
He can't pull his stacks to the ocean and invade me from the side, because I've got a navy and he doesn't. I don't need to attack, because so long as I bring my AT into range of sight, because he has almost no air-force, I can simply use bombers to run his tanks into the ground, then push my AT forward a little further. All I have to do is take it nice and slow, forcing him to either have to retreat or attack my stacks. However, because Anti-Tanks produce faster than Light Tanks, and on the defensive are considerably superior, all I have to do is hold him off, pick his tanks off with bombers one at a time as he uses them to scout, and produce AT.īy doing so, I can create my own wall of units, and gradually, point by point, step by step, simply push back.

So three waves of almost nothing but Light Tanks. Almost every single province stretching the width of africa (only a few to one side not controlled by either myself or him), streaming down, with a wave that are force marching, with a second wave behind them, and reinforcement Light Tanks coming from behind them. How did they invade? A wall of light tanks. They had about 15 fighters, and a scattering of AT and Infantry. This player at the start of this war had just over 190 units.

Having slowed down, even started to turn back their advance, I've been mass producing AT's at a nice and healthily rapid pace whilst I hold them off and push back in certain areas. I pumped out some Tank Destroyers to be able to meet some of their larger stacks head on and to force a halt to their advance in key positions. I pumped out some bombers, to pick off stragglers, and slow down their advance.

Someone who has an obsessive fetish for Light Tanks has decided to invade me, hoping for a weak target.

My major game at the moment I'm playing as South West Africa on a world map. As a point in case to how effective AT can be:
