Awesome ! One of my Favorite parts of G 40 Expansion :)
Can someone explain why tanks need to cost 6
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I have played many axis and allies games and I have never noticed tanks being overpowered. However, in the AAP40 and some AA50 house rules I see people moving tanks price up to 6. Why is this? I haven’t noticed an unbalance in tank power. Would this change be beneficial to AARe?
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Because in AAR and AA50 as well as AAE40 people just buy nothing but tanks for Germany. AAE was broken because of this and they were 3-2 tanks costing 5.
I am glad they are 6, but i wish Mechanized Infantry were a 2-2-2-5 unit. I view them as ‘light armor’
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Huh, maybe Ill try that and see how it works, and then see if the cost increase is needed.
I know at least that in AARe tanks are fine at 5 (probably because of the closer range) -
yes but thats AAR and not many people play that since AA50 and AA42 as well as AAE40/AAP40 coming up.
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Because their better defenders now, and also in Africa they’re good to blitz through down to South Africa
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Now people will just buy infantry.
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Prior to the introduction of mechanized infantry to the game, I used to think of tanks as representing all mechanized forces - tanks, mechanized infantry, and motorized infantry. Even an armored division was typically more infantry than tanks. If I recall correctly, a 1944 German Panzer division had 2 tank battalions and 6 infantry battalions. And Panzergrenadier (mechanized infantry) divisions had self-propelled guns and tank destroyers assigned.
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I used to think of tanks as representing all mechanized forces - tanks, mechanized infantry, and motorized infantry.
If that were true than artillery would be also included because artillery are also part of the makeup of armor. Yet Artillery are a different piece
Also, artillery are attached to Infantry too.
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True. A typical division in most armies will have its own artillery regiment/brigade. A corps might have an extra brigade or two of corps level artillery in adddition to the artillery units assigned to its infantry/tank divisions. Soviet Shock armies were basically leg infantry with a buttload of artillery (a buttload being an echelon or two above brigade) attached. But, at the scale of Axis and Allies (with each playing piece representing an army - the echelon between corps and army group), independent artillery units would rarely be large enough to be represented by their own playing pieces. But they are.