The original post is full of factual errors and unvalid conclusions, much more than I have energy to adress.
This misconception below seems to be a popular one and surfaces often so I'll refute it here.
The only thing it was sucessful against was some inferior Russian planes. This while using tactics developed in the Pacific and in flights of 4 Brews attacking together.
Here are few aireal victories of the Brewster during the last summer of the Continuation War:
17.06.44, 16.45-17.45, P-39
17.06.44, 17.20-17.25, Pe-2
18.06.44, 07.45-09.05, La-5
18.06.44, 07.45-09.05, Pe-2
18.06.44, 07.45-09.05, Pe-2
18.06.44, 10.50-11.30, La-5
14.07.44, 15.15-16.50, Yak-9
14.07.44, 16.00-16.30, Yak-9
15.07.44, 11.35-12.55, LaGG-3
16.07.44, 13.10, La-5
16.07.44, 13.17, La-5
27.08.44, 09.30-11.15, P-40
Source:
http://www.kolumbus.fi/kari.stenman/...it is also good to remember that many of these victories were scored while being significantly outnumbered and by the summer of '44, Brewsters obviously were starting to be rather war weary. So saying that it wasn't succesful against later Soviet types is complete nonsense. Not that this matters either way when it comes to how Brewster is modelled in AH. Why things happened in real wars how they did isn't a good way to gauge simulated performance of any aircraft.