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Conscript Bagger

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Posts posted by Conscript Bagger

  1. My paternal grandfather was about 40 when the war started, so he didn't fight.

    Maternal grandfather was in England and Europe as a ground crewman in 9th TAC, maybe servicing the P-38s that Kitty's grandma built. smile.gif He had Alzheimer's for several years and died when I was in middle school, so I never got to talk to him about his service, but Grandma has shared bits & pieces that she remembered over the years (and she has some interesting stories of her own about running a grocery store during rationing).

  2. My paternal grandfather was about 40 when the war started, so he didn't fight.

    Maternal grandfather was in England and Europe as a ground crewman in 9th TAC, maybe servicing the P-38s that Kitty's grandma built. smile.gif He had Alzheimer's for several years and died when I was in middle school, so I never got to talk to him about his service, but Grandma has shared bits & pieces that she remembered over the years (and she has some interesting stories of her own about running a grocery store during rationing).

  3. My paternal grandfather was about 40 when the war started, so he didn't fight.

    Maternal grandfather was in England and Europe as a ground crewman in 9th TAC, maybe servicing the P-38s that Kitty's grandma built. smile.gif He had Alzheimer's for several years and died when I was in middle school, so I never got to talk to him about his service, but Grandma has shared bits & pieces that she remembered over the years (and she has some interesting stories of her own about running a grocery store during rationing).

  4. Originally posted by mgdpublic:

    Yes scrolling the screen when I have a unit selected. You can't control click or it will deselect the unit so I just move the cursor to the top of the screen but it moves really slowly.

    That's odd, I never have it deselect my unit when I ctrl-click somewhere else (though I always have to scroll/rotate the screen a bit before the ctrl-click is recognized; THAT's aggravating.)

    The other option is to use the scroll arrows at the bottom of the screen - the scroll speed is higher with those.

  5. 1. Suppression. Achieving it (on the enemy) or avoiding it (on yourself) makes all the difference in the world. Sometimes it takes a few turns to get the enemy's heads down, even with multiple units firing, but it's so worth the effort. Even rifle squads are able to suppress the enemy at range, though MGs are much better because of their ammo load.

    2. The Advance command is your friend.

    3. Molotov cocktails are about as effective as thrown eggs. Don't stake your anti-armor defense on them.

    I'd be happy to PBEM after the holidays. Pop me an e-mail (ezp at mail dot com) anytime you want to start.

  6. Originally posted by Binkie:

    5) Real-time neural interface with ranking HQ for decreased order delay times and opportunity to yell my own uplifting brand of "encouragement" at the troops

    You may think you want that, but are you ready for when your troops yell back? I think most of us are better off not knowing what the men think of the orders we give them...
  7. While you won't know who sees your troops, you can see when enemies are targeting your unit. If you click on your unit, a yellow line connecting it to an enemy indicates the enemy is firing at you (or preparing to do so), a red line indicates your unit is firing at an enemy, and a thick red line indicates they are targeting each other.

  8. Originally posted by Michael Emrys:

    Can anybody name another radar equipped single seat night fighter that actually fired its guns in anger during the war?

    Not to split hairs, but the field-converted P-38 night fighters were single-seaters - I assume they saw some action, but maybe not? The production P38M (shown in the pic I posted on page 1) added the radar operator's rear cockpit.
  9. BB is actually "Barbarossa to Berlin." ;)

    Another thing worth noting is that CMBO and CMBB play quite differently in many respects. As a very general rule, CMBO is more forgiving and has less of a learning curve. The scope of CMBB (four years on the eastern front) may also be somewhat overwhelming at first - not necessarily in a given game, but the sheer number of options sometimes makes it hard to choose a setup! That said, CMBO has a ton of variety in nationalities and units too.

    Ande, you know there are demos for both games available on this site, right?

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