Look I just want to put it up as food for thought for planners. We want these things to be interesting and as historic as we can make them. What we don't want is to be just "re-enactors" where it "happened this way in the war so it has to be done like this".
Yeah it would help if HTC put some more Axis and Soviet types in the game, but til then we are stuck making subs like we had to do here. Can we just consider that aircraft type matters more to the enjoyment and balance of the game and acknowledge that numbers and substitutes are a pita that although we have fall back to, just aren't what we'd like them to be?
You know Perd, Spikes, and myself well enough to know that we are not aiming to have re-enactments in our events. If each side does not have a reasonable chance to win, then the event is fundamentally broken.
You may think that this month's FSO was stacked too heavily against the Allies, but as Spikes pointed out, the difference in frames 1 and 2 comes down to planning, execution, and luck. Frame 3 is the outlier to me. I have no idea why there was such a disparity given the manpower advantage held by the Allies in that frame. I especially expected the Allies to score many more kills of Ju 88's since the both the P-40 and Yak7b have more potent gun packs then the 109's with single 20mm cannon.
As for subs, do you really think that having an actual MiG-3 or LaGG-3 would have made a positive difference for the Allies? I do not. The LaGG would be worse than the Yak7 in every way and the MiG would perform very similar to the C.205, but would suffer in climb rate and acceleration.
In this setup the Yak-7 was not a sub for a LaGG as there were 2 regiments with Yak7's and another 2 with Yak1's operating in the Leningrad area during the Sinyavino offensive. Had we decided to use the Yak as a sub, there would barely be room for any other fighters as there were 5 regiments of LaGGs in the same area at the time.
Furthermore, I made two other major considerations with this design to maintain balance at the expense of the "happened this way in the war so it has to be done like this" way of designing events.
First, the 20mm gondolas were disabled on the G-2's. Historically these were available from the moment the G-2's were delivered to units in August 1942.
Second, The Fw 190 made it's Eastern Front debut at this battle on September 10, when I/Jg 51 deployed to the base at Ljuban to counter the offensive. That's 3 full squadrons of 190's to compliment the 12 squadrons in 109G-2's and 3 with 109F's at this battle.
In a more traditionally designed FSO, the number spread may have looked like what we saw in Frame 3, but the Allies would have been fielding Il-2's and B-25's every frame and Axis would have 190's and gondie laden G-2's. Now that would have been insurmountable for the Allies.