Due to TGT's desire to start playing VaS, but his and my desire to steer clear of the PL system, we're attempting to put together a short, concise campaign covering the battle of the Philippine sea. We'll be using the full OOB, with the ships broken down into their historical task forces (though we haven't quite decided how they will be disposed to start, or what victory conditions will be).
A hex map will form the foundation of the movement system, with 50 nautical miles per hex base scale. Surface groups are allowed 15 hexes per day (which roughly equates to maximum range for a 33kt ship) - I didn't want to overcomplicate this too much - though this is rounding down rather than up and may introduce problems with half-hexes.
Similarly, aircraft have a maximum endurance of 15 hexes (going by the range of the Dauntless).
I invite comments on the system; basically each day in the battle will be broken down into 3 'turns' - the Morning, Day and Evening.
Surface ships can move 5 hexes per turn. Planes can move up to their 15 in one turn, but must return to a carrier within 15 hexes of launch, or 3 turns (whichever is sooner) or splashdown.
Returning in the evening will incur a roll-off to see if the planes land safely.
A hex map will form the foundation of the movement system, with 50 nautical miles per hex base scale. Surface groups are allowed 15 hexes per day (which roughly equates to maximum range for a 33kt ship) - I didn't want to overcomplicate this too much - though this is rounding down rather than up and may introduce problems with half-hexes.
Similarly, aircraft have a maximum endurance of 15 hexes (going by the range of the Dauntless).
I invite comments on the system; basically each day in the battle will be broken down into 3 'turns' - the Morning, Day and Evening.
Surface ships can move 5 hexes per turn. Planes can move up to their 15 in one turn, but must return to a carrier within 15 hexes of launch, or 3 turns (whichever is sooner) or splashdown.
Returning in the evening will incur a roll-off to see if the planes land safely.