• Blitz Shadow Player
  • Caius
  • redboot
  • Rules
  • Chain of Command
  • Members
  • Supported Ladders & Games
  • Downloads


France '14 Update 1.03 Released
03-28-2014, 07:19 AM, (This post was last modified: 03-28-2014, 07:34 AM by Volcano Man.)
#21
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
Yes, I have seen them recover as well, but I think a lot has to do with your organization and the original unit quality. If you have a poor quality unit that is broken, and is detached, and its HQ is also broken, never in command, always in T mode, etc, then in that case I think the unit may never recover. This wouldn't be a bug though, because it is intentional that the FWWC series is very strict in regards to chain of command (and its penalties).

That said, if you have a situation where they never recover then by all means send me a test scenario so I can confirm that is what it is (ie. by design, because of abysmal units and a bad state of its chain of command).

(03-28-2014, 12:56 AM)Xaver Wrote: A little question Volcanoman, you are going to use in WWI serie the fanatic nation rule from PzC engine??? maybe in some defensive units and elite units is interesting.

Hmm, good question. I have been out of touch with the PzC series lately, since working on FWWC, I will have to look into that and whether it would be be applicable. I assume the most recent PzC has this feature?

EDIT:

I found it. It doesn't appear to be something that is in use in PzC at the moment, but rather a planned feature if I am not mistaken.

I don 't think this fanatical rule would be useful to the FWWC series, unless/until there is Verdun 1916 game, or a title that also cover the Gallipoli campaign (Ottomans would have it there). But there is some time until that ever comes to pass, but yes, once we get to that point I think the rule would be useful in the FWWC series too. Big Grin

(There is your one hint I guess, the upcoming game will be neither of those). Whistle
Send this user an email
Quote this message in a reply
03-29-2014, 12:02 AM,
#22
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
(03-22-2014, 01:04 PM)Compass Rose Wrote: HPS just released France '14 update v1.03.

The update includes:

Changes to France '14 V1.03

- New Wireless Intercept feature similar to modern Electronic Warfare
added.

I checked all of the PDT files in v1.03 and the Wireless Intercept parameter in all of them is set to zero which according to the User Manual means the feature is not enabled in any of the scenarios. Does anybody know the feature was introduced but not in effect? IS it only intended for use in newly designed scenarios?
Quote this message in a reply
03-29-2014, 02:09 AM,
#23
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
Well, the fanatical rule in WWI has limited use... and needs be used only in certain units... i think that this rule as you say helps in battles like Verdun or Gallipoli where you need prevent units in positions with hard defensive value be destroyed to fast, in some battles certain positions was hold in bad situations even cut off and i think in future titles we are going to see smaller units (maybe company level or lower???) and sure more bunkers in the line with trenches as strong points.

To be fair i prefer battles with movement, maybe this is why i like see a Tannenberg title or one covering middle east specially Meggido where what ifs could be very fun... stronger central powers (more infantry, german troops or cavalry), use of armor, extra troops in both sides...

Lets see what we have this year at least we are going to talk about serie with 2 titles hehehe.
Quote this message in a reply
03-29-2014, 09:32 AM,
#24
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
(03-29-2014, 12:02 AM)Doctor Wrote: I checked all of the PDT files in v1.03 and the Wireless Intercept parameter in all of them is set to zero which according to the User Manual means the feature is not enabled in any of the scenarios. Does anybody know the feature was introduced but not in effect? IS it only intended for use in newly designed scenarios?
Yes like the Fanatical feature in PzC this new feature is now available for possible future use in new titles in the series but has no effect on existing titles.

The introduction of the fanatical rule in PzC started debate about how the rule might be used in future PzC titles and it is possible the Wireless Intercept parameter will do the same for FWWC.
Quote this message in a reply
03-29-2014, 09:55 AM,
#25
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
(03-29-2014, 09:32 AM)Foul. Wrote: The introduction of the fanatical rule in PzC started debate about how the rule might be used in future PzC titles and it is possible the Wireless Intercept parameter will do the same for FWWC.

Can you please give an example of what would be considered "wireless" in the 1914-1918 era? I would think everything would be "wired" as "wireless" technology did not exist back then.

Thanks
Quote this message in a reply
03-29-2014, 10:56 AM,
#26
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
By 1914, radio communications, or wireless telegraphy as these communications were then known, were used by the world's military and naval forces. The relationships of frequency or wavelength, power, directivity and range were not well understood. Signals officers and commanders in the field and at headquarters rarely took into account the possibility of interception, or deception. The troops and sailors of the European nations soon bore the costs of such negligence.

In 1914 British radio operators organized as the basis of the Royal Navy radio intercept service, feeding traffic to Admiralty Room 40 for cryptanalysis and providing the foundation for the World War One success of British Intelligence:

Maurice Wright became a Marconi engineer in England in 1912 (and was later Engineer in Chief). Wright experimented with the then new triode vacuum tube in a radio receiving circuit in 1914. Two days before the outbreak of hostilities in August of 1914, he received German wireless traffic. He worked with Captain H. J. Round, (later a colleague and supporter of Major E. H. Armstrong after America entered the war). Their circuit details are lost to time, but it was undoubtedly a regenerative configuration, for it "made the interception of long range communications possible for the first time" as later reported by Peter Wright, Maurice's son, later a high official in the British Counter Intelligence Service (MI-5).

Working at his lab at Marconi at Chelmsford, Wright realized he was listening to the German Navy. He got the intercepts to Captain Reggie Hall of Naval Intelligence. Hall realized the bonanza in his hands, and put Wright to work building a chain of intercept stations for the Admiralty. Wright and Round also developed aperiodic direction finding techniques to track the German fleet, proving sufficient warning for the British fleet to engage it on the high seas. In the process, Wright established a clandestine intercept station in Norway in 1915.

The intercept stations set up in this effort were known as the "Y" stations. Marconi receiving stations, British Post Office stations and an Admiralty "police" station all provided intercepts to Hall's Room 40 codebreakers. These stations were soon joined by enthusiastic amateurs. Barrister Russell Clarke and Col. Richard Hippisley had been logging intercepts of German traffic at their amateur stations in London and Wales. They so reported, and went to work for Hall. New intercept stations soon went up on the coast. Soon practically all German naval wireless traffic also found its way to Room 40.

The German high power long wave station at Norddeich provided fodder for the codebreakers through the Y stations, which also soon turned to higher frequency interception as well. In 1915 these intercepts helped the British to win the naval battle at Dogger Bank, and played vital roles in later naval engagements.

The direction finding stations working under Round also provided intercepts to Room 40.The directionals tracked U-boats and Zeppelins as well as naval craft.

The Y station intercepts showed that the 1915 sinking of the Lusitania had the approval of the German high command, despite its denials.

The leading history of the astonishing success of British intelligence in the First World War concludes: "[the] Y stations made it all possible." The most famous intercept of all was the infamous 1917 Zimmerman Telegram that brought America into the war. Germany promised Mexico it could have back the territory it lost in the Mexican American War, if it would join Germany against the United States.
Snatched from the ether by intercept stations and decrypted by Room 40, it enraged Americans.

As early as November, 1914 there had been a call in the British press for the use of private wireless stations to monitor for spy transmissions out of England. (SIGINT, 46). While there is no evidence ofany wireless transmission of espionage out of England in that war, the demand of the amateur radio fraternity to be useful was met, and the system that would be so effective in the next war was foreshadowed.

The British Navy successfully intercepted wireless messages on the high seas as well. In an outstanding feat of codebreaking, Signal Officer Charles Stuart of the cruiser Glasgow determined that the German cruiser Dresden would coal at Juan Fernandez Island (Robinson Crusoe's old second home) off Chile, from deciphering an intercept from the Nauen Telefunken station.

British intelligence also sent Sir Hercules Langrishe and A.E.W. Mason to destroy the German station in Mexico at Ixtapalpa in 1918. This Mason did by smashing its Audions, putting the German agent Herr Jahnke out of business.

The success of British Army signals units in intercepting German wireless traffic convinced British commanders that wireless was too dangerous to use. The signals units thus turned almost exclusively to monitroing and intercept work. (SIGINT, 54)

Imperial German army interception of Russian wireless traffic leads to the decisive German 1914 victory at Tannenberg, blunting the Russian advance west:

The Russian Army used wireless to coordinate its campaigns. It took perhaps no precautions against interception and did not encode its traffic. In 1914, the Germans won the decisive battle of Tannenberg against the Russians. The Germans had all of the Russian traffic in hand and readable, overheard by the German radio station at Thorn, and in Koenigsberg in East Prussia. While the Germans may not have made as much use of this traffic as its importance would dictate, Generals Paul von Hindenberg and Erich Ludendorff could and likely did know as much about what the Russians would do as they did themselves. Tannenberg showed how important intercepts could be, and the Germans set up wireless intercept stations on all fronts. Yet the intercepts had gone to Hindenberg by motorcycle at the personal initiative of the chief of the Thorn station, and the whole effort began as an amateur and even sporting endeavor of the operators with time on their hands.

Tactical intercepts by all belligerent signal services provide important battlefield intelligence, but radio deception becomes a weapon:

In early September, 1914 the Russians intercepted a message from German Army Staff Headquarters from which the Russians inferred a threat from a new large force, and therefore held back forces of their own in the upcoming battle. The German Eighth Army staff, however, anticipating interception, had transmitted in plain text from its station at Koenigsberg the completely false message. Radio deception thus began to play its counterpoint to radio interception at the commencement of the festivities. The Germans used radio deception again successfully within weeks.

The Battle of Tannenberg taught the Germans the value of their nascent intercept efforts. The Russian traffic was read from August 1914 to the close of 1915. OneRussian General officer termed the Russians use of plain text and failure to take precautions "unpardonable negligence." (Flick, 10). The Austrians had integrated their intercept service into their Chancellery cryptographic section at the beginning of the war. (Flicke, 14). They regularly intercepted and decrypted Russian traffic all throughout the war.

The Germans made in the West the very errors from which they profited in the East. The French even before the war strove to intercept relevant traffic. At the beginning of the war in the West, the Germans sought to thrust into France to defeat the French armies east of Paris. The French had the whole order of battle by radio intercepts, and up to the minute tactical intelligence. Just as the Russian thrust failed in the East for want of radio discipline, so to the German thrust in the West turned to defeat at the Battle of the Marne for exactly the same reasons.
Quote this message in a reply
03-30-2014, 10:24 PM, (This post was last modified: 03-30-2014, 10:37 PM by Tide1.)
#27
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
And there you have it. Good little article thanks Lord Foul Helmet Smile Come to think of it the Titanic had the new fangled wireless Marconi so it would of been in wide use by 1914.
Quote this message in a reply
03-30-2014, 10:42 PM,
#28
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
Actually I should make it clear that the info in that post was someone else work and not mine. Wink
Quote this message in a reply
03-30-2014, 11:15 PM, (This post was last modified: 03-30-2014, 11:16 PM by -72-.)
#29
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
... knowing the scale of the Gallipoli area I would find it difficult to believe that you could do scenarios at the FWWC level - the area fought over would have been comparable to say ... Okinawa.

[Image: gallipoli-cruise-battlefields-map.jpg]

Or in other words- the British sector during the initial landings (iow not Suvla Bay), looks to be about 5 km across at its historically furthest extent - Krithia.

ANZAC Cove - it looks like it is about 2 km to Lone Pine .. sure it is a fair whack from both initial areas where landings occurred on 25/04/1915 - but what was there in reality? I guess you can make an argument that ANZAC Cove was not actually supposed to be where the ANZACs landed ... it was something like a mile to the south.

I guess you can vary the scale - but it seems like a challenge to make work.

Gallipoli was a lot about bluff as well -as Mustafa Kamal was a master of it - I think he did more with less than pretty much anyone else in the war.

Now then -if you want to go nuts and do one at SB: FWW level ... now that would be interesting. Desert2 It could well end up being the one game I would want to have on a desert island.

(Incidentally - that map is from some tour site -hence the day 1, day 2 thing - looks like they borrowed a map from an old book.
Send this user an email
Quote this message in a reply
03-30-2014, 11:15 PM,
#30
RE: France '14 Update 1.03 Released
The history of the Eastern Front in WWI and also Foul's article about how important intelligence gathering was (although saying the Germans stalled on the Marne due to intercepted messages is too much credit), makes me wonder how well a Tannenberg title would work. I've commented on that before.

One of the things the PzC and FWWC series are missing is clearly defined areas of operation, which gives a commander a lot of freedom to move units around and create ahistorically effective concentrations (also because the effectiveness of the supply system is not tied to the number of units in an area: each dump or source can supply a battalion or an army group with the same effectiveness) or make commanders that historically didn't cooperate much or even knew where their troops where into a very efficient team.

Fixing units in place often isn't the answer as in the case of Tannenberg, that would be ahistorical.

Galicia 1914, East Front 1915, 1916 or 1917 could be quite interesting, but Tannenberg 1914 could be problematic as the Russian player would be able to coordinate their attacks in a way that wasn't possible for the historical commanders.
Quote this message in a reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)