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MikeyD

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  1. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Richi in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  2. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from paxromana in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  3. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Lethaface in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  4. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Kinophile in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  5. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from beardiebloke in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  6. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Splinty in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    CM players on this site (lets recall this is a gaming site) are entirely aware that a King Tiger, IS-2, Abrams or T90 (depending on the title) is not immune to damage or destruction on the battlefield. Nobody here is so naive.
  7. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from MeatEtr in What's your ETA?   
    This is going to be very random, but last night I was watching a Korean pop music video that just released. It ends with someone driving to a secluded spot. Through the car windshield you can see a distant mountain ridgeline. Suddenly it dawned on me that's the same mountain that's in CMFI mainland Italy! Of all the random places in all the world that they could have filmed, they picked a mountain pass through the Apennines opposite our CMFI mountain! That really tickled me.
    If you want to see the MV the title's at the bottom of the Youtube screenshot.
     

  8. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from paxromana in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    Your typical CM player prefers large maps where they can freely maneuver out of sight of the enemy and employ 'clever' tactics to win (usually within an hour). Give him a constrained map with little opportunity to maneuver, plus obstacles, and the battles become much more grim. Move forward, kill more of them than they do of you, move forward a little more, repeat. Rather like Ukraine currently. Tom Clancy's novel 'Red Storm Rising'  concluded (if memory serves) with a column of Abrams  flying down an undefended forest trail to spectacularly flank the Russians. Yeh, nice work if you can get it. The enemy is not usually so obliging, though.
  9. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from hcrof in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    Your typical CM player prefers large maps where they can freely maneuver out of sight of the enemy and employ 'clever' tactics to win (usually within an hour). Give him a constrained map with little opportunity to maneuver, plus obstacles, and the battles become much more grim. Move forward, kill more of them than they do of you, move forward a little more, repeat. Rather like Ukraine currently. Tom Clancy's novel 'Red Storm Rising'  concluded (if memory serves) with a column of Abrams  flying down an undefended forest trail to spectacularly flank the Russians. Yeh, nice work if you can get it. The enemy is not usually so obliging, though.
  10. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from dan/california in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    Your typical CM player prefers large maps where they can freely maneuver out of sight of the enemy and employ 'clever' tactics to win (usually within an hour). Give him a constrained map with little opportunity to maneuver, plus obstacles, and the battles become much more grim. Move forward, kill more of them than they do of you, move forward a little more, repeat. Rather like Ukraine currently. Tom Clancy's novel 'Red Storm Rising'  concluded (if memory serves) with a column of Abrams  flying down an undefended forest trail to spectacularly flank the Russians. Yeh, nice work if you can get it. The enemy is not usually so obliging, though.
  11. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Artkin in What's your ETA?   
    This is going to be very random, but last night I was watching a Korean pop music video that just released. It ends with someone driving to a secluded spot. Through the car windshield you can see a distant mountain ridgeline. Suddenly it dawned on me that's the same mountain that's in CMFI mainland Italy! Of all the random places in all the world that they could have filmed, they picked a mountain pass through the Apennines opposite our CMFI mountain! That really tickled me.
    If you want to see the MV the title's at the bottom of the Youtube screenshot.
     

  12. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Livdoc44 in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  13. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from kimbosbread in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  14. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Kinophile in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  15. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from A Canadian Cat in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  16. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Seedorf81 in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  17. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from paxromana in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  18. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Petrus58 in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  19. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Butschi in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall, when doing research for CM Cold War, I stumbled on a US Pentagon estimate that they expected to lose some 30% of their ground attack aircraft within the first two weeks of a 'hot' war. What would follow those losses I assume would have likely resembled current aircraft use over Ukraine today. Look back to reports on this thread of the staggering losses of Russian aircraft and crews over Ukraine the first third of the war. Each lost SU-27 cost approx $30 million USD. Overflying enemy airspace is an expensive proposition. And that was before Patriot showed up. I'm reminded of horrific US helicopter losses over Vietnam in the 1960s. After your 5,000th helicopter got shot down you might want to rethink your 'combined arms' theories.
  20. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Flibby in Frontal Attacks   
    If you're able to knock down or suppress anyone who pops up to shoot at you you'll be able to make progress, if you can't you won't. The reason why flank attacks are preferred is you've theoretically got fewer enemy units to suppress at any one time.
  21. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from IHC70 in Just an Idle thought about perhaps 'revamping' some CM:BS elements   
    A lot of CMBS's 'faults' lie not in the game engine but in what the scenario designer thinks would be a fun scenario to play. If you want a minefield scenario, or a scenario with green troops with no command links, or an artillery dominant scenario, or a scenario with static defensive lines separated by a no-man's-land go ahead and make one. But  most players are accustomed to scenarios amenable to sneaking about and surprising enemy units, to employing 'clever' tactics over an hour's play time. The usual CM gameplay stuff. The real world is not often so amenable to 'having fun'.
  22. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from A Canadian Cat in Just an Idle thought about perhaps 'revamping' some CM:BS elements   
    A lot of CMBS's 'faults' lie not in the game engine but in what the scenario designer thinks would be a fun scenario to play. If you want a minefield scenario, or a scenario with green troops with no command links, or an artillery dominant scenario, or a scenario with static defensive lines separated by a no-man's-land go ahead and make one. But  most players are accustomed to scenarios amenable to sneaking about and surprising enemy units, to employing 'clever' tactics over an hour's play time. The usual CM gameplay stuff. The real world is not often so amenable to 'having fun'.
  23. Like
    MikeyD got a reaction from Lethaface in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall awhile back hearing US and Europe was having the small problem of pulling out equipment from storage, expecting to quickly hand it over to Ukraine, only to be shocked by its dilapidated state. Then comes the repair and refurbishment and parts replacement before they can hand it over, greatly extending delivery times. That applies to everything from Humvees to M777s and much else.
  24. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from Butschi in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    I recall awhile back hearing US and Europe was having the small problem of pulling out equipment from storage, expecting to quickly hand it over to Ukraine, only to be shocked by its dilapidated state. Then comes the repair and refurbishment and parts replacement before they can hand it over, greatly extending delivery times. That applies to everything from Humvees to M777s and much else.
  25. Upvote
    MikeyD got a reaction from benpark in How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?   
    6 hours ago (from my posting) BBC News gave Twitter a swift kick in the pants re the Ukraine war.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66113460
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