Last evening on channel 1, I followed a discussion about the lopsided numbers. At the time, there were 138 Bish, 157 Knits and just 52 Rooks. One Knit going by the handle of “http”, made the outrageous comment that the Rooks were milk-running!
How absurd can such thinking get? We had only enough people to have no more than 3 at every field we owned. Five minutes later, I tackle a huge gaggle of Knits attacking our basically undefended field (there were two defenders counting me), A32, and I blasted 5 Knits out of the sky (landing the kills too), the last of which was Mr. http…. Any more comments on milk-running there http?
It certainly appears that many who are afraid of encountering a REAL fight, gravitate to countries with the big numbers. Rather than be at the pointy end of the spear, they show up in the second or third wave looking to vulch for kills, instead of actually earning them in even-up fights. This gangbang mentality is growing, and it grows proportionally to the increasing population of Noobs.
I had a somewhat similar experience at A24 last night. Along with 4 other Rooks, we went over to pork the strats to relieve pressure on our nearest field. I took an La-5 with two light bombs. I used those to kill fuel and ammo bunkers. There wasn’t much opposition, only a Spitfire and La-7 attempted to get up for defense. I killed the Spit shortly after he took off. Coming in from the nearest Bish field was a horde of fighters, probably 10-15 of them. Most of them refused to come down as long as we remained unengaged. Some hearty soul in an IL-2 wandered in and was dispatched with a single pass. Menawhile, several Bish began taking off from the field, with just two of us remaining, it got real busy. The other Rook with me got hit, but smacked 2 or 3 Bish before they got to him. At this time, the ladies in the high-flying Mustangs and 190s felt safe enough to come down, after all, I was the only Rook left flying. Well, I shot down another three of the Bish gentlemen, but was down to just 8 rounds of cannon ammo and not enough gas to get safely away, much less RTB. So, when a La-7 attempted to make a run at me, I decided to stay. 30 seconds later the Lavochkin was running for cover trailing smoke, but I now had empty mags. So, I weaved and turned and dodged the attacks (meanwhile another Rook showed up, taking some pressure off of me), but finally ran out of gas. I was unable to avoid a pair of Mustangs while maneuvering in a glide and took damage forcing me to bail. On the ground I counted 17 enemy icons, 17!!! Moreover, there was not a Rook in sight.
Of those I shot down, and was eventually shot down by, I recognized only one name in the message buffer. Noobs with a gangbang mentality. Fight in hordes, never engage if there is the least bit of risk. I don’t fault them for being timid, the learning curve is steep. It’s no fun learning this game while being hammered continuously. So, for them it is easier to fight against the Rooks, rather than with them.
This is why Rook numbers are low. These Noobs won’t fly with a country that has low numbers, because there is nohigh alt horde to hide in. Worse, if they fly Rook, most of the time they will be defending against larger numbers of fighters with those advantages of altitude and E. Again, I really can’t blame them for doing this.
I have seen this relating to my squadron, where Noobs fly with us for a day, see the lopsided numbers and promptly announce that they are switching to Knit or Bish. Therefore, Rook numbers are unlikely to grow, and the disparity in numbers will continue to get worse unless HTC intervenes, or some squadrons rotate to the Rook side. Noobs don’t want to fly here simply because they spend all of their time running for their lives. That’s no fun for them. Gangbanging fields is relatively safe and they can gain a little experience too. Until something significant is done, this will only spiral further out of control.
My regards,
Widewing