Mark Stevens
Europe Aflame Forum Moderator
I've been reading more about the war on the Eastern Front, and looking at the maps, and I don't think that the current configuration of the Soviet railway system is very accurate. (Do I hear the witty riposte "Like the rest of the scenario"?)
If anyone would like to take a look at this revision and comment I'd appreciate it. Do remember that it's a big picture scenario, corps level, so I don't pretend that every little connection is included, also I've deliberately avoided placing the lines along rivers so as to avoid bridge blowing of epic proportions. And the celebrated tilted axis of the whole map.
However, this does bring out the importance of some of the main rail hubs, in particular Moscow, Veliye Luki, Bryansk and Voronezh, and it won't be so easy to move units around - either for the defending Soviets or the Axis attackers. Novgorod is now adjacent to Lake Ilmen - it had wandered some distance away when no one was looking, like a naughty child. And the main road/rail approach from Vyazma to Moscow actually runs from Vyazma to Moscow, rather than taking the scenic route via Kaluga. The main link to the Caucasus ran through Rostov, not Azov.
I can't quote any single source for these changes, they're a synthesis of several maps and items that I've read.
If anyone knows better, or thinks that a key route is missing, I'd be pleased to ignore, er, hear from them.
'The Fat Controller'
If anyone would like to take a look at this revision and comment I'd appreciate it. Do remember that it's a big picture scenario, corps level, so I don't pretend that every little connection is included, also I've deliberately avoided placing the lines along rivers so as to avoid bridge blowing of epic proportions. And the celebrated tilted axis of the whole map.
However, this does bring out the importance of some of the main rail hubs, in particular Moscow, Veliye Luki, Bryansk and Voronezh, and it won't be so easy to move units around - either for the defending Soviets or the Axis attackers. Novgorod is now adjacent to Lake Ilmen - it had wandered some distance away when no one was looking, like a naughty child. And the main road/rail approach from Vyazma to Moscow actually runs from Vyazma to Moscow, rather than taking the scenic route via Kaluga. The main link to the Caucasus ran through Rostov, not Azov.
I can't quote any single source for these changes, they're a synthesis of several maps and items that I've read.
If anyone knows better, or thinks that a key route is missing, I'd be pleased to ignore, er, hear from them.
'The Fat Controller'
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