@Jeff28:
Dont people just remove a couple axis AA guns on a negative bid? It doesn’t get given to the allies.
? I thought we were operating under the assumption that it was an Allied bid. If you’re going to take away AA guns, wouldn’t it be ALLIED AA guns?
Some people very well might do it that way, but it doesn’t make sense to me.
If no one has a problem with bids of Allies +10 and the Allied player chooses 10 IPC’s worth of units to place on the map, why would you subtract AA guns if the bid was Allies -5? Then a -5 bid is a lesser magnitude than a +5 bid, because you could just take off some AA gun that will probably have little to no effect.
Think about what I said. If both players think there’s an Allied advantage and the bid goes to -6, doesn’t it make sense that the Axis player then gets to choose a couple infantry or a sub or something, to place? Certainly makes a lot of sense to me.
I think the problem is that bidding is very confusing, especially when it gets to negative. A negative bid just means that both players actually think the OTHER side has the advantage, or they really want to play it, and they are willing to let the other player add units, which is exactly what you’re doing with a POSITIVE bid.
Explain why negative bids, in the manner I’ve described, don’t work. Because I don’t understand the consternation.
Re-reading your post…… I see where I might have not expressed myself clearly. When I said in the second to last paragraph earlier, that the Allies are “giving up” six IPC’s of units or three IPC’s of units, I didn’t mean the removal of Allied units. I meant they were allowing the Axis to place units. If you read the whole thing carefully, this is clear.