C. Hecht wrote:
Quaama wrote:
I'd like to advise caution regarding Extreme Fog of War in regards to terrain. Although you and your opponent may agree to have Extreme Fog of War as one of your selected Optional Rules there is nothing to stop your opponent from opening up the scenario as a separate game and scouting around as much, and as often, as he likes. The knowledge gained can then be used to select useful vantage points.
If you distrust your opponent you should not play him at all. Effectively that is cheating for me.
Quaama wrote:
Also, in JTS scenarios your opponent can also know where your forces are at the start and when, and where, others arrive due to remembered knowledge (having played that scenario before) or by opening that scenario as a separate game. I usually tell my opponent when I have played a scenario before our battle. For example, I have just begun my third battle of the historical Chickamauga (Chickamauga 039) and I told my opponent I had played it twice before (one Draw, one Minor Victory). Hopefully, it'll be 'third time lucky' will do it for me and I can finally get a Major Victory.
I think the fact that there are soooooooooooooooooooooooooo many scenario makes me doubt that one will remember exactly where & when the enemy shows, sure there is a general idea of what will happen just like everyone knows that the Prussians show up in Waterloo but the exact turn & hex is surely only memorized by very very few club members.
High age average in the club might also help.

Fortunately, I believe that few in the Club lower themselves to cheating: I just felt I needed to issue a warning about it in that instance. I believe I have only encountered such a thing twice. Once in a game where my opponent seemed too perfect in predicting my every movement in a battle where there were large areas of forest (not Chickamauga). This was done despite the complete absence of skirmishers in those areas where it occurred, leaving his units to apply maximum force to me at just the right places [a couple of skirmishers were discovered in some more obscure areas].
The other time I was inadvertently sent a file which showed unit movements that were different to those in the 'official' file that was then sent to me. The first file involved moves that were clearly a scouting operation (given the hexes they moved to and the way they moved in the replay) whereas the 'official' file showed different moves by the same units. Clearly, they had replayed the move (i.e. cheated).
I have never played against any of these people again and have no intention of ever doing so.
I'm no spring chicken but fortunately my memory is still quite good. Good victories, and heavy defeats, are well remembered when I'm on the same battlefield (mediocre battles are not so well remembered). Also, after playing the same opponent a number of times, you can get to understand their style which can be useful. Unavoidably, if they are any good, they can get to understand my style so I try to change things somewhat to give me a bit of an advantage - although it doesn't always work.