Just for the hell of it, I’ll probably give extended range and reliability (if I can afford it) to the new 1944 fighter model when its research is complete, as it’s the end of the line.
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Let's hope that's all it is! At this rate , they're likely to miss the war completely. Same with the Soviets.Canada and Mexico are not planning to invade US, they are only going to discourage draft-dodgers, if the Americans decide to help in China. Thank you
I've guessed it must mean the target province (assuming there'd be not much point to have extra air crew assigned in a non-occupied province anyway) and have played with it in the next session, just completed. Still not absolutely sure it's doing anything (haven't found the right tip to mouse over to confirm it).Didn't know this off the top of my head, so looked it up on the wiki. It just says it gives a bonus within the region (doesn't specify if the planes have to be based there or not).
Guess you'll just have to wing it!![]()
Well, if it's anything like HOI3 that will be the case!Glad to have helped!
A very ambitious play by the AI. But maybe all of Japan's units are stuck in China/Sulawesi so the Allies can land unopposed.
Right. Though its Kwantung rather than Japan occupying it at the moment.I think it has something to do with Taiwan. Maybe Japan/China will have a falling out.
That would be useful! So far the China-Japan communist pact has been doing pretty well. But we shall see the return of a good bit of HOI4 madness in the next episode, so that may change everything!If this plan works, China could be invaded on the coast with Japan out of the way. Right now it seems like the Allies will win this eventually. But how long that will take is the question.
I look forward to the iconic photo of a couple of Royal Marines having a brew next to a Union Jack flag.with a strong amphibious attack having been launched against Iwo Jima.
I suppose the alt-Poland of the 1940s, loyal Allied supporter etc, must be playing a little bit more by the rules.I am still chuckling at the idea of 30s Poland, of all places, trying to attract Foreign Manufacturers into the country. "No we won't steal your designs and not pay any licence fee. Yes I know we said that the previous dozen times and then stole your designs and didn't pay any licence fees, but we mean it this time."
If it didn't mean cheesy photo-shopping of that famous Mt Suribachi photo, it would be on the cards! Also, we will soon find out who is actually doing most of the hard fighting on Iwo Jima ...I look forward to the iconic photo of a couple of Royal Marines having a brew next to a Union Jack flag.
I feel like you should've been able to do something with your 9% participation. Not sure what happened to lock you out.[In which case, I wonder if Poland has been dudded a bit here. Not knowing how these normally go, I have no real frame of reference. Also, I had no visibility of what points the Chinese and Japanese would have had and how these compared to or interacted with the Allied participants.]
Honestly, one of the least border-gory peace deals I've seen from the AI. All the defeated nations have been left mostly intact.A thoroughly baffled Polish Foreign Minister Beck contemplated all this and tried to begin making sense of it. In the meantime, all he could do was curse the laziness of his staffers who seemed to be once more providing generic portraits for some of the heads of state, and in one case no picture at all!
Ironically, less than two weeks after the new supply hub had finally been completed, the hub and airfield at Golmud, ceded to China from Xibei San Ma at Pärnu, was available for Allied use. Though it would have to be secured from nearby MAB forces first.
Well, the Golmud hub should help in conjunction with the recently constructed hub. More supply is always better. Just remember to connect it to the rail network.As at 28 December, supply was better on the Allied front than it had been at any time since the campaign began. A combination of rail projects near the front and in depth to begin expanding the supply line from Delhi in the Raj should now proceed quite quickly
Sending some forces to Indochina would probably be fruitful (if the Allies can hold out before you arrive). Maybe if Sinkiang has an excess of troops, some of that force could be sent south.The Polish High Command now contemplated its next moves. Clearly, the campaign in Western China would continue to be a priority focus. But there was also discussion about a possible second expeditionary corps being sent to Indochina, to help stabilise the situation there. Maybe a single division could be shipped there as a test case, to see if any Japanese interdiction capability remained in that sector. If the proposed new force was staged behind in successive convoys, those following could be diverted to safety if the lead one was hit.
The question of why the allies continue to bother with China remains at large, and increasingly pressing, since they've resolved all their actual problems in Europe and Africa (though the UK has landed head first into the balkans, and we all know what that means).
Mainly, I guess it's China because it's the only game in town. I suppose the Red Menace must be defeated <shrugs>. And otherwise, I'd be left with little to comment onThen again given the war on China remains baffling pointless perhaps a baffling peace treaty would be the just result?
I think Germany did quite well too, really: part compensation for all those troops they lost in China! France, well ... <gives Gallic shrug>. Goal now is to defeat the Red Menace I suppose, currently in the East, maybe closer to home if Trotsky ever gets off his arse!Churchill and Mao had good peace conference. France, France. What is goal now?
I'd have thought I might have got a look at something, but it was all over by the time I got to see it (that window on the right of the Conference screen scrolled down a long way). And of course, Poland had 9% of the Allied contribution, but I'm thinking China and Japan would have also figured above us, but (irritatingly) it didn't seem to be possible to gauge their bargaining strength. If that's a not-so-gory result, then it must get pretty grisly!I feel like you should've been able to do something with your 9% participation. Not sure what happened to lock you out.
Honestly, one of the least border-gory peace deals I've seen from the AI. All the defeated nations have been left mostly intact.
Yes, the Polish rail crews will be busy for a while yet, it seems. If we can get Golmud before the MAB does.Well, the Golmud hub should help in conjunction with the recently constructed hub. More supply is always better. Just remember to connect it to the rail network.
Will toss it up. Given the steady growth in Polish army strength since we first sent the EF to China, I'll probably ship some more over by sea from the Motherland.Sending some forces to Indochina would probably be fruitful (if the Allies can hold out before you arrive). Maybe if Sinkiang has an excess of troops, some of that force could be sent south.
It certainly seems so. If nothing else, it would have been useful (for visibility and story telling purposes) to at least see each country's fulfilled demands step-by-step before it got to Poland's turn. It was like emerging from the anaesthetic half-way through an operation and before the surgical team had removed all the gore!I do remember being told that some sort of peace conference mod was an absolute essential in HOI4, and this once again proves that point.
I do remember being told that some sort of peace conference mod was an absolute essential in HOI4, and this once again proves that point.
Then again given the war on China remains baffling pointless perhaps a baffling peace treaty would be the just result?
By the looks of it - apart from being the only war going, so Churchill etc want to be in itIt's a very bloody affair in HOI4 and always seems to be. Only reason I went into Asia was because otherwise Churchill would conquer it.
In this timeline, it looks like the Soviets are watching and waiting while the rest of the world kills itself in the jungle for no reason. What even is the gameplan for what to do with China once the war is 'won'?
Well, the European WW2.1 was very tame and the remaining Asian one against Fascists in China hot at first and then pretty side-show-ish. But yes, the big one is the other leg of the tripod, Allies v Communists in WW2.2. Getting quite entertaining again now that the zany peace treaty gave the Communists a few nasty cases of border gore by ridiculously giving territory they had conquered fair and square to their enemies, the Allies.I love how we saw a bloodier world war 2, and then immediately afterwards an even bloodied world war 3 in China. Is there going to be anyone left alive by the end of this run?
By the afternoon of 7 January they were storming ahead, having pocketed two PRC divisions in the centre and pressing to isolate more along the coasts German panzers broke through to their north.
Some good news for the Allies.The big news in Indochina came on 16 January, when German panzers reached the coast and sought to defeat an MAB counter-attack. This trapped four MAB divisions in a new coastal pocket: another measure of revenge for what the Allies had suffered in the north just a few months before.
With a smattering of Allied divisions now in place, Britain decided to recall Manchuria to the war against the MAB. The Polish leadership doubted the wisdom of this: Manchuria itself was weakly defended and its two enclaves not at all. They were of more value at this point as a neutral diversion to the Communists than a soon-vanquished adversary.
A poor move by the British AI (and the Chinese for accepting the truce).By early the following morning, either the British or their Manchurian puppets must have realised their mistake: the truce was re-established. The latest fighting ended up being nothing more than short border clash.
The air bases seem to be helping a lot on this front. How impacted is the supply situation with all the newly-based planes?To the north, the Allies were running into heavier resistance, with air support once again figuring prominently in attack and defence, especially to the organisation of their opponents.
Now let's hope that enclave stays neutral.Since 17 January, the Allies had been conducting a steady advance through Jiuquan, with some Polish assistance, which by early on the 27th had split the northern and southern MAB lines in two against the neutral Manchurian enclave.
I feel like their should be some sort of penalty or restriction on truce-breaking. Weird that there isn't.the Manchurian Federation had survived after striking two truces, the latest still holding.
Maybe once the PEF is done in Indochina, a trip to Taiwan to open up another front against China is in order. Or they could finish up Sulawesi.The Western Pacific was still a welter of Allied divisions and ships in transit or on island bases. Reconnaissance of southern Japan had shown it was certainly not undefended. And another sizeable Allied troop convoy was on its way to Manchuria.
They are playing a bored game, too!Soviets and Americans are playing a board game. Japan with 1M+ has bled heavily. Thank you
It definitely is. The ebbs and flows of diplomatic events and maybe supply as each side gets extended.Some good news for the Allies.
This front is definitely looking more and more like the OTL Korean War. A lot of back and forth.
Yes, thought this at the time, on both counts.A poor move by the British AI (and the Chinese for accepting the truce).
I think so, increasingly as we increase capacity, supply and aircraft numbers, while the mission efficiency builds as well.The air bases seem to be helping a lot on this front. How impacted is the supply situation with all the newly-based planes?
Yes, same hope there too.Now let's hope that enclave stays neutral.
I was wondering whether it was Manchuria, China, Japan or Britain at work, also there seems to be a thing where Japan tends to conclude truces with Manchuria (which ever faction they are in).I feel like their should be some sort of penalty or restriction on truce-breaking. Weird that there isn't.
Taiwan is already with the Allies, as part of Manchuria. Sulawesi could be a chance: or even Japan itself if the Allies manage to land there eventually!Maybe once the PEF is done in Indochina, a trip to Taiwan to open up another front against China is in order. Or they could finish up Sulawesi.
I hope he is an amphibious warfare specialist. He is an entirely fictional general, if you are going to invent someone then at least lean into the joke.General de Wet
I can't see Bloody Vasey getting nervous. Swearing a great deal certainly, but not nervous.It must have made the Australians rather nervous.
The Donitz Yamanoto clash I never knew I wanted to see was somewhat disappointing. Karl should have brought some more U-boats, fingers crossed he does next time.
Are you not building anything in eastern Poland due to a potential Soviet attack?There was also a shift in construction priorities, with the next round of projects after the current ones in China were completed focusing on building the Polish industrial base again. Other countries seemed to be moving ahead with theirs and Poland was concerned they may start falling behind other middle sized powers.
So I guess Trotsky is doing something. It's just more covert.In Europe, there was some Polish (and indeed British) concern over the infiltration of Communism into France (where it seemed the Communists had now outrageously suspended elections) and in Germany, where Konrad Adenaur’s democratic Zentrum party was now well behind in the polls to the KPD, though with elections not due until September 1946.