Hello everyone! Hope you're having a great day!
This is the start of a new series (hopefully) where I join games and follow guides. I'm doing it to firstly, test the validity, and secondly, improve my play style.
Today we're following the amazing work of @BMfox who wrote this guide.
I love Pan-Asian and in an effort to improve I found my way here. It's a thorough guide that I'll mostly be following. However, since every game is unique, I'll need to make some changes along the way.
Lastly, keep in mind all updates are delayed. And so begins Day 1.
Day 1:
Nation: Nationalist China, same as the guide.
Construction/Production:
I start off exactly like the guide, except I don't have High Command and I joined a few hours before I had to go to bed. So instead of having 4 stacks ready in the morning like the guide did, I had to produce them all the next day. This didn't have much negative effect and I was on track by the end of Day 1.
Relations:
I had a few variations from the guide right off the bat.
I only joined with one ally, Tibet. This gave us more room for finding new allies at the cost of being backstabbed.
Also, I received offers for Share Map from multiple players, Japan, Manchukuo and, Philippines. I accepted them all.
I also started next to 2 active players, Communist China and Sichuan, and 1 inactive, South China.
Sichuan was in a coalition that my partner, Tibet, had already joined. I decided to as well for preservation. We were a ring of nations surrounding Ma-Clique. Mongolia, Xinjiang, Sichuan, Tibet and, I.
Communist China started stacking his units on my border. Sadly, I wasn't planning on making a guide at that point and didn't take screenshots. After some scouting, I noticed he had 17 units on my border, which is most of his army. His cores had no buildings and all urban cities were empty. I sent 1 infantry to wait by his shores to flank him when I did decide to attack.
South China was afk, although I positioned a light tank there, just in case.
Wars:
For now, this is covering nearby wars.
Firstly, we have North India who destroyed British Odisha but took heavy losses.
British Odisha - 11,495
North India - 13,872
Tibet saw this as an opportunity and decided to attack. From the looks of it, India was done for. Until 10 Light Tanks come pouring out of the capital. This was obviously golded in as Tibet had already scouted the area. It led to Tibet retreating into the mountains and regrouping with some arty. After which India was on the retreat. Tibet was also taking what was left of Odisha, bombing the troops with arty, and pushing West.
Tibet - 1,379
North India - 3,679
Next, we have Manchukuo who stacked all their units in an effort to attack Korea, leaving their entire core empty. Korea noticed and sent single units to attack the huge stack, which failed miserably.
Korea - 2,283
Manchukuo - 1,412
AT this point, Japan took notice. Korea, who was asleep or distracted, kept all of their units on the front lines. Japan rushed with 2 infantry and capture most of the Korean cores while taking minimal losses.
Japan - 89
Korea - 720
Then there's my coalition, most of them seem to not stack units, leading to huge casualties as they rush AI and players with single units. But they provide protection of sorts for now, which I'll take.
And that's where we leave off Day 1: Asia in chaos.
This is the start of a new series (hopefully) where I join games and follow guides. I'm doing it to firstly, test the validity, and secondly, improve my play style.
Today we're following the amazing work of @BMfox who wrote this guide.
I love Pan-Asian and in an effort to improve I found my way here. It's a thorough guide that I'll mostly be following. However, since every game is unique, I'll need to make some changes along the way.
Lastly, keep in mind all updates are delayed. And so begins Day 1.
Day 1:
Nation: Nationalist China, same as the guide.
Construction/Production:
I start off exactly like the guide, except I don't have High Command and I joined a few hours before I had to go to bed. So instead of having 4 stacks ready in the morning like the guide did, I had to produce them all the next day. This didn't have much negative effect and I was on track by the end of Day 1.
Relations:
I had a few variations from the guide right off the bat.
I only joined with one ally, Tibet. This gave us more room for finding new allies at the cost of being backstabbed.
Also, I received offers for Share Map from multiple players, Japan, Manchukuo and, Philippines. I accepted them all.
I also started next to 2 active players, Communist China and Sichuan, and 1 inactive, South China.
Sichuan was in a coalition that my partner, Tibet, had already joined. I decided to as well for preservation. We were a ring of nations surrounding Ma-Clique. Mongolia, Xinjiang, Sichuan, Tibet and, I.
Communist China started stacking his units on my border. Sadly, I wasn't planning on making a guide at that point and didn't take screenshots. After some scouting, I noticed he had 17 units on my border, which is most of his army. His cores had no buildings and all urban cities were empty. I sent 1 infantry to wait by his shores to flank him when I did decide to attack.
South China was afk, although I positioned a light tank there, just in case.
Wars:
For now, this is covering nearby wars.
Firstly, we have North India who destroyed British Odisha but took heavy losses.
British Odisha - 11,495
North India - 13,872
Tibet saw this as an opportunity and decided to attack. From the looks of it, India was done for. Until 10 Light Tanks come pouring out of the capital. This was obviously golded in as Tibet had already scouted the area. It led to Tibet retreating into the mountains and regrouping with some arty. After which India was on the retreat. Tibet was also taking what was left of Odisha, bombing the troops with arty, and pushing West.
Tibet - 1,379
North India - 3,679
Next, we have Manchukuo who stacked all their units in an effort to attack Korea, leaving their entire core empty. Korea noticed and sent single units to attack the huge stack, which failed miserably.
Korea - 2,283
Manchukuo - 1,412
AT this point, Japan took notice. Korea, who was asleep or distracted, kept all of their units on the front lines. Japan rushed with 2 infantry and capture most of the Korean cores while taking minimal losses.
Japan - 89
Korea - 720
Then there's my coalition, most of them seem to not stack units, leading to huge casualties as they rush AI and players with single units. But they provide protection of sorts for now, which I'll take.
And that's where we leave off Day 1: Asia in chaos.
“A man cries not because he is weak, but because he has been strong for too long.” - Itachi Uchiha
The post was edited 2 times, last by SamWarrior12 ().