AAA first shot ability, how do you see it?

  • '21 '20 '18 '17

    the balance has nothing to do with realism, its about why planes (esp fighters) are balanced against the rest of the units.  The planes are more expensive than everything else, but they have vastly more movement and (mobile!) defensive power than anything else in the game.

    The drawback is they cant take territory and they cant land in the advance defense of your stacks (unless its from an allied air force).

    people try to compare the units based on cost, but that’s not apt.  Like most games, the units are all different–not just more or less powerful than one another.

    destroyers and subs are totally dissimilar.  you cant simply compare 6 to 8.  subs cant hit planes
    destroyers have the same stats as artillery but cost twice as much?  because you don’t have another “infantry of the sea” choice.
    cruisers are worthless for 12, but you start the game with many
    fighters are the end-all be-all versatile unit, but then again, 6 moves is incredibly better than 4 moves, and they cant hold territory (and aren’t cheap).

    changing how AAA works changes the dynamics of what makes the fighter the cornerstone unit of the advanced AxA game…

  • '17 '16

    @Narvik:

    @Baron:

    To clarify my intent, I’m not actually looking at a new house rule.
    (I want a larger audience and more opinions from experienced players. Don’t want to see this thread drafted into another forum.)

    Look, despite your effort this thread just got drafted to the House Rule forum for some reason, now how does that make you feel ?

    I felt amazed…
    I really don’t know why THIS thread, at the present stage, is not within prescribed boundaries to stay on the G40 forum.
    People stayed on topic and a lot of interesting points have been made.
    The small deviations were more as comparison points than true promotion of a given House rule.
    And from Kreuzfeld up to taamvan it is not about something else than OOB AAA analysis.
    The moderator was quite nervous on the trigger this time IMO.
    Anyone has a better explanation ?

  • '17 '16

    @CWO:

    @Narvik:

    OK back to topic. Dug in infantry or artillery dont get a preemptive shot at charging infantry that run up the beach or cross the minefield, so why would AA guns fire preemptive at attacking aircrafts ? Its pretty much the same.

    Also, the previously mentioned parallel with the surprise attack ability of submarines doesn’t really work.  Submarines are designed to be stealthy – their defining characteristic is their ability to hide from surface observation by diving underwater – so it makes sense for them to have the ability in the game (as they did in WWII) to sneak up on a target unobserved and put a torpedo into its side before anyone realizes that there’s a sub lurking nearby.  Anti-aircraft guns have no such stealth abilities.  They can, to some extent, be camouflaged from daytime observation by the application of netting, but that doesn’t give them the same kind of stealth abilities as subs, for several reasons. First, visual camouflage of this type confers no advantages at night (since neither the guns nor the camouflage can be seen).  Second, an attacking air force will know perfectly well that the juicy targets (such as cities) will have batteries of AAA guns clustered in and/or near them, even if their exact location isn’t known. Third, WWII subs and AAA guns operated in a fundamentally different ways.  Subs operated in essence as single units (though they could sometimes operate in groups) whose purpose was to fire large and expensive weapons (torpedoes) singly or in small numbers at a target which was carefully tracked and aimed at with as much precision as possible.  WWII AAA guns, to have any chance of hitting aircraft overhead, had to operate in large numbers and had to function more or less like firehoses, pumping hundreds or even thousands of rounds into the air in the general direction of their targets.  And sometimes they didn’t even actually aim at specific targets; rather, they would fire “box barrages” designed to fill a predetermined volume of airspace with an optimal pattern of sharpnel designed to create the maximum chances that an aircraft flying through that airspace would be hit.

    Even more fundamentally, however, the concept of a first-shot advantage for AAA isn’t really meaningful.  A WWII battle between AAA on the ground and bombers overhead isn’t like a duel between Wild West gunslingers in which the advantage goes to the first man who gets his gun out of his holster.  Bombers don’t drop their bombs until they are over their target, whereas AAA guns will usually open fire as soon as the enemy planes are in range – so in that sense the AAA always gets “the first shot”, but that doesn’t translate into any kind of guarantee that the AAA will get the bombers before the bombers bomb their targets.  The effectiveness of WWII AAA ground defenses didn’t hinge on who got the first shot, it hinged on things like how many AAA guns were clustered around the target and how skillfully they were used.

    These two points seems to show that “first shot” better describes AAA capacity than “surprise strike”, which should be reserved to Sub ability.
    I believe AA guns have  a much longer range of direct fire than any plane weapon.
    So AAA start shooting before enemy can shoot back, hence …


  • @Baron:

    These two points seems to show that “first shot” better describes AAA capacity than “surprise strike”, which should be reserved to Sub ability.
    I believe AA guns have  a much longer range of direct fire than any plane weapon.
    So AAA start shooting before enemy can shoot back, hence …

    My point wasn’t that AAA didn’t usually shoot first in WWII.  My point was that this “shoot first” ability was not by itself any kind of decisive advantage.  As I said, a WWII bombing raid isn’t the same as a Western gunfight, where the guy who gets his gun out of his holster first (assuming he’s a good shot) immediately achieves a 100% victory.  AAA defenses against bombing raids were long attritional battles, in which the AAA guns would gradually – and very, very slowly – cut down the number of incoming bombers.  And keep in mind that most of the AAA shells that were fired at the bombers missed them completely (especially at night).  So in that kind of situation, the number of AAA guns firing is much more important that the concept of who shoots first.


  • My 2 cents.

    AAA is probably the most modified aspect of the Three-Turn House Rules set that my group plays.  …. The basic aspects are here below.  These mesh with other details in the full rules set which I won’t mention here.

    • All ships have AAA ability.  This is “Preemptive @1” happening after the Sub-Special Attack and before Normal Combat.  A ship’s AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit a plane.  Ships normal combat rolls must be applied to other ships.  … Therefore, in theory, a ship can roll TWO times per combat round.  Once @1 against a plane, and then again per their normal roll against an enemy ship.    This happens during each round of combat.

    • Land-Based AAA happens during normal combat and during each round of combat.  AAA guns can only target ONE plane @1 per combat round.  Their hits must be applied to planes, not land units.  AAA now cost 4 IPCs.

  • '17 '16

    @the_jetset:

    My 2 cents.

    AAA is probably the most modified aspect of the Three-Turn House Rules set that my group plays.  …. The basic aspects are here below.  These mesh with other details in the full rules set which I won’t mention here.

    • All ships have AAA ability.  This is “Preemptive @1” happening after the Sub-Special Attack and before Normal Combat.  A ship’s AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit a plane.  Ships normal combat rolls must be applied to other ships.  … Therefore, in theory, a ship can roll TWO times per combat round.  Once @1 against a plane, and then again per their normal roll against an enemy ship.    This happens during each round of combat.

    • Land-Based AAA happens during normal combat and during each round of combat.  AAA guns can only target ONE plane @1 per combat round.  Their hits must be applied to planes, not land units.  AAA now cost 4 IPCs.

    Fine for your AAA house rule.
    What I’d like to ear now is that based on your idea you explained how it seems better reflect AAA historical/physical behavior compared to OOB AAA?

    Said otherwise, what did you dislike about AAA first shot, so you developed a ground AAA without first shot while you give a first shot to naval unit?

    I can understand that for playability of Naval combat a separate attack/defense roll phase was needed, but maybe there is other reason too.

    Or, said otherwise again, what makes you feel uncomfortable about OOB AAA so you try to develop a specific house rule on that issue?

    Thanks for your answer.

  • '17 '16

    @Narvik:

    Dug in infantry or artillery dont get a preemptive shot at charging infantry that run up the beach or cross the minefield, so why would AA guns fire preemptive at attacking aircrafts ? Its pretty much the same.

    @CWO:

    @Baron:

    These two points seems to show that “first shot” better describes AAA capacity than “surprise strike”, which should be reserved to Sub ability.
    I believe AA guns have  a much longer range of direct fire than any plane weapon.
    So AAA start shooting before enemy can shoot back, hence …

    My point wasn’t that AAA didn’t usually shoot first in WWII.  My point was that this “shoot first” ability was not by itself any kind of decisive advantage.  As I said, a WWII bombing raid isn’t the same as a Western gunfight, where the guy who gets his gun out of his holster first (assuming he’s a good shot) immediately achieves a 100% victory. AAA defenses against bombing raids were long attritional battles, in which the AAA guns would gradually – and very, very slowly – cut down the number of incoming bombers.  And keep in mind that most of the AAA shells that were fired at the bombers missed them completely (especially at night).  So in that kind of situation, the number of AAA guns firing is much more important that the concept of who shoots first.

    Those points seems to make a strong case against first shot ability as a good way to describe in caricatural way how AAA works in battle against planes.
    Within game limits, there is better ways to depict AAA physical/historical effect on planes, IMO.

  • '17 '16

    @taamvan:

    the balance has nothing to do with realism, its about why planes (esp fighters) are balanced against the rest of the units.  The planes are more expensive than everything else, but they have vastly more movement and (mobile!) defensive power than anything else in the game.

    The drawback is they cant take territory and they cant land in the advance defense of your stacks (unless its from an allied air force).

    people try to compare the units based on cost, but that’s not apt.  Like most games, the units are all different–not just more or less powerful than one another.

    destroyers and subs are totally dissimilar.   you cant simply compare 6 to 8.  subs cant hit planes
    destroyers have the same stats as artillery but cost twice as much?  because you don’t have another “infantry of the sea” choice.
    cruisers are worthless for 12, but you start the game with many
    fighters are the end-all be-all versatile unit, but then again, 6 moves is incredibly better than 4 moves, and they cant hold territory (and aren’t cheap).

    changing how AAA works changes the dynamics of what makes the fighter the cornerstone unit of the advanced AxA game…

    Talking about balance, many people seems to believe Fgs and StBs are OP for their cost.
    Having a more dangerous AAA can balance things out. Especially when people exchange 1 lightly defended TT with 1 Infantry and a few attacking planes. This tactic would be less fruitful with a more affordable AAA and a revised AAA making a 1 shot in regular combat for example.
    There is enough room to adjust AAA power with cost and combat value.


  • @Baron:

    @the_jetset:

    My 2 cents.

    AAA is probably the most modified aspect of the Three-Turn House Rules set that my group plays.  …. The basic aspects are here below.  These mesh with other details in the full rules set which I won’t mention here.

    • All ships have AAA ability.  This is “Preemptive @1” happening after the Sub-Special Attack and before Normal Combat.  A ship’s AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit a plane.  Ships normal combat rolls must be applied to other ships.  … Therefore, in theory, a ship can roll TWO times per combat round.  Once @1 against a plane, and then again per their normal roll against an enemy ship.    This happens during each round of combat.

    • Land-Based AAA happens during normal combat and during each round of combat.  AAA guns can only target ONE plane @1 per combat round.  Their hits must be applied to planes, not land units.  AAA now cost 4 IPCs.

    Fine for your AAA house rule.
    What I’d like to ear now is that based on your idea you explained how it seems better reflect AAA historical/physical behavior compared to OOB AAA?

    Said otherwise, what did you dislike about AAA first shot, so you developed a ground AAA without first shot while you give a first shot to naval unit?

    I can understand that for playability of Naval combat a separate attack/defense roll phase was needed, but maybe there is other reason too.

    Or, said otherwise again, what makes you feel uncomfortable about OOB AAA so you try to develop a specific house rule on that issue?

    Thanks for your answer.

    Hello BM.

    Both Naval and Land AAA goes in every round of combat.  Naval AAA is preemptive to regular combat for two reasons:.
      1)  I think Naval AAA has a little bit more justification for preemptive behavior.  Take Torpedo 8 squadron for example.  …. all shot down while making their attack run.  … Dive bombers and Torpedo Bombers were one-shot attacks.  Ship’s AAA tried to get them BEFORE they got into range. 
      2) Game mechanics.  Ships will role 2 times.  Once for their AAA and then again for ship-to-ship.  Therefore, I needed to insert the AAA shot somewhere.  After the Sub-rolls and prior to regular combat rolls seemed like a nice spot.

    We’ve played 2 games with this mechanic so far.  (One five-player on the Europe map and an 8-player Global).  Naval combat is a lot more fun this way … and also a bit more realistic … especially with the potential to retreat after each round of Naval combat.

  • '17 '16

    And why did you change AAA from first shot to regular combat phase on land battle?
    Please give us not only a game reason, but also any historical impression or simile, if you can.
    Thanks,
    Baron


  • Hi Baron,

    Land battles are much more ambiguous in A&A.  The time scales are a lot different than Naval battles.

    The great (large) Naval battles in the Pacific were events that happened over the course of a day … maybe two.  They were quick, decisive and excessively violent strikes.

    The great land battles were events that generally took weeks … or even months.

    AAA’s implementation in land battles was quite different than AAA in naval battles.

    At sea, super-high concentations of AAA where loaded on a ship and used intensively for a few minutes with comparatively high results.

    On land, AAA is spread out in a wide variety of implementations… defending supply depots, key infrastructure, imbedded with ground units, defending air-bases etc…  and that AAA will be used MANY times in the course of the week(s) / month(s) battle that A&A is simulating.

    In A&A, a round of Naval Combat is probably something that happens in a day … or even a half-day.  And AAA was thrown out A LOT sooner than the attacking plane’s torpedo’s or bombs were dropped.

    An A&A round of land combat is something that happens in maybe a week or even weeks of combat.  And during that time, AAA is coming from a large number of areas over a large amount of time.

    Therefore, it doesn’t make much sense to have land-based AAA preemptive during regular combat.

  • '17 '16

    I like this way of comparing land and naval.
    It seems to make sense to have regular combat AAA that way.

    Here is a completely different POV on AAA game unit.
    From a game POV, giving to such or such unit first shot make it a defensive feature, simply because it forbid any enemy’s plane being hit to get a roll.
    It increase survivability of defending units.
    Since AAA is strictly a defensive weapon, it is correct to give it a similar game mechanism.


  • Hi Baron,.

    Yes.  Naval AAA has a little more “punch” than land-based combat AAA.    …. but, remember, AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit planes.   :wink:  …   so as the old breed admirals quickly learned in the early stages of WWII, their fine Battleships were no longer the kings of the high seas!    …  and they reluctantly removed Mahan’s books from their strategy shelf and placed them into the history pile.

    Your A&A fleets should be built around the AIRCRAFT CARRIERS, not the Battleships.   Battleships are best used as escorts and for assisting amphibious assaults.

    These revised AAA rules (together with the Three Turn Playing System and Enhanced Combat rules set) will help make the game reflect this historical reality.

  • '17 '16

    @the_jetset:

    Hi Baron,.

    Yes.  Naval AAA has a little more “punch” than land-based combat AAA.    …. but, remember, AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit planes.   :wink:  …   so as the old breed admirals quickly learned in the early stages of WWII, their fine Battleships were no longer the kings of the high seas!    …  and they reluctantly removed Mahan’s books from their strategy shelf and placed them into the history pile.

    Your A&A fleets should be built around the AIRCRAFT CARRIERS, not the Battleships.   Battleships are best used as escorts and for assisting amphibious assaults. These revised AAA rules (together with the Three Turn Playing System and Enhanced Combat rules set) will help make the game reflect this historical reality.

    Was this bolded point, the main reason which drives you to rethink Naval combat and changing how AAA works?

  • '17 '16

    @CWO:

    @Baron:

    These two points seems to show that “first shot” better describes AAA capacity than “surprise strike”, which should be reserved to Sub ability.
    I believe AA guns have  a much longer range of direct fire than any plane weapon.
    So AAA start shooting before enemy can shoot back, hence …

    My point wasn’t that AAA didn’t usually shoot first in WWII.  My point was that this “shoot first” ability was not by itself any kind of decisive advantage. As I said, a WWII bombing raid isn’t the same as a Western gunfight, where the guy who gets his gun out of his holster first (assuming he’s a good shot) immediately achieves a 100% victory.  AAA defenses against bombing raids were long attritional battles, in which the AAA guns would gradually – and very, very slowly – cut down the number of incoming bombers.  And keep in mind that most of the AAA shells that were fired at the bombers missed them completely (especially at night).  So in that kind of situation, the number of AAA guns firing is much more important that the concept of who shoots first.

    Thanks for this additional clarification and summary of your analysis.

    I was trying harder to find some points in your analysis which can explain why OOB AAA first shot seems intuitively OK to many people for reflecting somehow part of WWII air battle than trying to summarize your historical points.


  • Hi Baron,

    Exactly.  I think you hit the nail right on the head!

  • '17 '16

    @Baron:

    @the_jetset:

    Hi Baron,.

    Yes.  Naval AAA has a little more “punch” than land-based combat AAA.    …. but, remember, AAA is the ONLY way a ship can hit planes.   :wink:  …   so as the old breed admirals quickly learned in the early stages of WWII, their fine Battleships were no longer the kings of the high seas!    …  and they reluctantly removed Mahan’s books from their strategy shelf and placed them into the history pile.

    Your A&A fleets should be built around the AIRCRAFT CARRIERS, not the Battleships.   Battleships are best used as escorts and for assisting amphibious assaults. These revised AAA rules (together with the Three Turn Playing System and Enhanced Combat rules set) will help make the game reflect this historical reality.

    Was this bolded point, the main reason which drives you to rethink Naval combat and changing how AAA works?

    @the_jetset:

    Hi Baron,

    Exactly.   I think you hit the nail right on the head!

    But why did you see that G40 Naval fleet were clustered around Battleship?
    Carriers, Destroyers and Subs were optimal not Battleship nor Cruiser.


  • @Baron:

    But why did you see that G40 Naval fleet were clustered around Battleship?
    Carriers, Destroyers and Subs were optimal not Battleship nor Cruiser.

    Let me guess :)

    there is several “types” of fleetactions in WW2. Three types are
    1. contolling a seazone
    2. destroying/protecting civilian, commercial and  shipping
    3. supporting ampibious landings and troops on land.

    Subs and DDs are for fighting a convoy war (2)

    Subs and DDs are not that important for controlling a seazone and have nowhere near the impact they have in the game.

    For controlling seazones, CVs + landbased planes where the undisputed king.

  • '17 '16

    You answered a different question.
    You are questionning Destroyer’s blocker ability.
    Maybe, if a more accurate naval is needed, DD can only be used as blocker against Sub ; to block surface vessels you can house rule that Cruiser or bigger is needed.
    That way, some Carriers will be needed to do so.


  • @Baron:

    You answered a different question.
    You are questionning Destroyer’s blocker ability.
    Maybe, if a more accurate naval is needed, DD can only be used as blocker against Sub ; to block surface vessels you can house rule that Cruiser or bigger is needed.
    That way, some Carriers will be needed to do so.

    I would disagree. I think I talked about how subs and DDs are way to effective (compared to CVs) when building a combat fleet. If you wanted to make the game historically correct in composing a combat fleet, you would simply count the number of carriers and their planes, and then almost completely disregard the other ships. A fair version of this would be to make it so that ships had AA only, and planes where the only thing that was allowed to fire at enemy ships in a fleet battle. It is difficult to grasp how dominant they where.  Remember that UK sank half of the italian fleet using 20 gladiators in a nightraid.

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