- Joined
- Dec 16, 2019
100 divisions for a two-front world war is actually tiny. 48 of those were in France under the Twelfth Army Group for the express purpose of driving to the Rhine, leaving the other 52 for the ongoing fighting in Italy, the Pacific, and reserve formations. The vast bulk of our manpower went to the Navy, Army Air Force, and the massive service and support infrastructure necessary to keep everyone and everything supplied so far from home.It's because the US is too easy to make OP. That's why HOI US can't actually build their historic OOB in WW2, so no 100 division army, metric fuckton of Essex-class carriers, and tens of thousands of bombers all whilst supplying lend lease to everybody. But Victoria is easier since you just need to make the US play historically WHILE confining their military.
Also, the military was despite its small size actually incredibly well-trained and provisioned, Regulars being at least the match of any European soldier. But there's no good way to represent the mass influx of volunteers (commonly with some prior experience in their local militias) signing up for volunteer service as was the tradition here compared to the European system of calling up conscripts to bulk out the existing standing army. Imagine going to war with the USA and they pull a few hundred regiments out of their ass pre-equipped, either with their own weapons or via state (not federal) procurement.