Locarnus wrote: ↑Fri May 01, 2026 11:20 pmAh, yes. I now remember that it is not the first time I made this error. You are of course right, Baku is not needed to collapse the Soviet Union. I even put * symbols before and after city names, to distinguish primary and secondary objectives for the Soviet Union.McGuba wrote: ↑Mon Apr 27, 2026 4:59 pmThe Soviet Union can be defeated without capturing Baku first (or any of the Caucasus objectives really). So I don't know, it may even be better to go straight for objectives on the Volga river to achieve a quick victory in the east and only after turn south.I think there was some AAR like that earlier. But then the player has to wait longer for the prestige from the oil fields, so...
Speaking of additional objectives, I recently watched HerzogSieg on youtube also playing Strategic Command, where mines can be captured for additional income.
Imho Donetsk/Stalino would qualify for being added to the 40 prestige per turn $ locations (like Narvik and Tunis). Giving the player a historically valid incentive to defend along the Mius river, in order to preserve the raw material output of the area between the Mius river and the Dnepr.
It could partially replace the income bonus that the player gets from 1942 onwards?
Indeed, and there is already so much for players to keep track of (and hardly any visible Panzer Corps youtube tutorials).McGuba wrote: ↑Mon Apr 27, 2026 4:59 pmAs I wrote earlier, one of the main aims of this release is to reduce possible exploits in general. Experience shows that if there is an exploit, players will use it, "'cos why not?" People are people and not everyone is thinking like you.Without house rules, the game mechanics can be massively exploited for the Western bomber war.
Those exploits basically remove all challenge from that theater.![]()
Ah, two more things:
I'm currently using
color:#a0c0ff;
for the suppression number, since youtube makes a mess out of #ff0000 on that dark background.
Hoping that youtube compression will be more kind to that light blue, but I'm unable to test.
And second, it seems like there was no bridge at all across the Dnepr until late 1943 (neither road nor railway)?
Still looks strange, not seeing that connection on the map in 1941. And it poses a challenge for the number of bridge units.

Judging by the photo, Soviet troops were advancing across pontoon bridges! Don’t forget to include the Soviet partisans!!!
https://mir24.tv/articles/16318943/bitv ... nyh-faktov

And there were bridges there, but the Germans destroyed them as they retreated!
The surviving units of the Wehrmacht were forced to retreat to the right bank, where they took up positions in pre-prepared defences, leaving garrisons on some of the islands. For example, on the island of ‘Akula’, the Germans left an infantry platoon reinforced with three machine guns and two mortars. As they withdrew, the Nazis burned down most of the houses in the villages they were leaving behind and blew up both railway bridges across the Dnieper near Dnipropetrovsk. However, the Germans did not manage to completely destroy or transfer all available crossing equipment to the right bank.
https://nashemisto.dp.ua/ru/2018/08/10/ ... acii-foto/
https://pobeda.elar.ru/issues/osvobozhd ... vyy-bereg/





