Let's Play : Hearts of Iron 3 - [Entry 20 - Atop Mountain Peaks]

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Burninator

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Spoilered for word count. This one doesn't include much action, but that will follow soon enough!
Consider this the calm before the storm.

Enjoy!

Blutrot und Edelweiss
Teil 1

The morning was cool, the sky overcast. Wind whistled through the rubble-lined alleys of Smolesnk as tired columns of soldiers, clad in the grey of the Wehrmacht, left their makeshift shelters and headed for the city outskirts. The night had not been restful for the 1. Alpendivision, but after 36 hours of vicious house-to-house fighting, a daring bayonet charge had finally seen the collapse of the remaining pocket of communist resistance in the city They had taken no prisoners. The division's orders were now to fortify and hold the city against enemy counterattack in order to secure the second army's rear and supply lines. Encirclement threatened, and scouting planes, based in the city's intact airfield, had spotted several divisions of communist infantry, supported by artillery and light armor, swinging around the second army's southern flank and approaching Smolnesk from the Southwest. Supplies and ammunition were low, the 9000-man division would soon be outnumbered, the second army was too heavily engaged to spare reinforcements, and the promised regiment of artillery had never arrived, leaving the Alpendivision with only light artillery and minimal antitank capabilities. But Smolnesk had to be held. No retreat. No surrender. Their orders were very clear on this.

And Gefreiter Otto Remseck and his squad, didn't like it any more than the rest of their Division. ? Shit! Help me with this!" Remseck looked up from the Nachtsichtgeraet he was examining, to see Jgr. Hoffmann, standing in a trench, struggling with an MG 42 he was emplacing. The squad was fortifying a trench in the southern outskirts of the city, setting up sandbags and firing positions. The MG the squad had been assigned (carried by Hoffmann, whose rifle had been lost in the original attack on the city) had slipped in the soft mud, and threatened to slide into the trench. Jgr. Horn crouched at the edge of the trench to lend a hand, receiving a grin of thanks in return. Hoffmann and Horn were both new to the squad, having been assigned to them to replace two Comrades lost during the heavy mountain warfare of the Spanish Campaign. Both were only a few months out of training -the fight for Smolensk had been their first real battle- but they'd done well, this far, and they'd grown close in the time it took for the rest of the squad to accept them. Both showed good morale and cameraderie, untainted by the cynicism brought by years of soldiering, and were quick to learn from their more experienced squadmates.

Standing a few feet down the trench from Hoffmann was a tall, dark-haired soldier, putting down planks to provide better footing. Jgr. Richter had been with the Division from its creation in 1935, longer than even Remseck, but rumors of Slavic ancestry (though thoroughly disproven) had weakened his prospect for promotion, and he had been passed over. He bore no resentment, though; a very focused, intelligent solider who said no more than he needed to. A crack shot as well, and Remseck was thankful for it.

And finally, sitting next to him, there was a small, blond man, cleaning his rifle. His closest friend in the squad Jgr. Karl Brandt, they had spent the last five years training, fighting and drinking side-by-side. Remseck's promotion at the end of the spanish campaign hadn't changed their relationship, they still had each other's backs when it mattered, and gave each other shit at all other times.

To the squad's left and right, the remainder of their company was working on similar fortifications, forming a 300-yard line of shallow trenches on the Southern edge of the city. On either side of that line were further trenchlines, running around the southern and western edge of the city, manned by most of two battalions. The area was alive with soldiers carrying tools, materials and weapons, preparing their first line of defence. Behind them, in the ruins of the city proper, native labor was being employed to create further emplacements, shelters and fortifications. Mortars and light artillery were being set up, snipers and spotters took position. Many of the city's buildings and defenses had been bombed out by the Luftwaffe during the battle, but there were more than enough crossroads, alleys and windows to set up an adequate defence. The city would not come cheap to the communists.

Remseck returned to his Night Vision device. He had been providing covering fire when it had given out during the house-to-house fighting last night, leaving him blind and horribly unable to help his squad. He had strained his eyes in the dark for a while, looking for muzzle flashes to fire at, before advancing to find that the charge had been a success and the communists had been routed. The device was bulky and sometimes unreliable, but it still provided an enormous advantage during night fighting. He fiddled with the battery and grinned when he heard an electric whine as the blacklight turned on. He put it and his MP43 aside and stood up, stretching. He turned at the sound of footsteps and saw a platoon-level aide approaching. "Corporal Remseck? Lieutenant Albrecht asks that you report to his field HQ for a briefing." Remseck frowned. ?But we were briefed this morning." "Perhaps he wants to quiz you?" the aide, a corporal as well, gave a noncomittal shrug. "Field HQ is on what used to be Volgosnek street. 300 metres."

Remseck gave him a nod and headed off, walking along a narrow road towards the city. The outskirts had been mere slums, wood huts, and had been almost totally destroyed in the bombardement, but the city proper had partially survived the battle. Craters were evident in the houses and roads, and several 2 and 3-story houses had collapsed altogether. The industrial district, near the river, in particular, had been shattered. The broken, bombed-out appearance, as well as the absence of civillian movement, gave Remseck the impression of a ghost town. Not that the city was deserted, though, far from it. While many of its residents had evacuated, fleeing the german advances, many more hadn't gotten out. Some of those had been conscripted to help fortify their city, the rest were confined to their homes on pain of death.

Remseck was pulled from his musing by a pothole in the road, stumbling, almost falling. He shook his head sharply, irritated at his own lack of focus. He hadn't slept for far too long, but that was no reason to let his mind wander. He increased his pace, reaching Volgosnek street after another minute, and, hearing German voices from a house on his left, stepped inside. He found himself standing face-to-face with his Platoon Lieutenant, Josef Albrecht. He blinked in surprise, and, after a moment, remembering himself (he really, really needed some sleep) and snapped off a hasty salute. Albrecht acknowledged him with a nod and turned back to the table, around which Remseck's fellow corporals stood, examining a map of the city. Remseck wasn't sure about the Lieutenant. Judging from what he'd heard, he was fresh-faced and green behind the ears, having only joined the division late in the Spanish campaign, but some men rumored that he'd been assigned to covert operations ever since the start of the war. He certainly seemed competent, and quite self-assured, but apparent competence could be deceiving, and he hadn't necessarily earned his confidence. Albrecht's voice cut through his speculation and he realized he'd let his mind wander again.

"As I was saying, Corporal Remseck, this, you've been called here because the briefing you've received this morning was admittedly rushed. We've now received improved intelligence and managed to work out a coordinated battle plan." Albrecht gestured to the map. "The Communists will attack from the Southeast. Reports suggest four divisions, each with an attacked regiment of rocket artillery. We must assume that the troops have moderate combat experience and leadership. In addition, they are supported by two more independent regiments of rocket artillery, as well as a brigade of light armor. Their goal will be to retake Smolensk, capture the airfield, and threaten the vital supply lines to our North. To achieve this, they must strike at the city from the southwest, punch through our defenses in the South, and then cross the Dnieper to strike at our forces in the north of the city. I don't like to say it, but they have the manpower to do it. They will arrive by early evening, it is likely that they will launch their attack at night. Check your Night Vision equipment. To defend against the Communist assault, we have mustered up several lines of defense.



"The trenches, represented by the red line, are even now being dug by your goodselves. They are lightly fortified with sandbags and will provide adequate cover and firing positions. The trenches are equipped mainly with light machine guns, and, in the east, some 2cm Flak emplacements, and manned by two Battalions of light Infantry. This" - he circled a section of trenchline "is where our Company is positioned. The attack to the east is likely to be fiercest, but we still have plenty of work ahead of us. The purpose of the trenchlines is to blunt the force of the Communist charge, to cause maximal casualties to the attacking force, while buying us some time. Blue indicates positions providing supportive fire to the preceding line of defense. Light and medium mortars will be stationed here, as well as a few light antitank guns. They will be supporting you as best they can, breaking up infantry formations and attempting to disable armor. Nevertheless, these positions will likely not last more than one or two hours, particularly when the enemy rocket artillery comes into play. You will not retreat without orders, however. Runners and radio operators will maintain the chain of command. When word is given, you will abandon the trenches and fall back in good order. Squads will cover each other, and the divisional artillery regiment will provide heavy fire to cover the retreat of each individual section as it falls back. All equipment used in defense of the trenchline must be evacuated, except for the Flak emplacements. Ammo for these is scarce, and they're ultimately too heavy to lug back into the city.

After evacuating, the company will maintain cohesion and fall back to the second line of defense, the green line. This consists of a series of buildings, roads and crossroads that have been fortified and barricaded. The majority of our Machine Guns, as well as some antitank guns will be deployed here, as well as an additional battalion's worth of infantry, to form a regiment. The purpose of the green line will be to further slow the communists, as well as taking advantage of the highly defensible city center. We estimate that, to advance, the communists will have to rely heavily on their artillery and light armor. If we can force them waste their force multipliers here, our later battles will be that much easier. The green line, should, initially, last the remainder of the night. Our antitank guns can deal with their light armor well enough, and the city will provide adequate cover from their rocket artillery. Additionally, support will be provided by divisional artillery and the light artillery of all three regiments. When the line threatens to break, it will gradually fall back, tightening its perimeter while maintaining cohesion. The infantry regiment will engage in house-to-house fighting as it falls back, in order to buy the light artillery, as well as the machine gun and antitank gun crews, time to evacuate their equipment across the Dnieper river, to the black line. As you retreat, you will be supported by an artillery barrage, as well as bombing and strafing by the Luftwaffe, to further slow the Communist forces.

Dark red indicates the beachhead. This will be held by elements of the third regiment, second battalion, poor bastards. They will act as a rearguard, to enable the retreating infantry to cross the river unmolested. It's lightly fortified, but hopefully won't need to hold for more than a half-hour. At this point, it will hopefully be light enough for them to recognize you, preventing friendly fire. When our regiment has crossed the river, they'll provide covering fire to them. they will blow up the remaining bridges as they cross.

Black represents our main line of defense. Red and Green will slow the Communists and force them to waste men and materiel overcoming our positions. But black is where we will hold them. They must cross the Dnieper here, and we will prevent that by any means possible. All of our equipment, and our three infantry regiments will be employed here. We must hold them. And... if we don't... The brown line indicates our last line of defense. If the black line is routed, assemble and reform here. Protect the airfield." The lieutenant paused for a moment. "You will receive more specific instructions during the operation itself, but... that should suffice, for now. Gentlemen, this will not be easy. The Communists are numerous, and we do not have enough bullets. We're trained to fight while low on supplies, but it still might not be enough. We're in a position of power, but outnumbered." Another pause "But despite all that, we must hold. Reinforcements are moving on our position from Kiev, but it might take a week or more for them to reach us. We hold that long. And if we cannot hold, then we must delay the Communists for as long as we can, to buy the resupply convoys time to reach the second army. The airfield, and the roads to the north, must remain in German hands to enable their survival. If the Second Army falls, the front around Smolesk breaks. And when the front breaks, Moskau slips from our grasp. We can't let that happen. So fight as you've never fought before. Hold the line. Make it happen, gentlemen. Dismissed."

As Remseck left the house and headed back to his squad, mulling over what he'd heard, he grinned despite himself. Whatever else happened tonight, one thing was sure. He was not going to get much sleep.

Octorok, so how're you gonna take on the americans?
 

ChupathingyX

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Jun 8, 2010
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Burninator said:
Spoilered for word count. This one doesn't include much action, but that will follow soon enough!
Consider this the calm before the storm.

Enjoy!

Blutrot und Edelweiss
Teil 1

The morning was cool, the sky overcast. Wind whistled through the rubble-lined alleys of Smolesnk as tired columns of soldiers, clad in the grey of the Wehrmacht, left their makeshift shelters and headed for the city outskirts. The night had not been restful for the 1. Alpendivision, but after 36 hours of vicious house-to-house fighting, a daring bayonet charge had finally seen the collapse of the remaining pocket of communist resistance in the city They had taken no prisoners. The division's orders were now to fortify and hold the city against enemy counterattack in order to secure the second army's rear and supply lines. Encirclement threatened, and scouting planes, based in the city's intact airfield, had spotted several divisions of communist infantry, supported by artillery and light armor, swinging around the second army's southern flank and approaching Smolnesk from the Southwest. Supplies and ammunition were low, the 9000-man division would soon be outnumbered, the second army was too heavily engaged to spare reinforcements, and the promised regiment of artillery had never arrived, leaving the Alpendivision with only light artillery and minimal antitank capabilities. But Smolnesk had to be held. No retreat. No surrender. Their orders were very clear on this.

And Gefreiter Otto Remseck and his squad, didn't like it any more than the rest of their Division. ?Shit! Help me with this!" Remseck looked up from the Nachtsichtgerät he was examining, to see Jgr. Hoffmann, standing in a trench, struggling with an MG 42 he was emplacing. The squad was fortifying a trench in the southern outskirts of the city, setting up sandbags and firing positions. The MG the squad had been assigned (carried by Hoffmann, whose rifle had been lost in the original attack on the city) had slipped in the soft mud, and threatened to slide into the trench. Jgr. Horn crouched at the edge of the trench to lend a hand, receiving a grin of thanks in return. Hoffmann and Horn were both new to the squad, having been assigned to them to replace two Comrades lost during the heavy mountain warfare of the Spanish Campaign. Both were only a few months out of training -the fight for Smolensk had been their first real battle- but they'd done well, this far, and they'd grown close in the time it took for the rest of the squad to accept them. Both showed good morale and cameraderie, untainted by the cynicism brought by years of soldiering, and were quick to learn from their more experienced squadmates.

Standing a few feet down the trench from Hoffmann was a tall, dark-haired soldier, putting down planks to provide better footing. Jgr. Richter had been with the Division from its creation in 1935, longer than even Remseck, but rumors of Slavic ancestry (though thoroughly disproven) had weakened his prospect for promotion, and he had been passed over. He bore no resentment, though; a very focused, intelligent solider who said no more than he needed to. A crack shot as well, and Remseck was thankful for it.

And finally, sitting next to him, there was a small, blond man, cleaning his rifle. His closest friend in the squad Jgr. Karl Brandt, they had spent the last five years training, fighting and drinking side-by-side. Remseck's promotion at the end of the spanish campaign hadn't changed their relationship, they still had each other's backs when it mattered, and gave each other shit at all other times.

To the squad's left and right, the remainder of their company was working on similar fortifications, forming a 300-yard line of shallow trenches on the Southern edge of the city. On either side of that line were further trenchlines, running around the southern and western edge of the city, manned by most of two battalions. The area was alive with soldiers carrying tools, materials and weapons, preparing their first line of defence. Behind them, in the ruins of the city proper, native labor was being employed to create further emplacements, shelters and fortifications. Mortars and light artillery were being set up, snipers and spotters took position. Many of the city's buildings and defenses had been bombed out by the Luftwaffe during the battle, but there were more than enough crossroads, alleys and windows to set up an adequate defence. The city would not come cheap to the communists.

Remseck returned to his Night Vision device. He had been providing covering fire when it had given out during the house-to-house fighting last night, leaving him blind and horribly unable to help his squad. He had strained his eyes in the dark for a while, looking for muzzle flashes to fire at, before advancing to find that the charge had been a success and the communists had been routed. The device was bulky and sometimes unreliable, but it still provided an enormous advantage during night fighting. He fiddled with the battery and grinned when he heard an electric whine as the blacklight turned on. He put it and his MP43 aside and stood up, stretching. He turned at the sound of footsteps and saw a platoon-level aide approaching. ?Corporal Remseck? Lieutenant Albrecht asks that you report to his field HQ for a briefing." Remseck frowned. ?But we were briefed this morning." ?Perhaps he wants to quiz you?" the aide, a corporal as well, gave a noncomittal shrug. ?Field HQ is on what used to be Volgosnek street. 300 metres."

Remseck gave him a nod and headed off, walking along a narrow road towards the city. The outskirts had been mere slums, wood huts, and had been almost totally destroyed in the bombardement, but the city proper had partially survived the battle. Craters were evident in the houses and roads, and several 2 and 3-story houses had collapsed altogether. The industrial district, near the river, in particular, had been shattered. The broken, bombed-out appearance, as well as the absence of civillian movement, gave Remseck the impression of a ghost town. Not that the city was deserted, though, far from it. While many of its residents had evacuated, fleeing the german advances, many more hadn't gotten out. Some of those had been conscripted to help fortify their city, the rest were confined to their homes on pain of death.

Remseck was pulled from his musing by a pothole in the road, stumbling, almost falling. He shook his head sharply, irritated at his own lack of focus. He hadn't slept for far too long, but that was no reason to let his mind wander. He increased his pace, reaching Volgosnek street after another minute, and, hearing German voices from a house on his left, stepped inside. He found himself standing face-to-face with his Platoon Lieutenant, Josef Albrecht. He blinked in surprise, and, after a moment, remembering himself (he really, really needed some sleep) and snapped off a hasty salute. Albrecht acknowledged him with a nod and turned back to the table, around which Remseck's fellow corporals stood, examining a map of the city. Remseck wasn't sure about the Lieutenant. Judging from what he'd heard, he was fresh-faced and green behind the ears, having only joined the division late in the Spanish campaign, but some men rumored that he'd been assigned to covert operations ever since the start of the war. He certainly seemed competent, and quite self-assured, but apparent competence could be deceiving, and he hadn't necessarily earned his confidence. Albrecht's voice cut through his speculation and he realized he'd let his mind wander again.

?As I was saying, Corporal Remseck, this, you've been called here because the briefing you've received this morning was admittedly rushed. We've now received improved intelligence and managed to work out a coordinated battle plan." Albrecht gestured to the map. ?The Communists will attack from the Southeast. Reports suggest four divisions, each with an attacked regiment of rocket artillery. We must assume that the troops have moderate combat experience and leadership. In addition, they are supported by two more independent regiments of rocket artillery, as well as a brigade of light armor. Their goal will be to retake Smolensk, capture the airfield, and threaten the vital supply lines to our North. To achieve this, they must strike at the city from the southwest, punch through our defenses in the South, and then cross the Dnieper to strike at our forces in the north of the city. I don't like to say it, but they have the manpower to do it. They will arrive by early evening, it is likely that they will launch their attack at night. Check your Night Vision equipment. To defend against the Communist assault, we have mustered up several lines of defense.

http://imgur.com/26ZFB

The trenches, represented by the red line, are even now being dug by your goodselves. They are lightly fortified with sandbags and will provide adequate cover and firing positions. The trenches are equipped mainly with light machine guns, and, in the east, some 2cm Flak emplacements, and manned by two Battalions of light Infantry. This" - he circled a section of trenchline" is where our Company is positioned. The attack to the east is likely to be fiercest, but we still have plenty of work ahead of us. The purpose of the trenchlines is to blunt the force of the Communist charge, to cause maximal casualties to the attacking force, while buying us some time. Blue indicates positions providing supportive fire to the preceding line of defense. Light and medium mortars will be stationed here, as well as a few light antitank guns. They will be supporting you as best they can, breaking up infantry formations and attempting to disable armor. Nevertheless, these positions will likely not last more than one or two hours, particularly when the enemy rocket artillery comes into play. You will not retreat without orders, however. Runners and radio operators will maintain the chain of command. When word is given, you will abandon the trenches and fall back in good order. Squads will cover each other, and the divisional artillery regiment will provide heavy fire to cover the retreat of each individual section as it falls back. All equipment used in defense of the trenchline must be evacuated, except for the Flak emplacements. Ammo for these is scarce, and they're ultimately too heavy to lug back into the city.

After evacuating, the company will maintain cohesion and fall back to the second line of defense, the green line. This consists of a series of buildings, roads and crossroads that have been fortified and barricaded. The majority of our Machine Guns, as well as some antitank guns will be deployed here, as well as an additional battalion's worth of infantry, to form a regiment. The purpose of the green line will be to further slow the communists, as well as taking advantage of the highly defensible city center. We estimate that, to advance, the communists will have to rely heavily on their artillery and light armor. If we can force them waste their force multipliers here, our later battles will be that much easier. The green line, should, initially, last the remainder of the night. Our antitank guns can deal with their light armor well enough, and the city will provide adequate cover from their rocket artillery. Additionally, support will be provided by divisional artillery and the light artillery of all three regiments. When the line threatens to break, it will gradually fall back, tightening its perimeter while maintaining cohesion. The infantry regiment will engage in house-to-house fighting as it falls back, in order to buy the light artillery, as well as the machine gun and antitank gun crews, time to evacuate their equipment across the Dnieper river, to the black line. As you retreat, you will be supported by an artillery barrage, as well as bombing and strafing by the Luftwaffe, to further slow the Communist forces.

Dark red indicates the beachhead. This will be held by elements of the third regiment, second battalion, poor bastards. They will act as a rearguard, to enable the retreating infantry to cross the river unmolested. It's lightly fortified, but hopefully won't need to hold for more than a half-hour. At this point, it will hopefully be light enough for them to recognize you, preventing friendly fire. When our regiment has crossed the river, they'll provide covering fire to them. they will blow up the remaining bridges as they cross.

Black represents our main line of defense. Red and Green will slow the Communists and force them to waste men and materiel overcoming our positions. But black is where we will hold them. They must cross the Dnieper here, and we will prevent that by any means possible. All of our equipment, and our three infantry regiments will be employed here. We must hold them. And... if we don't... The brown line indicates our last line of defense. If the black line is routed, assemble and reform here. Protect the airfield." The lieutenant paused for a moment. ?You will receive more specific orders during the operation itself, but... that should suffice, for now. Gentlemen, this will not be easy. The Communists are numerous, and we do not have enough bullets. We're trained to fight while low on supplies, but it still might not be enough. We're in a position of power, but outnumbered." Another pause ?But despite all that, we must hold. Reinforcements are moving on our position from Kiev, but it might take a week or more for them to reach us. We hold that long. And if we cannot hold, then we must delay the Communists for as long as we can, to buy the resupply convoys time to reach the second army. The airfield, and the roads to the north, must remain in German hands to enable their survival. If the Second Army falls, the front around Smolesk breaks. And when the front breaks, Moskau slips from our grasp. We can't let that happen. So fight as you've never fought before. Hold the line. Make it happen, gentlemen. Dismissed."

As Remseck left the house and headed back to his squad, mulling over what he'd heard, he grinned despite himself. Whatever else happened tonight, one thing was sure. He was not going to get much sleep.

Octorok, so how're you gonna take on the americans?
This is a cool addition to the LP, good job.

However, one obvious flaw are the Asian characters. Also when putting images make sure to put [ img] before and [/img ] (without the spaces) after it so that it actually shows as an image. However, that link/image seems to be broken either way and won't show.
 

HK_01

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That whole "I don't want Romania, Hungaria, etc because the Soviets will just walk over them" reminded me of what happened in a game of mine, and it was awesome.

I had those guys join the Axis at their request, then not 24 hours later Romania declared war on the Soviet Union in the name of the entire Axis without me being ready for it at all. In fact, I had been preparing for an invasion of Britain at the time and the majority of my troops were in France.
In any case, I miraculously managed to hold the line against the Russian assaults, but, of course, my Allies weren't, so the Russian took the entire Balkans (almost) down to Greece. This looked like a disaster, but it was also a huge opportunity. I just used my tank forces and cut them right off at the original border, trapping well over half of the Red Army in the Balkans, where they were woefully short on supplies and not really a match for my forces. They had nowhere to run to and the giant cauldron was slowly closed by my troops and all these forces were utterly destroyed. Really made the war a lot easier.
Unfortunately, the Russians decided that they don't really want to surrender so I had to trudge all the way to the Pacific (to the Japanese, who had pushed all the way to Africa and with whom I was at war with - yes, it was weird) and that took a long time because my supply lines were completely overstretched.

Edit: This was Arsenal of Democracy by the way, not Hearts of Iron 3.
 

Fat Hippo

Prepare to be Gnomed
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May 29, 2009
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Cool text, Burninator, you're really bringing the battle of Smolensk to life. Looking forward to the second one! And to the next entry from Octorok as well, of course.
 

Burninator

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Yay, thanks for the feedback! Visiting family right now, but I'll finish up part 2 when I get a spare minute or 90.

And for those interested, hearts of iron is available on steam for something like 60% off right now. Bought the complete pack for 12 Euro.

Man, Paradox entertainment should really be sponsoring Octo.

Edit: Oh, and I managed to fix the chinese characters. Apparently the escapist can't recognize a bunch of german characters, so some weird stuff happened. Nevermind.

Oh, and the image wasn't broken, I just wasn't sure how image tags worked here, so I linked to it! Thanks for the explanation, though. Map is courtesy of google earth, hope it helps.
 

BrotherSurplice

ENEMY MAN
Apr 17, 2011
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Fantastic achievement mate! I drank a toast to your victory (although I don't drink alcohol, so I contented myself with coca cola).



I imagine this was your reaction on victory:
 

Octorok

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May 28, 2009
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Notice : Well, with Christmas well and truly celebrated (and all associated hangovers recovered from), we can return to our regular broadcast.

I'll work on a new entry today.

Also - Hearts of Iron 3 is now on a 75% off sale on Steam, if anybody wants to get it.
 

Octorok

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Another Notice : Sorry about the delay. For some reason, random files are disappearing from my game folder. I've verified the game cache a bunch, but it doesn't actually do anything after telling me that I'm missing over 2000 files.

The save games are safe (I think), but I'm going to have to redownload the game.

With my internet speeds, this may be some time...

I know it's a bit crappy that I made you wait this long during holiday celebrations, then dumped this on you, but it won't be much longer now.
 

Octorok

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Further Update : Technical difficulties persist. Still. I have my saves rescued, that's one thing, but even after a complete reinstallation, it's still giving me guff.

I'll keep you informed of any new developments.
 

Octorok

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AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! YES! RISE, BELOVED LET'S PLAY, FROM THE PIT OF TECHNICAL ERRORS.

[HEADING=2]Entry 15 - Desert Sands[/HEADING]

Wow. I mean... Wow. Upon further viewing, I was unbelievably lucky that the Soviet Union chose to surrender when they did.

If they'd have fought for just 30 more days, I'd have lost the war.

At the time they surrendered, my army was stretched completely to breaking point. Even if the weather had been perfect, I couldn't have advanced one inch further, and if you notice the date - early October. Just the start of the Russian Winter. If they'd held into December, I really could not have held the line around Moscow, and even Moscow itself could not be supplied properly.

Also, the Allies had just invaded Iraq with an extremely large force, easily large enough to go through Turkey and cut off the armies in the Caucasus.

I didn't show you this, but the Russians actually were just starting to win the war again as they surrendered. In the South/Centre they had pushed me all the way back out past Kiev and Minsk, and you saw that they'd pushed me out of the Crimea.

Lastly, you saw their army. It was larger in October than it was in April, despite 2 million casualties. Around the time my attack had frozen, the Allies had cut off Turkey, and I'd lost all gains South of Moscow, those Reds would have encircled and destroyed my poor bastard troops around Moscow and Stalingrad.

Be it by divine intervention or sheer dumb luck, in the aftermath of the greatest land battle in human history, Germany stands astride the world, stronger than before.


There's no time to lose. I begin (perhaps a little late) building a vast naval complex on Iceland, to allow a large landing in Canada/British-held North America.


On the theme of moving swiftly, I pull back a quarter of a million men to Iraq to halt the Allied tide, and hopefully to push the Allies out of this area of the Middle East altogether.


Another quarter million to Southern Europe.


With a forced Soviet peace, I've saved the remnants of the Japanese Army at the final possible hour.

That one province is Japanese Korea.


Weirdly, where one Imperial Japanese door closes, another opens.

Having lost Manchuria and Korea, the Japanese have invaded French Indochina instead.


Bugger. The Allies retake Baghdad. I say "Allies" rather pointedly, because that force is not pure British. It is, in fact, Canadian, American, Australian, New Zealander, British, Indian, South African, French, Polish, Belgian, Dutch, Spanish and Iraqi.


The first ships of my new "Grand Fleet" arrive. I'll need to establish complete naval dominance of the Atlantic to take North America, and to facilitate this, I'm building the largest navy in history.


THANKS. THAT'S GREAT, GUYS.

My brave Italian allies flee from Iraq without ever even meeting the Allies in battle. Further proof that, had the Soviets given in, I'd have been screwed in my geographical rear.


I can choose between keeping the Maginot Line, and mildy (really, extremely mildly) boosting the Atlantic Wall.

I don't know what the game has against the Maginot Line, but in terms of economics, the 9 levels of fort I'd lose are not at all worth the 1 level of Coastal Fort I'd gain.

Easy decision.


I continue my attack on Africa once more, happily just taking the largely undefended colonial territories of France, Spain and Britain.


Half a million men back to France.


Yet another new transport fleet. I can't really "ferry" troops the way I did in Sealion in the US. I'll need to be able to transport a large enough force to whatever point I invade to hold several large ports against counterattack.

In layman's terms - I'ma need a buttload of boats.


I land 60,000 Marines in Sweden, taking their military by surprise and seizing Stockholm.


New Year's Eve, 1943 - the thunder of thousands of guns lights up the desert sky as I begin my attack on the Allied force in Iraq.


Numbers and technology are on my side, coupled with the fact that the large density of different nations in the Allied force fragments their command structure, leaving their men uncoordinated.


In Sweden, they begin to attack German-held Denmark. I put a stop to this in the traditional manner - Paratroopers from Russia are flown back to Rostock, and then deployed behind Swedish lines.


And now we're at war with China. Outstanding.

I don't doubt that I can beat them, but their vast reserves of manpower will really bog down my invasion of India.


Welp. The Swedes don't have much going for them in numbers or equipment, but they're hardy fighters, and they push back my men in various places, repelling an attack on Göteborg and encircling some Marine divisions on their way to Swedish cities.

Time for fresh forces.


The Soviet Union combats an enemy closer to its level.

Actually, I kid about it, but they still have that crazy large army (even if they lack the industry to supply it).


Paradrop works well, if with unpleasantly high casualties.


The Allies have now been beaten out of German Iraq, back into the British province of Kuwait.


Finally, with the coastal cities secured and my men working their way inland, the Swedish surrender.


I now have achieved such total dominance that, for all intents and purposes, I have "won".

Well, it's been fun, seeya!


Ahahahaha, just kidding. There's no chance of me ending this at least before I've finally forced the fucking British to surrender.

They resisted my occupation for a year, encouraged uprisings in every country under my rule, intervened in seemingly EVERY GODDAMN CAMPAIGN I EVER FOUGHT, and invaded absolutely everywhere they could while I was busy elsewhere, despite the fact that I beat them years ago.


In a two-week long battle along a 50km front, 156,000 Allied troops surrender to the crack Desert Rats of my 3rd and 6th Armies.


The British immediately attempt to retake the province from the sea. It's a wide front to cover, and my men have no real defences against ships, but it mostly goes my way.

The information I gather is good, though. I know that the British have access to at least 200,000 men, predominantly infantry.


They simultaneously invade the North coast of Denmark. Somehow.


They are repelled from the beaches in Kuwait.


They do, however, land in force in Spain. I lack the men in the area to really do anything, and they seem to lack the men and supplies to get further into Spain.

I'll go get some more men and encircle these guys.


I have now taken a large portion of colonial West Africa, now putting the idea in my head of a potential invasion of Brazil.

It's half the distance to Brazil from Africa than Iceland to Canada, and probably not as well defended.

It's not a certain plan, but an idea I'll keep in my mind for now. I'm not much closer to an invasion of North America, but hey, at least I'm not under the threat of destruction, and I'm still a little shocked at how quickly the Soviets surrendered.


A map of the world showing only the German Empire. From the Indian Ocean to Greenland, from the Sahara to Baltic Sea, we are close to true hegemony.

END OF ENTRY 15
 

Ilikemilkshake

New member
Jun 7, 2010
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Congratz on Winning :D
It would have been interesting to see where your game would have went were the Victory Points system not so easily exploitable with paratroopers but oh well.

As for your plan to invade Brazil, it should be very easy if you can negotiate the terrain. Tech-Wise they suck, so unless they've licensed their armour, aircraft etc from another nation you'll have no trouble and should put you in a good position to invade the US.
 

Octorok

New member
May 28, 2009
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Ilikemilkshake said:
Congratz on Winning :D
It would have been interesting to see where your game would have went were the Victory Points system not so easily exploitable with paratroopers but oh well.

As for your plan to invade Brazil, it should be very easy if you can negotiate the terrain. Tech-Wise they suck, so unless they've licensed their armour, aircraft etc from another nation you'll have no trouble and should put you in a good position to invade the US.
You know, I only found out *after* I'd done 14 entries of this that Paratroopers were known to be overpowered, and you can use them to preposterous effect on Victory Provinces.

I just... never really bothered using them before. I was never in a position where (I thought) Paratroopers were helpful, until this LP, when I thought it would be cool to take the Maginot Line instead of going through the Low Countries.

It sounds stupid, but I stumbled into the Paratrooper strategy by mistake, and I feel kinda bad now.

I feel like I cheated to win half my victories.
 

worldruler8

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Aug 3, 2010
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Oh, it's not that they're overpowered units, it's that your paratroopers were true Germans! You can't beat that! And I can't wait till you take out America. And speaking as an American, that almost felt treasonous...
 

Melon Hunter

Chief Procrastinator
May 18, 2009
914
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So now you've technically achieved victory, where now for the all-conquering German hoards? America? Canada? Brazil? Perhaps the ineffectual Italians will be forced to bend knee to their former allies? Or perhaps even that last bastion of freedom in Western Europe, the unconquered, the mighty... Portugal?
 

Fat Hippo

Prepare to be Gnomed
Legacy
May 29, 2009
1,991
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Yeah, just keep going till 1948 or whenever it ends, we want to see you kick some more ass!
 

Octorok

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May 28, 2009
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worldruler8 said:
Oh, it's not that they're overpowered units, it's that your paratroopers were true Germans! You can't beat that! And I can't wait till you take out America. And speaking as an American, that almost felt treasonous...
At least, since I can't use many Paratroopers, the battle for America should be interesting.
Melon Hunter said:
So now you've technically achieved victory, where now for the all-conquering German hoards? America? Canada? Brazil? Perhaps the ineffectual Italians will be forced to bend knee to their former allies? Or perhaps even that last bastion of freedom in Western Europe, the unconquered, the mighty... Portugal?
Well, current targets include : Yugoslavia, Albania, Norway, Finland, Portugal (Italy is in my faction, so I can't fight them), India, Arabia, possibly parts of China/Southeast Asia, Australia, the Dutch East Indies, Africa, possibly the rest of the Soviet Union, all of North and South America.

Oh, and Madagascar. THEN THE MOON.
Fat_Hippo said:
Yeah, just keep going till 1948 or whenever it ends, we want to see you kick some more ass!
Just watch me lose the whole Empire to Luxemburgian Rebels.
 

Burninator

New member
Jun 3, 2011
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Yessssss update! Very nice. Mopping up and all. Your plan so far seems pretty good. My advice to take out china would be to try to go naval on their asses as well, if you can. Many of their major cities should be on the coast, if you can land enough forces, maybe you can force a quick surrender? Dunno how they're set up, but blunt force would probably be bad! Other than than, I agree with your strategy. Finish taking Europe and Africa, push the british back in india so that you might have a passage to all of asia. Build a nice navy, don't lose sight of the soviets, you should be fine.

Stay the hell away from Madagascar, though. Playing Pandemic 2 has taught me that, whatever you do, you do not wanna fuck with Madagascar.

Oh, and definitely play as long as you can. Without nukes, if possible!

Anyway! Still working on Edelweiß, I've got a huge outline written up which I just need to flesh out now. Next chapter tomorrow, promise. But I just got off a 13-hour flight, so I need some sleeeeeeeep.

Edit: And in regards to rebellions, man, I hope you're not forgetting about Poland!
It'd actually be pretty hilarious if the middle eastern melting pot of allied forces included some poles.
 

tonysands1

New member
Feb 23, 2011
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Good thread, although now you're in the "Post-Barbarossa" blues. I had this so many times in HOI2, once Barbarossa/Great Patriotic War was finished, nothing else was ever fun enough to compare to the long saga of attacking the Soviet Union/Germans.

This thread has inspired me to finally jump onto HOI3 so here's to that when it comes! Bought the "HOI3 Collection" on Amazon, all the DLC/sprite packs etc, all for £10.99! £24.99 on Steam!
 

BrotherSurplice

ENEMY MAN
Apr 17, 2011
196
0
0
Wow. From Greenland to Kuwait, from Freetown to Archangelsk, the Thousand Year Reich surely cannot be stopped now! [sub]Touch wood[/sub]

As for next targets, I recommend either India or North America. Or, you could finish conquering all that (probably) empty territory in Africa. Why are so many people suggesting Brazil? Has it got good resources? Could it become a large threat? Does it have large stocks of bacon?

Also, why didn't you build a naval base in Greenland? It would have been closer to mainland North America.

tonysands1 said:
"Post-Barbarossa" blues
Oh god, someone HAS to make a song with that title.