@Wolfshanze:
CWO Marc, I saw your custom layout, and noticed your under-table storage… you had a lot of USA-1, USA-2, USA-3, Germany-1, Germany-2, Germany-3, etc boxes under the tables. What do the numbers mean… are they just 1-of-3, 2-of-3, or do they mean something else (like 1 is for this game, and 2 is for that game).Â
The box numbering you see has changed somewhat since I took the pictures. At the time, I kept all the sculpts for each country together, in a series of consecutive trays. For the US, this required about 4 or 5 trays because of the sheer number of sculpts I own: every A&A board game ever published, with most of them owned in multiple copies.
More recently, however, I changed systems. In my new arrangement, I distinguish between the core units of each country and everything else. The core units are the sculpts which correspond exactly in design and size and colour/shade to the ones in G40/2. That narrow definition lets me squeeze the core sculpts for the major powers (US, UK, USSR, Germany and Japan) into two consecutive trays each (suffixed as -1 and -2). Those of the other powers (Italy, ANZAC, France and China) fit into one tray each. I also have a tray for Canada, which I created using the ANZAC pieces from G40/1, supplemented with half of the ANZAC AAA units from G40/2. ANZAC has the same colour in both games, but different designs; basically, the ones in G40/1 replicate the British designs, while the ones in G40/2 are all new ANZAC-specific designs. G40/1 has no AAA units, which is why I had to borrow some from G40/2.
All of my other sculpts – the ones I regard as non-core ones – are now in auxiliary trays, in various groups that are based (mostly) on the nature of the sculpts rather than their nationality. There are design variants, colour variants, design-and-colour variants, and so forth. The Russian-coloured Soviet IS-2 tanks, for example, are in one of the trays that I use for special supplementary units that are correctly coloured for their country of origin. The American-coloured and British-coloured Soviet IS-2 tanks, on the other hand, are in one of the trays that I use for what I call “foreign equipment.” I also have some trays in which I keep assorted goodies like generic ICs, generic AAA units, atomic bomb sculpts (from non-A&A sources), nuclear mushroom clouds (ditto), and so on. Plus trays for all of my non-A&A sculpts, since my most basic distinction of all is between official out-of-the-box (OOB) sculpts and non-official ones (like the ones from HBG, for example).