Armchair Dragoons Forums
Wargaming => Age of Gunpowder => Topic started by: Martok on November 23, 2020, 07:18:07 PM
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Apparently Game Labs has been quietly working on a new title in their Ultimate General series...
https://www.ug1775.com/
American Revolution is a sandbox strategy game featuring the epic historical period during the rebellion of the American colonies against the British Empire. Take on the role of the British or American Colonists, and fight for territorial control over North America. A gripping real-time campaign awaits you on a detailed 3d map where you can build your army and navy, construct military infrastructure, and fully command your armies on a regimental level. If you want even more action you can fully zoom-in and fight massive battles on a battalion level.
MASSIVE BATTLES
If you choose to fight battles with full tactical control, the regiments become divided into smaller battalions allowing you the command of hundreds of units in real-time, creating a dazzling and realistic combat experience of the historical period. Troops are positioned in a landscape according to the placement they had on the map at the given time. Some will engage the enemy immediately, others can be re-positioned in deployment zones, while those which were further away may join later as reinforcements.
DELAYED REPORTING
Realistic reconnaissance is simulated, making messages the basis of military intelligence and battle maneuvering. Messages can be delayed or be intercepted by the enemy, resulting in your orders not reaching your troops in time or rendering communication with your distant territories impossible.
Not gonna lie, this one has me more interested than previous entries in the franchise. While I've always liked the look of the battles, the games' more linear campaigns were admittedly something of a turn-off. If American Revolution does contain a true sandbox-style campaign, however, then this will almost certainly become a must-buy for me. :nerd:
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We'll see. I'm dreaming of a Swamp Fox Campaign. :dreamer:
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We'll see. I'm dreaming of a Swamp Fox Campaign. :dreamer:
:o
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https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ixljWVyPby0
Shirley you next.
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Francis Marion was certainly the most under rated and arguably the best commander on either side in the war. A Swamp Fox Campaign would be great, a great mix of Regular and Militia as well as Irregular troops for both sides. Lots of places to hide, lots of places to maneuver, strategic river crossings to hold or lose. It Shirley would be a good one. :hehe:
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Agreed, that would be a fun campaign. It don't know how well (or if) UG:AR will be able to recreate that, although this bit gives me some hope:
Terrain matters
Hills will allow you to see enemy units earlier and shoot them down more efficiently. Rivers and bridges are natural obstacles that will present serious defensive advantages. Forests will help you hide your movements and flank the enemy. Trenches, roads, fences, houses, fields – every inch of ground matters. Use it well in order to achieve victory.
Fingers crossed!
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That would be great. :applause:
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Hmmm.
Wonder if this would have Nathaniel Greene's campaign versus Cornwallis?
That would be hard to simulate, but would be totally unique.
That would include Cowpens, Guilford Court House and lots of maneuver
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Francis Marion was certainly the most under rated and arguably the best commander on either side in the war. A Swamp Fox Campaign would be great, a great mix of Regular and Militia as well as Irregular troops for both sides. Lots of places to hide, lots of places to maneuver, strategic river crossings to hold or lose. It Shirley would be a good one. :hehe:
that was the home turf for my old National Guard unit back in SC
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Hmmm.
Wonder if this would have Nathaniel Greene's campaign versus Cornwallis?
That would be hard to simulate, but would be totally unique.
That would include Cowpens, Guilford Court House and lots of maneuver
If I'm understanding the dev's intentions correctly, the game's sandbox gameplay precludes a specific Southern campaign per se (and in any other theater, for that matter). That's not to say that the British AI won't follow historical precedent and invade the South at some point, however, thus recreating a similar scenario.
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Avalon Hill had a boardgame on the american revolution (1776?)
There were a lot of "perfect" strategies.
One of the best for the british player was an early southern strategy.
The colonials got more troops if the british forces were in particular regions.
Due to the thin population in the South, the colonials received very little. The Brits could rather easily control this big region, giving them political points which made French involvement less likely.
Also the Brits put a large force in Canada, busy building bateaux for great riverine mobility.
This made it very difficult for the rebels when the Brits did strike.
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Avalon Hill had a boardgame on the american revolution (1776?)
There were a lot of "perfect" strategies.
One of the best for the british player was an early southern strategy.
The colonials got more troops if the british forces were in particular regions.
Due to the thin population in the South, the colonials received very little. The Brits could rather easily control this big region, giving them political points which made French involvement less likely.
Also the Brits put a large force in Canada, busy building bateaux for great riverine mobility.
This made it very difficult for the rebels when the Brits did strike.
It's not like that doesn't sound historically implausible
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I played that game. I never came close to winning as either side as I recall. :'(
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I played that game. I never came close to winning as either side as I recall. :'(
Especially when playing solo, huh?
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True. It's bad when you can't even beat yourself. Even when you cheat. :doh: