I think that this idea could be a little bit overpowered but would be extremely useful. In my current game I have used paratroopers to capture some provinces, but was struggling to land them behind my enemies troops in order to effectively surround them. At this point I had a carrier and I thought it would be cool if paratroopers could land on a carrier and could be sent out from there. Maybe only a certain level paratroopers would be able to do this, like tac bombers and have to have a certain level carrier.
Paratroopers on Carriers.
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Like strategic bombers, the air transports would need a long runnway for takeoffs.
Typically about 3000ft.
Aircraft carriers runways max out on the largest ships at around 300ft.
Plus you have the planes large wingspan which would only just miss the conning tower. -
A paratrooper unit doesn't just represent a few men; I'm not sure of the scale for Call of War, but I would guess it represents a battalion (300 to 800 soldiers). In any event it represents far more than could logically be staged from a carrier - not to mention that aircraft large enough to carry more than a handful of men would be too large and heavy to be launched. Remember we are talking about WWII era - the Doolittle raid was barely possible and far more valuable for morale reasons than tactical. The B-25's used in that raid were stripped down and lightened as much as possible - far from being robust aircraft capable of carrying a platoon or two of paratroopers.
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Alright, just an idea i had that would make it easier to invade island countries. Thanks for the historial info
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BeorntheBold wrote:
A paratrooper unit doesn't just represent a few men; I'm not sure of the scale for Call of War, but I would guess it represents a battalion (300 to 800 soldiers).
FYI, the basic infantry regiment formerly required 1,500 men, but this was modified during one of the unit balancing revisions in the last 18 months. -
I was going to talk about the men needed for the unit but thought I'd made a big enough point that the planes were not capable at the time.
Good input tho. -
MadMike69 wrote:
thought I'd made a big enough point that the planes were not capable at the time.
Of course, the U.S. Marines do VSTOL take-offs and landings from amphibious support carriers every day in their V-22 Ospreys. Of course, at $70 million per copy, not many countries can afford a fleet of Ospreys. -
Plus, most airborne troops at the time weren't parachute, but glider-carried. In Arnhem's first airborne division landing for example, two combat brigades were parachute, the third and all support troops (artillery, recce, AT, engineers, signals, medical, etc etc) came in gliders.
Now after imagining launching big transport planes from an aircraft carrier (exactly - IMAGINING), extend that image to launching them with a glider behind them...When the fake daddies are curtailed, we have failed. When their roller coaster tolerance is obliterated, their education funds are taken by Kazakhstani phishers, and their candy bars distributed between the Botswana youth gangs, we have succeeded.
- BIG DADDY.
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