• Customizer

    @toblerone77:

    What about if the defender retreats, the attacking force may attack again as if it had not moved in the combat phase?

    I was thinking something like this, but how do you limit it so it doesn’t turn into a giant landgrab?

    I can see Germany breaking through in Russia and scooping up half of the country in one turn.

    This is sort of out of the box, but what about this:
    If the defender retreats, the attacking forces may use one additional move and enter enemy territory. This combat is not resolved until the defending player’s turn, at which point they roll as the attacker.


  • Have it were it can only happen in 1 attacking territory per turn.


  • I do use it in my G39 games, but if you are strickly talking about G40 now then ya it could be to strong.

  • Customizer

    Yeah, I’m thinking it might be overpowered as well. But then again, it would completely shift the way that defenders deploy their troops, since you have to consider a breakthrough. Definitely more realistic.


  • Thats whats great about a G39 advance games. More things to think about and try.

  • Customizer

    @toblerone77:

    What about if the defender retreats, the attacking force may attack again as if it had not moved in the combat phase?

    Maybe I should elaborate a bit more. The attacking force would get only a second attack as it has completed it’s combat moves. The first CM was cancelled only due to the defender retreating.

    The same would apply to the defender as if they had been attacking in thier own combat move and retreated thus only one retreat. If the defender moved in retreat to a neighboring friendly occupied territory it would cancel those units from retreating as well.

    Possibly an additional requirement would be that the the attacker may only make a breakthrough with the units that made the initial assault.

    With all this in mind I don’t think it would be too overpowering and has advatages for both the attacker and defender.

    Even better it might speed up a session of G40 given the possibility that more attacks could be made.

  • Customizer

    @toblerone77:

    @toblerone77:

    What about if the defender retreats, the attacking force may attack again as if it had not moved in the combat phase?

    Maybe I should elaborate a bit more. The attacking force would get only a second attack as it has completed it’s combat moves. The first CM was cancelled only due to the defender retreating.

    The same would apply to the defender as if they had been attacking in thier own combat move and retreated thus only one retreat. If the defender moved in retreat to a neighboring friendly occupied territory it would cancel those units from retreating as well.

    Possibly an additional requirement would be that the the attacker may only make a breakthrough with the units that made the initial assault.

    With all this in mind I don’t think it would be too overpowering and has advatages for both the attacker and defender.

    Even better it might speed up a session of G40 given the possibility that more attacks could be made.

    Let me make sure I have this correct with this example:
    Germany has a large force in Poland consisting of a mix of units (infantry, artillery, mechs, tanks and planes). Germany attacks Baltic States. The Russians retreat to Novgorod. So now Germany can take that force and follow the retreating Russians to Novgorod? Including the infantry and artillery?


  • You should have tokens. For 5-8 IPC each token bought in advance allows non-infantry units to make a second attack to adjacent area they just took.

    Tokens are kept in capital till needed. This only works for land combat.

  • Customizer

    @knp7765:

    @toblerone77:

    @toblerone77:

    What about if the defender retreats, the attacking force may attack again as if it had not moved in the combat phase?

    Maybe I should elaborate a bit more. The attacking force would get only a second attack as it has completed it’s combat moves. The first CM was cancelled only due to the defender retreating.

    The same would apply to the defender as if they had been attacking in thier own combat move and retreated thus only one retreat. If the defender moved in retreat to a neighboring friendly occupied territory it would cancel those units from retreating as well.

    Possibly an additional requirement would be that the the attacker may only make a breakthrough with the units that made the initial assault.
    With all this in mind I don’t think it would be too overpowering and has advatages for both the attacker and defender.

    Even better it might speed up a session of G40 given the possibility that more attacks could be made.

    Let me make sure I have this correct with this example:
    Germany has a large force in Poland consisting of a mix of units (infantry, artillery, mechs, tanks and planes). Germany attacks Baltic States. The Russians retreat to Novgorod. So now Germany can take that force and follow the retreating Russians to Novgorod? Including the infantry and artillery?

    Yes. Remember though, the Russians would not have to retreat and the Germans don’t have to pursue. However this moves away from the original concept of breakthrough. It was just an idea with a similar flavor.

  • Customizer

    @toblerone77:

    Yes. Remember though, the Russians would not have to retreat and the Germans don’t have to pursue. However this moves away from the original concept of breakthrough. It was just an idea with a similar flavor.

    At first I am thinking “Why wouldn’t the Germans pursue? They could get Leningrad in the first round.” Then I thought maybe the Russians have a large stack of defense there and the German force may not be big enough to handle that.
    That brings me to another question.
    If we allow defender retreats like this, could both the defender and the attacker choose to retreat? Like in my previous example, Germany attacks Baltic States, the Russians there retreat to Novgorod where Russia has a big stack of defense. Then perhaps the German player notices a large amount of tanks and mechs in Bryansk, Smolensk and/or Archangel, or perhaps spread between all three to make it look like not as much, along with Russian planes at the air base in Moscow. He realizes that by taking Baltic States, his force is falling into a trap so he wants to back up to Poland and reinforce.
    Can this possibly happen? It would basically leave Baltic States empty and still under Soviet control, but it seems possible to me.
    This could make for an even longer game as each side tried to out build the other. Germany is usually making more money by this time but also has the UK and possibly US harassing him from the other side. Interesting problem.

  • Customizer

    It would definately need play testing for sure. It think it could be a fun or interesting feature to the game. I can see there could be potential problems too. I’m out of town at the moment and will be busy with Christmas stuff, but I’d like to work on this when I can get at my games.

  • Customizer

    @knp7765:

    @toblerone77:

    Yes. Remember though, the Russians would not have to retreat and the Germans don’t have to pursue. However this moves away from the original concept of breakthrough. It was just an idea with a similar flavor.

    At first I am thinking “Why wouldn’t the Germans pursue? They could get Leningrad in the first round.” Then I thought maybe the Russians have a large stack of defense there and the German force may not be big enough to handle that.
    That brings me to another question.
    If we allow defender retreats like this, could both the defender and the attacker choose to retreat? Like in my previous example, Germany attacks Baltic States, the Russians there retreat to Novgorod where Russia has a big stack of defense. Then perhaps the German player notices a large amount of tanks and mechs in Bryansk, Smolensk and/or Archangel, or perhaps spread between all three to make it look like not as much, along with Russian planes at the air base in Moscow. He realizes that by taking Baltic States, his force is falling into a trap so he wants to back up to Poland and reinforce.
    Can this possibly happen? It would basically leave Baltic States empty and still under Soviet control, but it seems possible to me.
    This could make for an even longer game as each side tried to out build the other. Germany is usually making more money by this time but also has the UK and possibly US harassing him from the other side. Interesting problem.

    I maintain it probably needs testing, but the ability to keep your opponent guessing in the situation you describe is where I see the fun.

    If the example Russian forces were routed first round I’d let the Germans have the opportunity to pursue. If they (The Russians) last a second round let the Russians decide to retreat or stand their ground. The Russians may want to set a trap or they may simply want to stall the Germans just like the OOB play.

    We could also go with the example from amphibious attacks. Once a breakthrough or secondary attack is declared, there is no retreat for the attacker and they are committed to victory or defeat. The territory that the defender retreated from is considered “blitzed” and is capture territory.

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    Another concept to try would be to keep “breakthrough” units in reserve.

    IE you attack a territory defended by 1 inf, with 10 tanks.  You hold 7 of your tanks in reserve for the breakthrough.

    Assuming one of your 3 tanks hits the first round, and the defender doesn’t, your 7 other tanks (or units) can then extend into the next territory, attacking other units, or capturing empty territory.

    I would not allow breakthroughs through to the next territory however.

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    This concept would also be a major game changer at Sea.  I’m very interested to hear about results.

  • '17 '16 '15 '14 '12

    @Gargantua:

    Another concept to try would be to keep “breakthrough” units in reserve.

    IE you attack a territory defended by 1 inf, with 10 tanks.   You hold 7 of your tanks in reserve for the breakthrough.

    Assuming one of your 3 tanks hits the first round, and the defender doesn’t, your 7 other tanks (or units) can then extend into the next territory, attacking other units, or capturing empty territory.

    I would not allow breakthroughs through to the next territory however.

    That would be a good way to have the “Blitz”.  You could do a lot with tank/mech combos.


  • @Cmdr:

    When I saw the title of this thread I thought it was interesting.

    My mind immediately jumped to: if you attack and defeat all defenders in one round and they defenders did not score any hits, then the attacker can proceed to attack the next territory in line regardless of movement points left.

    The idea, as I thought of it, would be to blow through pickets and attack territories of value, maybe get defenders to actually defend territory?

    Might not work, just what immediately jumped to mind.

    I like this idea alot

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