i remmber those good old times of hoi2 vanilla when i was swarming everyithing with 100 doomstacks of tanks ^^
Just stumbled across this, really enjoy the way you put the updates together, very clear and a good variety of images. The British are active in a number of theatres just now, but Asia seems to be relatively quite. How well prepared are you for a Japanese attack?
Strasbourg is attackable from four sides, meaning lots of enemies and they get a 30% multiple fronts bonus. If it falls, that exposes Chaumont, but only from one direction and the krauts have to cross a river and fight through a forest to get to it, don't worry too much.
Will building up infrastructure in troubled provinces speed the rate that the fortifications can be repaired? Also make sure you're up to date on province repair tech. Otherwise the only thing you can do , is make sure there is more firepower in each province, so they Germans run out of org before they can do too much damage to the forts. Maybe time to bring more of your boys home.
BTW Frenchie, 1939 INF in 1942? Still using Cavalry? Also not too sure the armoured car brigades are worth it.
Well, just as your theatres are beginning to look secure, the Germans launch their greatest offensive yet. Are there any further British troops than can be diverted to the continent to patch the French lines, or even open another front against the Germans?
It's like WW1...
Yup, these guys were quite new to the game and to their respective countries, so you can see it's a "learning experience". Actually makes for a realistic war, rather than having the AI stumble from disaster to disaster at the hands of two human players. France could do with more IC by the look.
Have a look at this thread - from this post onward I discuss IC building for France prewar.
http://forum.paradoxplaza.com/forum...till-last!&p=15216398&viewfull=1#post15216398
My best effort was 160 base IC by September 1939, but that's a little extreme. Still, you can manage two or three rounds of Factory builds before war. Don't start any more factories after June 1938 elections, let the ones that are in progress finish, and as more and more ic becomes available start to upgrade your units and build new stuff. You can easily convert all of France's manpower into infantry divisions in the time left.
At the start of the game I take an axe to all the stuff I don't need however.
I'd probably disband the cavalry, AA brigades, AC brigades, submarines, convert the Destroyers to escorts. Trade all my airforce, tanks and better navy to UK, disband all level 1 and 2 tech ships, except perhaps the carriers. Make political/minister changes and build factories early on, then do a mass build of infantry and motorised infantry in the last year before war. Leave all the upgrading and reinforcing till 1939, no sense upgrading to stuff that's gonna become obsolete again. Don't start building Land Forts till advanced Construction engineering is researched , still gives plenty time to finish it before war starts.
Now as regard's France's current situation, if they are short of IC to upgrade, repair and reinforce quick enough, I'd think trading her navy and airforce to the UK right now and let them pay maintenance. Let the UK put 15 of the best battleships with 15 of the best cruisers into a really strong surface fleet, maybe with France's navy there is enough for two groups like that, and be done. Don't mix carriers or transports or subs in the "big gun" battlegroup, they have different firing distances and will just contribute a stacking penalty. Don't have more than 30 allied ships in any one sea zone or get a massive "over command max" penalty. As for your carriers, if they are level 3 or better, put them in their own battle group, but retreat from a naval battle if it starts getting into melee range. As for the level 1 & 2 carriers, they are too slow and will always get caught by Germany's battleships, and your fleet only moves as fast as the slowest ship. However, they can serve as escorts for your transports, along with some obsolete gun ships and cruisers.
Can the UK send free supplies and money to ease strain on France's industry?
There is one glaring difference from WW1; the Germans do not face an enemy in the East yet. Does this look likely to change?