Then, at best, so is your stance about it being a valid addition to the game ‘subjective’. That goes both ways, you know.
I also find the prospect of not understanding the position of copy paste actively harming the game absurd. It actively makes both trees less unique, diluting the US tree with a foreign design when it isn’t needed, and gives less reason to try the British tech tree. It’s one thing if this is done to fill a gap -an actual gap, mind you, not ‘play style’ gaps in a thick tree that already has plenty of good vehicles as it stands, with many more possible additions-, and another to copy paste a redundant premium into an already stuffed tree.
As for AB, as said before, the US already has a ton of really good aircraft at the tier, and with the buffs to performance aircraft get across the board, any supposed ‘need’ for a copy paste spitfire is lessened.
You actually illustrated one of my issues with premium copy paste. Instead of grinding out the Italian tree with Italian aircraft, you did so with a British aircraft. Because of the bonuses allotted to premiums, once you acquire such an aircraft, you lose any objective reason to play Italian aircraft, which not only makes the point of grinding out the tree -to use Italian aircraft in this case- somewhat redundant, but also makes it so that you aren’t actually prepared to use the nation’s aircraft in question. While Italy has good turn fighters, so the Spitfire isn’t as bad there, in other trees, like the US, where you aren’t really supposed to turnfight with their aircraft, calculated maneuvers aside? Actively detrimental as it’s teaching you the wrong lessons for the tree.
Because the Spitfire is a good turn fighter. While there are situations where US aircraft can outperform it in a turnfight, such situations require set up to do. This is an issue because the first instincts of new players is to enter into turnfights, regardless of what aircraft they are actually flying. Instead of discouraging those instincts, the Spitfire encourages it, which is an issue when much of the tree, especially the iconic aircraft people will be beelining for, play very differently to what you would expect of a Spitfire. Good newbie aircraft teach new players how to play the nation’s aircraft, which is something the Spit does not do and actively encourages behaviors and habits that run counter to what you should do with the vast majority of US aircraft.
Not in this specific case, but it holds true for just about every other copy paste vehicle of its kind. You are also assuming that Britain and US will always be on the same team in SB, which can’t be guaranteed. Alternate History SB matches are far from an outlandish possibility.
While I agree to an extent, simply saying Go play Other Tank/Plane game isn’t a good counter, especially when the only things they share is that they use military vehicles. Personally believe that copy paste should only be done when either absolutely necessary or if it, somehow, supports an actual cause or museum. In this case, it is neither necessary, nor does it help anyone outside of lining Gaijin’s pockets.
Not really. How you crack the egg is different, but the end result is the same. Just look at Italian ground where they have both Panzers and Shermans. All of the Axis nations flipped to the Allies post war, and frequently made use of American and Soviet kit as the US and USSR had so much surplus and wanted to prop up their new allies. It’s better in the sense that they actually used it, but, as WT is performance based and doesn’t care much for era, the end result is the same.