I think all of us would be wise to give HTC a break on criticism of the current game and state of things - I'm sure they are well aware of the decline since the glory days and peak player numbers of the late 2000s. There is NO point in investing energy into fixing any issues/problems with the state of the game and the gameplay when such huge changes are on the way and a completely new game coming - a new game with so far some possibly unknown potential changes. That being the case, what's the point in worrying about the current state of things so much, if at all?
Give them time to get AH3 out and live - 95% of HTCs energy and resources IMO should be going into that, not complaints about AH2 issues - and there are issues, everyone including HTC knows this.
Once AH3 is live, then give HTC some time to adjust things as they need to be tweaked with the new game. THEN, if there is no response to legitimate concerns and criticisms that are current AH2 problems (that's even if they carry over), after a reasonable period of time with the new game, I'll be banging my gong along with the rest of the usual suspects. IMO for now, it's not only pointless, it's a bit unfair.
I've said it before in other recent posts, online PC WW2 gaming is easily at an all time high, there are hundreds of thousands playing various WW2 games, and AH3, especially with the VR support in the future, IMO will have the potential to surpass the peak numbers of the glory days 6 or 7 years ago. The less static we put into the signal right now, the better.
I try and always slip in the "return to peak numbers fixes a majority of the issues", and I still believe this largely to be the case, regardless of any potential AH3 gameplay mechanics changes, or even if there isn't much in this regard (I still believe the original gameplay model is very sound, how else did it last 17 years ffs). Maps too large, hard to find fights - all the major repeating complaints - poof gone like chaff in the wind when there are numbers to fill the arenas. AH3 has the potential to do this, especially once word starts to circulate of it to the aforementioned hundreds of thousands of current online WW2 PC gamers out there. I'd bet less than 10% even know about this place, and when that changes...
I for one can't wait for that. Especially in VR, it's going to be sick.