Yeah, I wish they put the couple of rules not in both books in the global section at the back.
Europe has the straits rule.
Pacific has Kamikaze and China rules.
If you’re aware of that, it isn’t too much of a problem.
In addition, if you are doing an unprovoked attack on UK1, then that means Japan did not declare war on the Allies on J1. So USA didn’t collect their NO’s anyway. So you are only going to lose USA bonus income on USA2, because USA3 income is automatic. The UK and ANZ NO’s pretty much offset that, even with a UK1 DOW
I have a question which I cannot find an answer to in the rulebook. So here is what happened. The UK has a carrier with a fighter in SZ 91. They attacked a German fleet in 109 with that carrier and fighter plus some more air units. Germany had a battleship cruiser and sub. Germany chose to not submerge its sub since no British unit could hit it. It missed the carrier but the Brits sunk all other Axis ships. Now the Brits have one carrier and some planes and Germany had a sub. What happens? I am assuming that Britain can ignore the sub and stay there without Germany’s sub getting to fire at it until Germany’s turn? Or does Britain have to retreat or face the sub getting the defenseless carrier? That sounds too bazaar so we played that Britain can ignore the sub but do the rules clarify this? Thanks.
@Charles:
Or does Britain have to retreat or face the sub getting the defenseless carrier?
This.
Ignoring subs is in the movement phase only, not in the conduct combat phase. This battle is unwinnable because you have nothing that can hit the submarine. You could sink the other Axis ships as you said, but then you must retreat the carrier or lose it senselessly
Thanks. Germany clobbered the Allies anyway so its ok that we let the UK get that. Btw I see we are on page127 of the Faq. That is the last Sea zone in the game so I guess its the last page Imogen questions allowed just joking. :-D
sorry if this was asked… but I didn’t have time to read over all the FAQ…
if you have two powers units (US, ANZAC) in the same sea zone, and Japan attacks, do the allies support each other or does the US stay out of the battle because they aren’t at war yet?
That depends. If The UK/ANZACdeclared war on you, you can ignore the US. But if you declared war, then this US is at war with you and you must fight them.
A single infantry attacks a territory containing just 2 AA Artillery units, does the infantry automatically kill the 2 guns without rolling?
A single fighter attacks a territory containing just 2 AA Artillery units, does the fighter automatically kill the 2 guns if it survives a single defence shot @1 from them?
Thanks.
@Charles:
That depends. If The UK/ANZACdeclared war on you, you can ignore the US. But if you declared war, then this US is at war with you and you must fight them.
No, Japan can declare war on only UK/ANZ or declare war on only USA and not UK/ANZ. You only fight the naval units you are at war with. The neutral ships will do nothing
@Young:
A single infantry attacks a territory containing just 2 AA Artillery units, does the infantry automatically kill the 2 guns without rolling?
Yes
A single fighter attacks a territory containing just 2 AA Artillery units, does the fighter automatically kill the 2 guns if it survives a single defence shot @1 from them?
Thanks.
Yes
@Charles:
Or does Britain have to retreat or face the sub getting the defenseless carrier?
This.
Ignoring subs is in the movement phase only, not in the conduct combat phase. This battle is unwinnable because you have nothing that can hit the submarine. You could sink the other Axis ships as you said, but then you must retreat the carrier or lose it senselessly
If the British had a Cruiser remaining, though, they would be able to attack the sub correct? Unless the sub chose to submerge and avoid combat?
Sure. It’s when there’s only a carrier that you have no chance but to retreat because nothing could hit the sub
Situation:
SZ 1 touches SZ 2, SZ 2 touches SZ 3, SZ 3 touches land territory
SZ 1 has one friendly transport, can pick up an infantry.
SZ 2 has one enemy sub
SZ 3 is empty
land territory is empty
May I send the transport, alone, over SZ2, ignoring the sub, then hit SZ3 and do an amphibious assault into the land territory?
Or must I bring a warship to escort it over the sub, or would this ignoring subs with escort rule only apply when doing an amphibious assault from SZ?
You can do it. Subs only stop amphibious assaults from the sea zone that the sub is in. So only a sub in Z3 stops an unescorted amphibious assault on Soviet Far East
Can I take a unclaimed Dutch territory with an infnatry AND a AA gun?
Yes, you may move any number of AA units into Dutch territories as UK/ANZAC at any time. Whether or not you also send a non-AA unit to transfer ownership to the UK/ANZAC from the Netherlands is a different issue. You could move only the AA if you wished, but the infantry in your example is what is transferring ownership.
And just in case you’re wondering, you can always move an AA unit into a pro-[your side] neutral territory so long as you also move a non-AA unit along with it to claim it.
If you’re talking about taking an unclaimed Dutch territory as the Axis, then you likely are doing it from a transport, and the situation is slightly more complicated due to transport rules with combat/non-combat moves and stuff.
edit-
fixed a typo
Just to add to tesla’s correct reply that the reason you can do it is because it is a non-combat move.
AA cannot be moved on a combat move.
Axis would take a Dutch territory with a non-AAA ground unit in combat move. AAA could be added in the noncombat move from a DIFFERENT transport. You cannot unload an infantry from a transport in the combat movement phase and then unload the AAA from the same transport in the non-combat movement phase. Once a transport unloads anything, any time during the turn, it is DONE for the rest of the power’s turn - can’t move, can’t unload
Once a transport unloads anything, any time during the turn, it is DONE for the rest of the power’s turn - can’t move, can’t unload
Do the rules say this and if so, where?
You can do it. Subs only stop amphibious assaults from the sea zone that the sub is in. So only a sub in Z3 stops an unescorted amphibious assault on Soviet Far East
That’s my read as well but it appears to be a loophole. The sub should block an unescorted transport IMO.
One question. Are you allowed to load a transport in a hostile sea zone with a combat and then unload in the same or a different sea zone? I can’t find where this is covered in the rules.
Page 33, 3rd para. down on the right side
“Whenever a transport offloads, it can’t move again that turn”
4th para. down
“… once it offloads, it can’t move, load, or unload again that turn”
“That’s my read as well”
It’s not my personal interpretation. It’s the rule. I’ve been on this site for years and seen Krieghund’s answers for years to all these questions, and that is why I’m a rules deputy - because I know the rules very, very well.
I know for a FACT that submarines only block unescorted transports from conducting amphibious assault only when the sub is in the destination, last sea zone, the one the transport would want to offload from. It’s not just my “interpretation”. If you want to play the way that makes sense to you, you house rule it and make sure your opponent agrees. Then you can have it the way “your opinion” is, but the rules are often not the way we think it might be.
A hostile zone is a zone that has an enemy surface warship in it. You can not load up transports in that zone with a combat move. There is one exception, and that is if you JUST now declared war on the power that owns the warship(s) and you were not at war with them before your turn.
I think you need to carefully read page 33 on transports, and then re-read it. And maybe read it again.
Bottom left of the page, “loading and offloading” first sentence says you can load in FRIENDLY sea zones. Friendly sea zones are clearly defined in the rulebook as zones that don’t contain any surface warships of powers with which you are at war. Or in other words, have no more than enemy submarines and/or transports in them.
Page 12, blue box, first paragraph contains the exception to the rule that transports can’t load ground units from hostile sea zones, which I described above.
I know I probably sound impatient - I had a frustrating evening. But these are all the answers you want, and chapters and verses.
I need clarification please:
Do retreating aircraft only get to move 1 space, to the same space as land units, or do they get the finish there remaining move totals?