Are you assuming the Ta-152 would need trimming?
The Forward tank is on the CG. The Aft tank is next to it under the pilot's seat.
As far as I know all weight changes are calculated dynamically and applied to the CG along with the current forces.
If you read the thread, you would find that folks are positing that the 190 stability improves by burning the aft tank. The opposite would be that the stability would degrade if the aft tank were full and the forward empty.
That position implies a center of gravity change when burning the aft tank. A dynamic center of gravity due to fuel burn implies a change in the pitch trim of the aircraft. The video clearly shows there is no change in the pitch trim of the aircraft when fuel is burned from the forward tank.
In the real airplane (Dora model) there is a definite need to manage fuel balance. The correct sequence is burn rear tank before front tank for center of gravity reasons.
In every real world airplane I have ever flown, even fuel tanks with a centroid on the center of gravity require adjustment of pitch trim with fuel burn. This is because the center of gravity is a POINT and fuel tanks are not POINTS.
So if Aces High is calculating center of gravity dynamically AND modeling actual fuel tank fuselage stations one would expect a large trim change burning fuel from either forward or center tank in the 190 series
In Aces High there is no pitch trim change burning either tank. That clearly means that either C of G is not calculated dynamically or tanks are not modeled at the fuselage station or both. Most likely it is both.
Assumptions otherwise, despite evidence to the contrary, are erroneous.