I strongly disagree that you are abandoning your customers if you mold the pieces in black. The Japanese roundel is red and white - yet I do not see you casting the pieces in red (or white).
Personally, I love the German Combat Dice as it is, but I do not see a need to slavishly adhere to the same color - the dice goes really well with black units, and a black dice would probably not look as impressive. That being said, I feel that you would be abandoning these selfsame customers by not allowing them to use the pieces they already have in addition to the ones you will make.
I have made a poll on this matter - I am being vehement on this issue because I strongly feel that it would be in your financial interest to make them black, as well as I believe Combat Unit sales will dwarf Combat Dice sales.
Let me put it another way - Avalon Hill would never have come out with nation specific pieces for Axis & Allies under your logic, as the “decisions today are limited by (…) decisions yesterday”, to quote a well-respected member of the community :-)
One last thing - stone can be recarved… and made into beautiful objects. (Statue of David by Michelangelo… etc.)(ok, I had to throw that in!)
@FieldMarshalGames:
@reloader-1:
FMG…
The French Army does not wear blue.
The USSR did no have red uniforms.
Name 1 Japanese that wore Orange kit.
See my point? Colors in this game are an abstraction - who would disagree with a blue French color? Yet, honestly, no one wore that in WWII.
If you really want to go down this path - the Germans did have black uniforms.
Just offering my suggestion and my fervent hope that you make at least a small batch of German units in black.
It may be possible in the future, however this is already decided. (Special production run?)
We have to match the COMBAT DICE. We can not switch-up and abandon our many customers who have COMBAT DICE or AMMO BOXES. We decided to go GREY way before this project was even announced. GREY is the ICONIC colour of the German Army. At this point it is written in stone, like so many historical cases… our decisions today are limited by our decisions yesterday.