I'm...really not sure you understand either the mechanics of such an action, the mechanics of WWII munitions, or the decency involved in blatantly ignoring someone's arguments just because their internet manners aren't quite up to YOUR particular standard.
Oh, don't worry, I'm not dismissing your argument on the basis of you being a jerk--indeed, it's the sole reason I'm actually attempting discussion with you--I'm dismissing your argument on the basis of you failing to provide any logical reasoning for your opinion.
Let me summarize how this argument has gone, up to this point:
First, Ozarck did a thing, which he believed would be beneficial for the team.
Second, Milo said that that thing would not be beneficial (the rudeness of it is mostly irrelevant; it just meant he failed to persuade anyone, not that he was wrong).
Third, Ozarck and Milo engaged in an empty dialogue through which nothing was communicated beyond mutual disagreement and dislike.
Fourth, they disengaged, while you came in to take up the slack.
Fifth, I came in as the devil's advocate and attempted to provide solid, logical reasoning for the unsupported side.
Sixth, GOTO: Fourth.
We *could* stop that little loop at the end, either by you giving up, or providing the reasons
why you believe what you do... or we could exchange words and no information. Quite frankly, I'm perfectly fine with any of those possibilites--you can choose whichever suits you best.
Yes, Milo (And myself) could've addressed that better. Perhaps he and I should have.
You're right, we've well established the point that you two have been childish, and you've acknowledged that here. I guess I probably jumped on that as an easier argument to make, too. I apologize; I'll stop calling you out on the ad hominems.
Ozarck should most certainly have not ignored him, nor me.
Uhh, I'm pretty sure he thought you (not Milo) were trolling him. He gave a pretty standard troll response. I don't think you're a troll, that's why I'm talking to you, but I can see how he'd make the mistake.
As for Milo, Oz didn't ignore him, he just disagreed. Despite disagreeing, he didn't even change his action to
not set the bomb if an ally didn't want him to. In fact, I believe it was even specifically pointed out to Milo that
he should change his bolded action if he wanted the bomb to not be set, advice which Milo ignored.
I'm honestly confounded as to what Oz did
wrong. Assume Milo would take advice? Assume that he didn't need to specifically illustrate exactly what would happen if Milo didn't change his action? Are either of those great crimes?
For the sake of argument, let's discount my point that there's enough munitions in that bunker to level the base and/or start enough chain reaction explosions in OTHER munitions (Such as those stored in ready condition inside the hangar, or more fuel silos, etc.) to kill us all.
See, this is a useful statement! It provides me with knowledge of what
you think, which allows me to understand where I made the error in my logical, or to correct your mistake if you made one. Speaking of:
I do not agree with the assertion of there being enough munitions to level the base. I fully believe there's enough to level the building, and possibly the couple directly adjacent to it, but no further.
Supporting me is the large distance between the munitions storage and the team. Do you feel the munitions explosion will seriously damage a building hardened against bombing, four hundred feet away, with intervening obstacles? Do you disagree with one of those things I just described?
Another bit of support is that the munitions storage does not seem to have as much ordnance as you believe it does. Remember, Piecewise specifically described what was contained inside, and the only explosives named were hundred pound bombs, which are relatively small bombs with visible damage radii around forty feet, on open ground. I don't blame you for assuming worse; most people don't research such things before stating their opinions--and virtually nobody has actual experience with this subject.
Finally, as a single OOC argument to complement the two IC ones, I don't think Piecewise as a GM would make the munitions dump so disastrous. If you recall, he more or less
encouraged blowing it up. Piecewise does not encourage wipes, ever, and he usually doesn't set them up--beyond nukedoor (which he
still gets flak over, heh), I don't remember him ever setting up a wipe so trivial to create as the one you believe the munitions dump to be.
...Well, maybe amps, but that's more him fucking up before the game ever began, and not being able to go back on. It was a mistake to think people could be given magic implants made from poking God's Left Testicle, and
not misuse them with disastrous results.
This leaves us with a very loud explosion on the base bringing every single German for fifteen miles around running back towards the base. This is definitely NOT a good condition for a stealth mission.
This is actually a
really good point which I had not considered! I fully agree--the explosion will call more nazis to the scene.
I do believe that problem is outweighed by the distraction value the explosion would provide, however. Currently, the majority of our team is acively engaging in a firefight, with little hope of retreat. To win the firefight, they need to outright beat the base's
entire garrison. Yes, some soldiers are distracted with firefighting, but I have no doubt that they will be recalled before the firefight is ended. It's not like they're completely uncoordinated, at least some of them have radios.
A massive explosion in the South would call them back faster, but it would also provide a very useful distraction, which the team could make use of to escape the firefight they're engaging in. That is very likely to save their lives, unless you feel they would win when outnumbered by more than four to one?
Furthermore, as I mentioned, Ozarck is working on immediate exfil without the rest of the team, which is, again, breaking a rule of the military that is almost sacred in importance. He can't justify that. Not while remaining IC.
He's not exfiltrating, he's running away from the bomb he set, in the only way that's safe to run to. It's not a direction that he can exfiltrate in, because there's a river in the way, and he'd be fucked if he tried to run through the firestorm alone, anyway. A very logical IC perspective would be that he doesn't think he can get to the team if he runs North, thinks he'll probably be seen (and shot--he doesn't have a gun, remember) if he goes to the West or East, but if he runs to the South, he can then loop around and return to the team. Do you disagree? Please tell me where the error in my judgement is.
OOC, he's heading to my truck, which will immediately take him around to reinforce the team from behind, or perhaps flank the enemies from the only direction they wouldn't suspect. No problem there.