War at Sea League @ Battleground Games

Battleground Games in Abington is the FLGS where I have the pleasure to play War at Sea with a small but friendly crowd.

John, the guy who has been pushing War at Sea from the start, has also been trying to get a league going. I’m the new guy but on the official forums for Battleground I came up with a bunch of suggestions on potential league play that I will share with you. I’d love to get feedback on your thoughts.

Right now we meet each Wednesday and play against each other in casual play without any official or strict standings like in a league or weekly events. It is great to get out and play the game with others and have fun. It could be better to add a little competetive spirit and perhaps some prize support to help others get into the game.

There are two ways a standardized setting for War at Sea can be handled. The first is a league and the second is a weekly event.

Both of these can be implemented with relative ease. They each have their benefits and disadvantages. The weekly event doesn’t tie anyone into a lengthy committment and maintains a spirit of casual play.

The league gives each person more time to try and win thus evening the playing field. It could be a bad night but in a league that’s 1 bad night out of 6 weeks instead of having bad luck at the only day of the event. It also provides a more formal setting for gaming and increases the competitive nature.

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Axis & Allies War At Sea Axis U-Boat Terror

Recently in the podcast I’ve been talking about the War at Sea Collectible Mini game. I thought I’d take this opportunity to spend a little more time on the game. I’m going to discuss a 100pt Axis fleet I made and also the scarcity of the game.

The fleet I made is a combined force of German and Italian forces. This past Wednesday I was at Battleground Games in Abington for War at Sea night. I played an intro game, to get the feel for the rules, with Rick using an Allied fleet. I won by 6 points although it was more of a draw.

For the same game I used my German/Italian fleet. The fleet is composed of:

1 Duca D’Aosta

1 Bolzano

1 Nordmark

1 Koln

3 U510

2 FW 200 Kondor

1 JU 87B Stuka

The primary strategy is to use my U-boats to control the seas and prevent my opponent from getting near objectives or any of my surface vessels. They are helped with the Wolfpack special ability (+1 Attack Dice for Torpedo attacks if other subs in the fleet have the Wolfpack ability). Additionally, the Kondors could use their Pinpointer special ability to confer another +1 Attack Dice to each U-boat attacking the designated target. This means at 2 spaces away each U-boat would get 4 torpedo dice with a maximum of 5 dice for 0 and 1 square away.

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More Dead Computer Info & New Computer Info

I’m still saving up for a new computer, and once I get a new job I’ll be able to afford it. For the time being my laptop won’t serve for podcasting. I am looking into other options and will have something for everyone soon. While the podcast is on this forced hiatus I will be working to have more activity in the blog for readers.

17inch iMacThis post serves as a discussion point, and my thoughts, on the new computer. Originally I wanted a new machine to run Windows XP. Any new machine, except custom built, would come from a manufacturer with Vista pre-installed and that’s a mess. Instead I’m aiming for an Apple.

I want a 17inch iMac with 2.0GHz processor, 1GB of memory, 160GB hard drive, 8x DL Superdrive (plays CD-ROMs, DVDs, etc), and ATI Radeon X1600 graphics card. I’ll also install Parallels and a copy of Windows XP Pro. This will let me boot into either OS X or XP depending on my needs.

I’ll use this to game (Dawn of War, SW Galaxies, Warcraft III, Age of Empires 2, etc) in XP. The superior dual core processor will be ablel to handle the stress of podcasting (recording, editing, publishing) plus other tasks. The large memory will be able to play modern software and the extensive HD will give me lots of room to use.

I’ll use GarageBand, once I get used to it, to record the podcasts thereby booted Audacity (I’ll still use that in the meantime). The Apple won’t suffer from meltdowns like a PC and it also is more secure than a PC. I won’t have to worry, as much, about losing files such as when my computer just died.

All told the machine should cost $1,300 or so.

What do you think I should get for a new computer? I’ll mainly use it for podcasting, gaming, surfing the net, running the website, and listening to music. When I get into grad school I’ll use it for that too.

Dead Computer Update

My computer is thoroughly deceased. It will be some time before I can purchase a new one as I’m out of work and saving my money.

However, I found an old laptop of mine to use. It doesn’t work very fast, can’t play games on it or do a lot at once, and its battery is dead (has to be plugged in at all times) but it’ll let me stay in contact with the web now and again.

I am trying my best to see if I’ll be able to do any podcasting on it. If I can they may not sound the same or perform as well as previous podcasts. If that fails, I will be able to do a very watered down podcast at TalkShoe. A positive of TalkShoe is that you can call into my podcast, which will be LIVE, and interact with me on my discussion.

I’ll update you as I know more.

Dead Computer = No Podcast

When I woke this morning my computer had been dead. That computer has all my podcasting files and programs on it. I intended to put out a podcast today but that will not happen. I apologize for the delay. I’m working to come up with a solution. Hopefully, I’ll be able to scrounge up some cash (money is short right now) for a new computer.

I’ll keep you abreast of developments.