Additional "Battle types" in this war relative to ours? In OTL the types of battles varied greatly, with the battles in New Mexico calling for very different tactics and equipment than the ones in Tennessee or Virginia, I'm wondering what types of battles that would exist iTTL and not ours. I *think* there was some lacustrine (on the Great Lakes) fighting early in the war and some of the fighting in Maine dealt with repelling sea based troops which wasn't done iOTL. Any other additional "types" spring to mind? Also, iOTL, which "front" was longer, the USA-CSA (Civil War) or the German-Russian (WWI)?
In BROS, there have been lacustrine and riverine actions on Lake Ontario and the upper Saint Lawrence/Lake St. Pierre,as well as the Mississippi; amphibious operations on Lake Ontario, the Gulf of Maine, Long Island Sound, Lower New York Bay, Delaware Bay, Chesapeake Bay, the South Atlantic and Gulf coasts, San Francisco Bay, the Columbia, and Puget Sound, as well as more actions (bloodless and otherwise) in the Grenadine Confederacy, on Hispaniola, and in Hawaii; littoral squadron/fleet actions under steam in Long Island Sound, Lower New York Bay, Delaware Bay, Chesapeake Bay, and San Francisco Bay; and overland campaigns (ranging from battalion-sized columns to field armies) in Upper and Lower Canada, New Brunswick, Maine, the Eastern Shore of Maryland-Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennesee, Arkansas, Missouri, the Indian Territory, Texas, New Mexico, Mexico, Oregon, Washington Territory, Rupertsland, Minnesota, and Manitoba, and various ship to ship actions (sail and steam) in the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and Arctic oceans and most of the adjacent seas, including the Caribbean, North, and Mediterranean seas. Battlefields have included farmland, forests, dunes, deserts, prairies, hills, mountains, and urban fightng, as well.
The most direct road route today between Virginia Beach and El Paso is about 2100 miles; from Murmansk to Sevastopol today, road mileage, is about the same. Interesting comparison, actually.
Thanks for reading, and the post; it is appreciated.
Best,