admiralsnackbar Posted June 1, 2020 Posted June 1, 2020 10 hours ago, BobRoss0902 said: On the subject of bulkheads, they could do the sort of things they pull off in game, the reason why Bismarck was still floating upright well after even every single gun on board was forcefully silenced was due to the fact that she was so well divided into sub compartments, I personally think there should be more options for bulkheads so that achieving that level of efficiency should be more difficult than sacrificing some weight as well as have tech limitations. There needs to be downsides to such a level of subdivision, I'd say when crew is a thing, more bulkheads make it more difficult for crew to escape or something like that. The trade-off was, and is to some extent already, higher displacement for the same level of speed and firepower. Until the game sets up more varied win conditions, having ships you can't sink regardless of how many shells you put into them is a very bad idea.
DougToss Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 (edited) On 5/31/2020 at 1:42 PM, BobRoss0902 said: Ships historically if you didn't get a catastrophic hit would be pretty spongey tho. Sinking a ship is usually just a bonus, damaging it and forcing the enemy to take it in to port was often what happened putting it out of action for often times until the end of a war. Jutland, Distant Guns and Steam and Iron recognize that. Winning battles is not about sinking ships, any more than land battles are won by destroying each piece of enemy equipment. If the only way to win is to sink the enemy outright, gunnery and damage models are going to stay whacky by necessity, because the game design is at odds with the stated goals of realistic outcomes. Ships would have been designed and employed differently indeed if control of the sea came only from sending hulls to the bottom. By that logic, what is the purpose of a protected or light cruiser? They should clearly have 8-9" guns if their own utility comes from swiftly sinking ships. e: With bulkheads, the penalty can't be that it makes it harder for the crew to escape, because the point is that they make it so the crew doesn't need to escape. For the player, that is a non-choice. You would always take maximum bulkheads, what's the advantage of saving the crew of a sunk vessel compared to the vessel not sinking? It takes a few months to train a crew, assuming you don't already have crews ready, a naval reserve, etc. etc. versus years to build a new ship. Using up displacement has got to be the penalty, as well as being gated by technology and possibly hull sizes. Edited June 4, 2020 by DougToss
Masonator Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 (edited) In custom battles, can the AI please stop building super-ships that are completely unable to be sunk by normal battleships? This shit is effing ridiculous. This monster sank two Iowas and barely took any damage in return. It's positively broken. Edited June 4, 2020 by Masonator
Jatzi Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 1 hour ago, Masonator said: In custom battles, can the AI please stop building super-ships that are completely unable to be sunk by normal battleships? This shit is effing ridiculous. This monster sank two Iowas and barely took any damage in return. It's positively broken. I mean it's a 92,000 ton battleship. It kinda makes sense it has ridiculous amounts of armor. Yamato, the largest battleship ever built was only 70,000 tons at full load and had a 16 in belt and 25.6 inches on the turret faces. Imagine what 30,000 more tons would allow. I hope you know that such dreadnoughts are not going to be built in the campaign except for like super late game and probably when it's not really necessary. Maybe the AI goes too far with armor but the player is capable of building an unsinkable dreadnought, the AI should too. 3
Cptbarney Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 2 hours ago, Jatzi said: I mean it's a 92,000 ton battleship. It kinda makes sense it has ridiculous amounts of armor. Yamato, the largest battleship ever built was only 70,000 tons at full load and had a 16 in belt and 25.6 inches on the turret faces. Imagine what 30,000 more tons would allow. I hope you know that such dreadnoughts are not going to be built in the campaign except for like super late game and probably when it's not really necessary. Maybe the AI goes too far with armor but the player is capable of building an unsinkable dreadnought, the AI should too. Plus dat name doe, King karl the great. I think if i saw a ship named that and that big i would expect it to rekt everything that exists in the world lol. gib 20-22inch guns pls. 5
BobRoss0902 Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 1 hour ago, Cptbarney said: Plus dat name doe, King karl the great. I think if i saw a ship named that and that big i would expect it to rekt everything that exists in the world lol. gib 20-22inch guns pls. Gib 40 inch guns like those weird ottoman cannons. 1
Reaper Jack Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 11 minutes ago, BobRoss0902 said: Gib 40 inch guns like those weird ottoman cannons. Captain, we've been outfitted with the new super cannons! Excellent Jerry! Now we just need to work on firing them faster than once a week! 6
Masonator Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 9 hours ago, Jatzi said: I mean it's a 92,000 ton battleship. It kinda makes sense it has ridiculous amounts of armor. Yamato, the largest battleship ever built was only 70,000 tons at full load and had a 16 in belt and 25.6 inches on the turret faces. Imagine what 30,000 more tons would allow. I hope you know that such dreadnoughts are not going to be built in the campaign except for like super late game and probably when it's not really necessary. Maybe the AI goes too far with armor but the player is capable of building an unsinkable dreadnought, the AI should too. Displacement in this game is way higher than it would ever be irl. I built my ships according to all of the numbers for USS Iowa - it came out at well over 71,000t for a ship that displaced 48,000t in real life. This can be observed on every type of ship across all nations, the hulls and components all weigh massively more than they should.
DougToss Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 Displacement and mobility are both pretty crazy right now. I'd love to take a look at the math for some of these systems because I don't know where the numbers we see are coming from. 3
Reaper Jack Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 4 hours ago, Masonator said: Displacement in this game is way higher than it would ever be irl. I built my ships according to all of the numbers for USS Iowa - it came out at well over 71,000t for a ship that displaced 48,000t in real life. This can be observed on every type of ship across all nations, the hulls and components all weigh massively more than they should. Components, especially engines, weigh too much while armour weighs too little at the moment. Guns seem to be in a good place weight wise. I don't know where you got that Iowa number from though, it's far too low. The Iowas weighed 58,000-60,000 tons at full load (the game uses full load weight.)
Hangar18 Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 11 hours ago, Masonator said: Displacement in this game is way higher than it would ever be irl. I built my ships according to all of the numbers for USS Iowa - it came out at well over 71,000t for a ship that displaced 48,000t in real life. This can be observed on every type of ship across all nations, the hulls and components all weigh massively more than they should. when you do it, check the demensions of the ship in the bottom left, the battle cruiser hull might be more fitting for your test.
Hangar18 Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 On 5/25/2020 at 4:05 PM, Reaper Jack said: The heaviest cruiser belt in history was the Des Moines Not technically correct. The Alaska, as well as the finished hull of stalingrad both surpass it On 5/31/2020 at 8:13 AM, Steeltrap said: Funnily enough, I happen to think one of the most crucial root causes of all these problems lies in the grossly inflated hit rates. If you get hit 10 times as often as you might in reality, everything ELSE becomes 10 times as significant in the sense that if the damage or armour or damage control systems are insufficient, that over the top mass of hits will VERY quickly illustrate any issues. Agreed, and it is also the cause of the bow tanking.
DougToss Posted June 4, 2020 Posted June 4, 2020 The gunnery model is the single biggest problem, and as @Steeltrap mentioned, has bled into every other issue. Ships have to be designed to be more mobile or protected than any real designs afloat because they will be hit more often to a frankly, insane degree. When hit rates drop down to anywhere near reality, and ideally match firing tables and exiting formulas, it will be much easier to get mobility and protection right.
Hangar18 Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 2 hours ago, DougToss said: The gunnery model is the single biggest problem, armor model. gunnery numbers can be tweaked easily enough. 1
Reaper Jack Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 2 hours ago, Hangar18 said: Not technically correct. The Alaska, as well as the finished hull of stalingrad both surpass it Agreed, and it is also the cause of the bow tanking. Alaska's are not cruisers any more than the Hood was a cruiser. For the exact same reasons. The USA called them Large Cruisers so they could get the budget through by pretending they were not capital ships, and a cruiser is not a capital ship. The Stalingrad (Can tell you've picked that up from WoWS as no Russian class of supercruiser/battlecruiser was called thus, it was the Kronstadt class) never had her armor fitted, and little more than the keel and lower hull was complete, like all Russian capital ships of that time period, the USSR's failure to produce functional armor meant they were the ultimate in vanity projects, and were ships that could never have been completed, so starting them was pointless, in that sense they are not different to the Montanas, i.e. pure speculation. Additionally these ships at full load would have weighed upwards of 42,000 tons, which is absolutely Battlecruiser territory. Yes the idea of the Battlecruiser was dead by the mid 40's, however in function and role both the Alaskas and Russian fantasies were Battlecruisers, they are in no way, shape or form even close to being regular cruisers.
IronKaputt Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 On 6/4/2020 at 8:31 AM, Cptbarney said: Plus dat name doe, King karl the great. I think if i saw a ship named that and that big i would expect it to rekt everything that exists in the world lol. gib 20-22inch guns pls. SMS St. Siegmund: build H-45 with six-gun turrets in "Sink Australia" mission. There 22-inchers came from BTW?
DougToss Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 10 hours ago, Hangar18 said: armor model. gunnery numbers can be tweaked easily enough. The armour model's failings are more apparent because hit rates are an order of magnitude greater than they should be. Ships have to be protected against more hits than they would ever be expected to receive. Also 22" guns? Can we be serious for a moment?
DerRichtigeArzt Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 I think 20" guns should be the absolute maximum and only in single turrets. 2
DougToss Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 Absolutely. Look at the guns used in historical big-gun naval battles, and let's get gameplay right for the 11-16" guns where it really counts rather than get caught up in flights of fancy. 2
Aceituna Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 32 minutes ago, DerRichtigeArzt said: I think 20" guns should be the absolute maximum and only in single turrets. 9 minutes ago, DougToss said: Absolutely. Look at the guns used in historical big-gun naval battles, and let's get gameplay right for the 11-16" guns where it really counts rather than get caught up in flights of fancy. I understand your argument that 508 mm (20 inch) weren't used in real historical battleships. But we are able to design H-class in-game (which was only planned). And for H-44, 508mm guns were really planned (they were supposed to be in double mounts). So i think that it would be nice if we get them. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H-class_battleship_proposals#H-42_through_H-44 1
DougToss Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 The Royal Navy also designed carriers that were made out of ice. I'm not saying don't allow the fantastical calibers, I am saying that right now there is no reason not to build massive warships with massive guns, when in actuality there must've been some reason... seeing as nobody actually ever did so. I'm sure given enough time, expenditure and effort, dual mounts of 20" were within the edge of possibility, I'm just saying that the way things are working now, you would be a fool not to have 10 x 20" guns because the AI certainly will and there is no real penalty for so doing. I mean, 12" guns were popular for a reason, right? We've yet to see that in-game. The Germans used 11" guns. The very reasonable causes for them doing that aren't really represented yet. 2
Aceituna Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 (edited) 10 minutes ago, DougToss said: The Royal Navy also designed carriers that were made out of ice. I'm not saying don't allow the fantastical calibers, I am saying that right now there is no reason not to build massive warships with massive guns, when in actuality there must've been some reason... seeing as nobody actually ever did so. I'm sure given enough time, expenditure and effort, dual mounts of 20" were within the edge of possibility, I'm just saying that the way things are working now, you would be a fool not to have 10 x 20" guns because the AI certainly will and there is no real penalty for so doing. I mean, 12" guns were popular for a reason, right? We've yet to see that in-game. The Germans used 11" guns. The very reasonable causes for them doing that aren't really represented yet. Sure it's not essential and there are other much more important work to do in the game development at the moment. I only say that because we are already able to build H-class it would be nice if we could put correct guns at it someday. Edited June 5, 2020 by Aceituna
madham82 Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 1 hour ago, DerRichtigeArzt said: I think 20" guns should be the absolute maximum and only in single turrets. 33 minutes ago, DougToss said: The Royal Navy also designed carriers that were made out of ice. I'm not saying don't allow the fantastical calibers, I am saying that right now there is no reason not to build massive warships with massive guns, when in actuality there must've been some reason... seeing as nobody actually ever did so. I'm sure given enough time, expenditure and effort, dual mounts of 20" were within the edge of possibility, I'm just saying that the way things are working now, you would be a fool not to have 10 x 20" guns because the AI certainly will and there is no real penalty for so doing. I mean, 12" guns were popular for a reason, right? We've yet to see that in-game. The Germans used 11" guns. The very reasonable causes for them doing that aren't really represented yet. Splitting hairs here, but if the Japanese were able to build a triple 18" mount, why do you think it would be hard to build a twin 20"? The gun is the truly difficult part, the mount is more a question of expense and weight. 12" guns are currently some of the best at accuracy and ROF in the game. They have an usual buff to accuracy when compared 13", 14" and 15"s. Many of my designs for fighting large numbers of smaller ships use triple 12"s. They are actually the best gun to mount if you are facing DDs, that and some 8" secondaries. 4
IronKaputt Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 (edited) 1 hour ago, DougToss said: I'm sure given enough time, expenditure and effort, dual mounts of 20" were within the edge of possibility, I'm just saying that the way things are working now, you would be a fool not to have 10 x 20" guns because the AI certainly will and there is no real penalty for so doing. [sigh] That's why we need some sort of ingame treaty, there player can set limits for AI (displacement, caliber, etc) - doubles as difficulty settings. I fully understand people who don't want to built "ludicrous" ships and I respect their wish. Please respect other's wish to design monstrosity with quad 20-inch superheavys. Edited June 5, 2020 by IronKaputt
Reaper Jack Posted June 5, 2020 Posted June 5, 2020 2 minutes ago, IronKaputt said: [sigh] That's why we need some sort of ingame treaty, there player can set limits for AI (displacement, caliber, etc) - doubles as difficulty settings. I fully understand people who don't want to built "ludicrous" ships and I respect their wish. Please respect my wish to design BBs with 4x4 20-inch superheavys. You should be able to build them sure. The cost of doing so should be as immense as the Yamatos was historically (and worse for even bigger ships) and stunt your navy in other areas, again, as it should. There needs to be a push and pull system, where you can't just get the best toys without there being a drawback or some sort of pay off, this system not existing is actually causing a lot of the game's issues right now aside from armor not being modeled correctly yet. Mostly with ships that can have it all, armor, huge guns and speed. 6
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