(07-11-2014, 03:48 PM)ComradeP Wrote: Interesting post.
You can completely block LOS to the artillery units by placing two smoke rounds south of them (as in, 1 in each hex 1 hex below their positions). The central hex in between them is also forested, so it blocks LOS.
Yes, this will work too.
There are many variations for
the use of smoke.
The downside for
the Soviet units in this action is
the smoke is being placed directly next to
the Soviet guns, blinding
them. This a big advantage to
the panzers who will be able to rush
the Soviet positions without any fear of defensive fire until
they are point blank with
the Soviet guns (adjacent hexes). While
the artillery pieces might get off a shot when
the panzers appear right on top of
them,
the fire
from the panzers in
their turn will be most destructive. Better to place
the smoke out a small ways so that supporting units to
the gun position would be able to open up on
the advancing panzers.
A neat tactic is to place a defensive unit
then have hidden units nearby to fire on approaching enemy attackers who only some of your force.
The possibilities are enormous.
These types of tactics were used historically by
the Soviets at Kursk. Panzer commander to Commad HQ: "It looks like we have broken through and can roll straight over
the few disorganized defenders fleeing in
front of us." Loud explosions are heard.
The radio connection goes to static back at command HQ. Hello? Hello?
(07-11-2014, 03:48 PM)ComradeP Wrote: The artillery units in your example are hidden until they fire due to the terrain they are in (they would also be hidden if they switch to T mode, provided they're not spotted whilst doing so). Screening them with smoke is primarily useful for allowing them to switch to T mode and either move out of their hex in the same turn or the next.
It is implicitly assumed for
the purpose of this demonstration that
the forward guns were spotted when
the panzers cleared
the ridge.
There is a recon unit in
the panzer line. I did not explicitly call this one out. Sorry if that confuses some people.
There are several o
ther ways to have spotted
these guns by
the time
the panzers reach this area if you wish to confine your thinking to recognizing where I took
the screen shot
from. I am speaking more broadly about concepts and general tactics. I did mention in my post "
the panzers are staring at
the your positions".?
(07-11-2014, 03:48 PM)ComradeP Wrote: It's important to keep in mind that LOS is a cone of sorts, so units can see around "corners" in the sense that their LOS is not limited to straight or diagonal lines from their hexrow. That makes placing smoke further away from the units you want to screen/blind less efficient.
Not necessarily....OS follows
the center of
the hexes
or the side of the hexes. LOS is not so block like as you describe.
When
the visibility shoots up on a warm July day in 1943 over
the open Steppes, you can see for four to five Km. To be dogmatic in doctrine and always place smoke adjacent to
the enemy can
then protect
the enemy
from your defensive fire. One has to weigh
the merits of placement based on
the situation. Consider LOS with o
ther units who can direct artillery fire, direct fire opportunities
from long range guns etc.
As an example, one might want to screen a stack of panzers
from seeing a movement of T-34s moving
from one dead ground position to ano
ther. Placing smoke, (if
the guns firing
the smoke have enough range) directly next to
the panzers may ruin
the chance to direct fire on those same panzers later in
the turn by o
ther forces. Such close proximity of smoke rounds to
the enemy units throws away
the point you make above about 'a cone of visibility'.
The smoke rounds create
their own shadow cones too. I recommend people open a game file, push some units around to create a contrived but possible situation
then experiment with dropping smoke in different places to see
the LOS effects. Or you can get a pad, pencil and straight edge and do
the geometry off line. But that is not as much fun.
(07-11-2014, 03:48 PM)ComradeP Wrote: In some cases, units in clear terrain that have not moved are also hidden (up to a certain distance it seems). I'm not entirely sure how that rule works yet. In the Ozerovskii scenario, the same one as in the first example, the Soviet light tanks that function as triggers for their tank brigades spot my units before I can spot them, even though the light tank units are also in clear terrain. A special visibility rule might apply to Fixed units in clear terrain, I might've missed it.
No
there is no special visibility rule. This works
the same as it does in Squad Battles.
The rational is
the same.
The ability of a phasing unit to immediately have enemy units in LOS visible at
the end of
the unit's movement in PzC is not used at
the Panzer Battles scale.
The PzC visibility is based on two factors.
- A PzC daylight turn is two hours long. Plenty of time to identify enemy units.
- Units in PzC are huge when compared to single small T-70s or armored cars sitting quietly observing the terrain in front of them as in Panzer Battles. In PzC a full battalion or company can be seen regardless of terrain it is in. At the PzB scale this had to be altered to reflect the distances and size of the units.
The point made here is use historical tactics of
the period. Recon units in
the Panzer Battles games are very valuable assets, not just secondary units to run around 'bumping' into
the enemy as
they are used in PzC by some players.
The recon units should proceed
the main force when marching over long distances that are in some of
the scenarios like
the Ozerovskii scenario. This might mean
they are out
there, on
their own, a full turn or half turn ahead of
the main force. Such is
the risk of being in
the recon business in 1943 Russia.
March blindly without using recon units provided and see
the results of that command decision.
I hope this post expands
the discussion in this thread.
Dog Soldier
Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything.
- Wyatt Earp