Well, I've had a chance to give the rules a couple of thorough read-throughs, and I like what I'm seeing so far. I'd have given them a test game or two last night, but for some reason, I could not get the marker pages in the PDF to print on my printer at home. Wierd, as they printed just fine on the printer at work this morning. Go figure.
Anyway, aside from some head scratching on the turn and defense values (which is probably inevitable - see below), it looks like a great product. It has a lot of the feel of the old AH Mustangs game, with the detail scaled back a bit in the name of playability. I can't wait for some bomber, ground attack, and nightfighter rules! And, of course, for a plane calculator so that I can stat up all of those obscure planes I have models of (Do-24 or BV-138 anyone?).
Ok - the inevitable nits to pick:
1) I am surprised at some of the turn ratings. I know you were trying to be objective about this and not deal with which plane is "supposed" to be more maneuverable than another, but some of the numbers do seem a bit whacky. We'll see if they still seem that way after a few games, but it certainly is counter-intuitive to me at this point to have a Bf-110 able to turn with a Spitfire and inside a P-51, or an Me-410 (one of my all time favorite planes, by the way) turning inside a FW-190.
None of my reference books have it, but I know there ARE references containing the roll and yaw rates for different planes of the era ... these were used in building the flight models for the MS Combat Flight Simulator and IL-2 (and probably other) computer games. You might even be able to yank the rates out of the airplane attribute files for those games. If so, that might be something to consider including in the turn rating formula.
2) I am also a little puzzled by the defense ratings. Most of them are 4+, which seems reasonable, but the ones that got 5+ ratings surprised me - particularly the A6M. How were these derived? It doesn't seem to me to be related to the amount of armor on the plane, or whether it carried an inline or a radial engine, or on the size of the plane (target area). Am I missing something obvious?
Thanks,
Doug