not in 183 games, the fall of moscow means the writing is on the wall. germanys bonuses need to be reduced from 5 to 3 (except norway) imo to prevent an unstoppable income flop, and bm air interception rules can prevent the easy suffocation of russia. these two changes make the game a bit more fair
Russia naval movement
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Are there any restrictions on Russian naval movement when not at war? For example could the sub and cruiser in sz 115 move to sz 112 through the sea zone with the German battleship and cruiser?
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Manual page 15:
"Powers Not at War with One Another
When two powers on opposite sides are not yet
at war with one another, they are not yet enemies,
and they operate under some special conditions
and restrictions.Movement: A power’s ships don’t block the naval
movements of other powers with which it’s not at war,
and vice versa. They can occupy the same sea zones." -
@tmartin The main restriction is the Danish Strait. The Germans own it, and thus the Russians cannot move through it. So you cannot make the move SZ115 to SZ112. You can move anywhere in the Baltic sea including spaces occupied by German ships, if not at war.
There is an exception: when not at war, the Russians can ask the German player to allow the units to pass through the straits. There very little incentive for the German player to allow this, but it is permitted in the rules.
pg 9 in rule book about Straits:
If your side (but not necessarily your power) controlled a canal or narrow strait at the start of your turn, you may move
sea units through it (you can’t use it in the same turn that you capture it). If a canal or narrow strait is controlled by a
power not on your side, but with which you are not yet at war, you must ask permission to use it, which may be denied.
You can’t move sea units through a canal or narrow strait that is controlled by a neutral territory or by a power with
which you are at war. -
@surfer thanks for that clarification