It's a part of the game. It is called a
disruption of resources. If you are busy hunting for a lone sapper then you are not available to hit my base, shoot down my allied raiding force or defend your territory elsewhere. In the end this is a game of numbers so anything I can do to sway the favor elsewhere on the front to my side then I'll do it. This is an out of the box tactical approach to this wargame for those of us who are not skilled fighter pilots. Talk to the Soviet partisans behind German lines circa 1941 to 1944. It can actually be quite effective. There are times when I tied up four or five of you in your IL-2s, A-20Gs and Storches looking for my single Greyhound when you could have been tipping the odds of the schwerpunkt elsewhere. Heck, I've even shot down a fair number of you in the process which only infuriated you more and kept you coming after my nimble little six wheeled delight instead of concentrating on the main effort.
And there were many times that, without uttering a word, my teammates shifted their schwerpunkt to the base I was snooping around simply because I got it flashing. This action thus shifted the front in a new direction thus adding more dimension to the ebb and flow of the war effort while causing our adversary to adjust sometime saving one of our bases that was on the verge of collapse.
This is the beauty of a multidimensional game. I guess that's why I used to be so hooked on the Grand Theft Auto games back in the day.
