I mentioned this back in August.
I think event designers need to rethink the merits of side splits that aren't 50/50. With the low player base, is it really wise to give any side a 15-20 man advantage by design?
This past month the manpower advantage had by the allies was more than 25 pilots every frame, +34 in Frame 3!
The conventional wisdom has been that the attacking side in a single-side attack event needs the extra pilots in order to protect the bombers, but when the attacking side can match the defenders fighter for fighter, then the attackers merely steamroll the defenders.
In frame 3 of this month's FSO. The attacking side manpower advantage was 34 and the total number of bomber pilots was 20, meaning that when just factoring total fighters per side, the attackers had a sizable advantage.
This disparity has played out every single frame of the last three single-side attack FSO's - each one using the 45/55 side split. It has become clear to me that the 55/45 split only results in the defending side getting slaughtered. And here is some data to back it up.
Battle Of Britain - July 2016Frame 1: Total Attackers=112; Bomber Pilots=43; Defenders=91; Actual split=55/45; Attack Kills=67; Objects Destroyed=184; Defend Kills=48; Attackers landed=72; Defenders landed=30
Frame 2: Total Attackers=102; Bomber Pilots=26; Defenders=86; Actual split=54/46; Attack Kills=71; Objects Destroyed=17; Defend Kills=46; Attackers landed=76; Defenders landed=20
Frame 3: Total Attackers=116; Bomber Pilots=35; Defenders=92; Actual split=56/44; Attack Kills=81; Objects Destroyed=324; Defend Kills=38; Attackers landed=106; Defenders landed=31
Rabaul '43 - August 2016Frame 1: Total Attackers=136; Bomber Pilots(includes P-39 straffers)=47; Defenders=88; Actual split=61/39; Attack Kills=63; Objects Destroyed=85 ;Defend Kills=72; Attackers landed=61; Defenders landed=33
Frame 2: Total Attackers=118; Bomber Pilots (P-39's did not strafe)=27; Defenders=89;Actual split=57/43; Attack Kills=58; Objects Destroyed=115; Defend Kills=73; Attackers landed=54; Defenders landed=35
Frame 3: Total Attackers=120; Bomber Pilots(including P-39 straffers)=47; Defenders=88; Actual split=58/42; Attack Kills=62; Objects Destroyed=84; Defend Kills=72; Attackers landed=78; Defenders landed=33
Maximum Effort - Italy 1944 - November 2016Frame 1: Total Attackers=121; Bomber Pilots=20; Defenders=92; Actual split=57/43; Attack Kills=55; Objects Destroyed=133;Defend Kills=89; Attackers landed=66; Defenders landed=32
Frame 2: Total Attackers=112; Bomber Pilots=19; Defenders=87; Actual split=56/44; Attack Kills=55; Objects Destroyed=111;Defend Kills=76; Attackers landed=71; Defenders landed=35
Frame 3: Total Attackers=122; Bomber Pilots=20; Defenders=88; Actual split=58/42; Attack Kills=68; Objects Destroyed=127;Defend Kills=55; Attackers landed=91; Defenders landed=25
Averages: Total Attackers=117.67; Bomber Pilots=31.55; Defenders=89.00; Actual split=57/43; Attack Kills=64.44; Objects Destroyed=114.33;Defend Kills=64.11; Attackers landed=75; Defenders landed=30.44; Average Attacker Landing Rate=64%; Average Defender Landing Rate=34%
I chose to measure kills and objects destroyed against pilots landed because I believe that it best shows an individual pilots ability to score a kill or drop bombs and ability to survive a mission. These are the ways that most players measure their individual experience in FSO.
Let's address the idea that an unbalanced side split somehow serves bomber success and survival. The numbers do not indicate that side split numbers had an effect on the success of the bombers or the ability for defenders to attack them at least once. Bomber success and survivability seem more a result of plane selections, strategy, and individual skill. The ability for defenders to kill seem to be directly a result of available firepower and the advantage in firepower vs. the attacker's firepower - Spit1's and Hurri1's struggle to kill while cannon armed defenders can score kills quickly with few passes before being overwhelmed by escorts. What also must be considered is the fact that many of these safe landings are being made by defenders in crippled aircraft - they were knocked out without being knocked down.
As it stands, in any single-side attack FSO with a 45/55 side split, an attack pilot is almost twice as likely to survive than a defending pilot - and the cause has nothing to do with planes, plans, skills, or luck. It is because the attackers can match the defense fighter for fighter in numbers.