Why did Japan lose so badly?

Why did Japan lose so badly?

When you're outbuilt about 8:1 on most relevant classes of ships, against an opponent who tends to build better ships and planes than you've got, it almost always ends badly.

inferior technology, inferior industrial output, inferior leadership, inferior spirit

Outnumbered, outgunned, fighting on multiple fronts, inferior industrial base, inferior material base, inferior technology, outdated tactics, extreme distance from allies

The IJN was crap

>inferior spirit
Objectively and undeniably wrong on this point. Spirit is the only thing they had better than literally everybody else

They were an island with no resources propped up to global prominence by British support. They lost the support and then picked a fight with the largest national economy in the world. The rest is history.

>outnumbered, outgunned, and cornered
The UNSC could have pulled it off.

They had too much spirit?

>muh suicide attacks
This is delusion not spirit. The African American soldier had every reason to hate the country he fought for, but he did so anyway. Why? Because he was allowed to think for himself, though some might not like it he could stop listening to American propaganda and obtain communist literature or anything he fancied, he decided for himself that the US was the lesser evil in an imperfect world where you have to make trade-offs, that the war was an opportunity to prove himself and prove the racists wrong and that he wasn't going to let the other soldiers down.

The Japanese soldier on the other hand lived in a bubble, they weren't allowed to embrace reality so they never lived in it. If bravery is knowing exactly what might happen and doing it anyway, that wasn't it.

the USA.

>implying the UNSC wasn't BTFO

The UNSC survived the war.
The Covenant didn't.

It was a clutch

I wouldn't say they lost badly, but Japan was running on fumes for the final years of the war.

they originally seized Indochina and the Dutch East Indies to secure a wartime supply of iron and oil for the war effort, but by 1944, it was a goddamn gauntlet to get that material to Japan without harassment from either the US Navy, who was outproducing japan to where their navy outnumbered them 8-1, and Chinese units who would constantly destroy material convoys up the road through China.

but in the summer of 1945, Japan still had an impressive hold over Mainland Asia. pic related.

What did them in was being overwhelmed. between near daily firebombings of Japanese home cities, the Atom Bombs, and the Soviet entry into war that threatened to capture all of China, the Emperor simply saw no way to effectively resist such an onslaught with his navy in the bottom of the ocean and no fuel or metal to keep the tanks built and running.

Orbital Drop Samurai Troops

Because a Japanese Empire controlling all of East Asia would have threatened Russia too much and God loves Holy Rus' so he destroyed the Japanese.

t. Russophile American

Bro the Covenant split between elites and brutes/jackals/grunts.

So the Covenant didn't survive the war.

right, it fell to civil war before it could finish killing humans

Because they only ever managed to attack countries when they become weak and still failed terribly at that. Nips are all talk, really shit at war and conquest in the long term.

Just because their national spirit was built upon a fantasy, that doesn't mean it's not national spirit.

>I wouldn't say they lost badly
In nearly every battle they fought they lost 99% of their men. The U.S. usually lost the same amount, but never anywhere near the same percentage. They lost every battle after Wake quite horribly despite fighting tooth and nail to hold every single inch.

The Covenant is still flying around the stars.
Human babbies are crying on Earth.
Who really won?

The Fall of Singapore pretty much overturns your entire argument.

The reality of that event was that Yamashita's army were running out of supplies while the British still had a ton of ammo. Yamashita literally bluffed Percival.

The British were unprepared for the attack, yes, but the way they planned the defense of Malaya and Singapore makes me believe they actually wanted to lose the bloody place to begin with. Personally, I blame Churchill for that.