• Just call me blind, but can anyone tell me where in the rules of 1940 Global/Pacific/Europe is stated when subs do emerge again after they’ve submerged?

    In the old Pacific and Europe and Revised it’s clearly stated. It’s rather important to know and not to assume when they emerge with the convoy-disruption rules in place.

    At the moment we assume they emerge before convoy-disruption right after non-combat movement.

    Thanks in advance and kind regards,

    K’68


  • @K0rnput1968:

    Just call me blind, but can anyone tell me where in the rules of 1940 Global/Pacific/Europe is stated when subs do emerge again after they’ve submerged?

    In the old Pacific and Europe and Revised it’s clearly stated. It’s rather important to know and not to assume when they emerge with the convoy-disruption rules in place.

    At the moment we assume they emerge before convoy-disruption right after non-combat movement.

    Thanks in advance and kind regards,

    K’68

    Page 18, AAEurope1940 rulebook, right column, second paragraph below the section: “Step 2: Submarine Surprise Strike or Submerge (Sea Battles Only)”. “Attacking or defending submarines that choose to submerge are removed from the battle strip immediately and placed on the game board in the contested sea zone, removing them from the remaining battle sequence.

    This means that “submerging” simply takes the sub out of combat and places it back on the game board. Subs don’t actually stay “submerged”, it is just an option to leave combat when the enemy has no destroyers to force you to stay.

    See also page 29 for the submarine unit description.

    This is different from the old versions of the game. This is also not an official answer. Hope it helps.


  • @JamesAleman:

    @K0rnput1968:

    Just call me blind, but can anyone tell me where in the rules of 1940 Global/Pacific/Europe is stated when subs do emerge again after they’ve submerged?

    In the old Pacific and Europe and Revised it’s clearly stated. It’s rather important to know and not to assume when they emerge with the convoy-disruption rules in place.

    At the moment we assume they emerge before convoy-disruption right after non-combat movement.

    Thanks in advance and kind regards,

    K’68

    Page 18, AAEurope1940 rulebook, right column, second paragraph below the section: “Step 2: Submarine Surprise Strike or Submerge (Sea Battles Only)”. “Attacking or defending submarines that choose to submerge are removed from the battle strip immediately and placed on the game board in the contested sea zone, removing them from the remaining battle sequence.

    This means that “submerging” simply takes the sub out of combat and places it back on the game board. Subs don’t actually stay “submerged”, it is just an option to leave combat when the enemy has no destroyers to force you to stay.

    See also page 29 for the submarine unit description.

    This is different from the old versions of the game. This is also not an official answer. Hope it helps.

    Ah, that explains it a little better now, thanks! I was looking in the turn sequence for it. It’s always difficult when you are reading the rules in a foreign language. We are going into our first official match with others this weekend and want to be fully prepped against any form of loopholes in the rules.

    Been playing A&A for 24 years now and must say: the rulebooks -unfortunately- don’t get any more transparent with each new release. (Don’t get me wrong, We really love the new global over here and are faithful buyers of each new release. thanks for all those nice hours of gaming fun Larry!)


  • @K0rnput1968:

    We are going into our first official match with others this weekend and want to be fully prepped against any form of loopholes in the rules.

    Fun, fun.

    Been playing A&A for 24 years now and must say: the rulebooks -unfortunately- don’t get any more transparent with each new release. (Don’t get me wrong, We really love the new global over here and are faithful buyers of each new release. thanks for all those nice hours of gaming fun Larry!)

    :-) Dittos!

  • TripleA

    Question on Russia.  I read the global political situation and it says USSR cannot wage war against a European force until the 4th turn.  It would seem that they can declare war on Japan anytime they wish then, is that correct?

  • Official Q&A

    Yes.


  • @94Canuck:

    Question on Russia.  I read the global political situation and it says USSR cannot wage war against a European force until the 4th turn.  It would seem that they can declare war on Japan anytime they wish then, is that correct?

    They can declare war on Germany and Italy as soon as Italy or Germany declares war on Russia.  Thus, Russia could declare war on Germany on R1 if attacked on G1.

  • '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    @Krieghund:

    Yes, but the transports would not be automatically sunk.  Since they can retreat, they are not defenseless.  The fighter would get one shot against the transports before they could retreat.  Of course, if they choose not to retreat, the fighter will sink them all eventually.  Either way, there will be no amphibious assault.

    I have a question along similar lines.  The last game that I played my opponent tried an amphibious assault that required us to resolve the naval battle before but he was unsuccessful in sinking all of the defending ships, because of unlucky or lucky dice rolls depending upon how you look at it.  We were wondering if the transport is immediately sunk or if it can retreat?  And if it can retreat can does it get fired upon before?  I don’t think we’ve had a situation like this arise before in all of the games of AA50 and AA40 that we’ve played…  We had the transport just get sunk, but in hindsight I think he should have been able to retreat it.

  • Official Q&A

    When the attacking warships and/or planes are all destroyed, any remaining defender hits are applied to the transports.  At the end of the round, the surviving transports can retreat normally.  If for some reason they can’t retreat, they are destroyed.

  • '20 '19 '18 '17 '16

    Thank you!


  • Can a single unit kill unlimited numbers of unprotected transports?

  • Official Q&A

    Yes.  Think of it as attacking the transports and rolling to hit for round after round until they are all sunk.

  • TripleA

    This is new to me.

    So if a Transport is alone in a sea zone, and a ship or fighter comes in.  Attack rolls and misses, the transport can retreat and end the sea zone combat?  I always thought it was an auto kill, did no know about the retreat option.


  • Only the attacker got the option to retreat.


  • Yes, so transports can retreat when they are with an attack force.


  • My english isnt very well, but i hope you understand me!  :-)

    Okay, let us imagine that i have a aircraft carrier with one tactical bomber on it and i have two fighters which are able to reach this aircraft carrier.
    Now my question: can i move in the non combat move my tatical bomber from the carrier to a friendly territory and simultaneously land the other 2 fighters on this carrier?! :?

    and my second question:

    if i play ussr and attack japan in t1 i can also capture neutral territorys. Also Pro-Axis territorys? or only pro allies?

  • Official Q&A

    Welcome, Zorrodog!  Your English is fine.

    1. Yes.

    2. Once USSR declares war, it can immediately attack unfriendly or strict neutral territories and claim friendly neutral territories.


  • correct me if I am wrong but i thought carriers were limited to 2 airplanes


  • @Henz:

    correct me if I am wrong but i thought carriers were limited to 2 airplanes

    At the end of the turn.  The third one landed elsewhere.

    Basically, 1 carrier can service 4 planes.  2 take off and land on land.  2 start from land and end on the carrier.

    A lot of players make the mistake of having a carrier per 2 fighters.  That’s best for maximizing defense, but for maximizing strike capability and offense, you want 4 fighters per carrier.

  • Official Q&A

    @gamerman01:

    @Henz:

    correct me if I am wrong but i thought carriers were limited to 2 airplanes

    At the end of the turn.  The third one landed elsewhere.

    Not just at the end of the turn, but at any given point in time.  Zorrodog’s example is OK because one plane left at the same time that two others were arriving.

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