Kamikaze are a defensive weapon, which are resolved at the beginning of the combat phase, so the attacking air units have already launched from their carriers are not in danger (unless they are “guest” air units). As such, they will participate in combat even if their carrier is hit, and will have the remainder of their movement to land as normal afterwards.
Global 2nd edition Q+A ( AAG40.2)
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I find that it helps new players to separate and breakdown actions as long as it doesn’t effect game play. I moved the repair damaged units ahead of purchase new units because an IC likely gets fixed before purchasing new units, but I understand keeping them together if you’re playing with the “can’t go back once a phase is finished or has been skipped” rule. However, getting convoyed before or after collecting your income can’t have too much of an effect, I just think it’s important to help new players remember what can happen throughout a single turn sequence. About #4 & #11… you would be surprised how many new players believe that air units on carriers must move with the carriers, they also forget that planes can land on new carriers, or new planes can land on existing carriers.
1. Research & Development (Optional)
2. Repair damaged units
- facilities
- capital ships
3. Purchase new units
4. All air units take off
5. Combat movement phase
6. Scramble defending air units
7. Deploy Kamikaze tokens
8. Resolve Combat
- strategic bombing raids
- amphibious assaults
- general combat
9. Non-combat movement
10. Mobilize new units
11. All air units land
12. Collect income
13. Conduct convoy disruptions -
I don’t think the answer to simplifying the game is to have more phases. Perhaps have a checklist with all those steps if you like, but I hate the part in Triple-A where you have to purchase units before combat movement. Politics and repair are also annoying. These should all be rolled into a single phase which allows going back and changing things. That would make it easier and more fun.
I could, conceivably, understand a scramble/intercept/kamikaze phase between Combat Movement and Combat. That might save a bit of confusion. And perhaps a scramble/intercept planes land phase after combat - it’s pretty obvious but it could be formalised if you wanted too.
And I agree about #4 & #10 being confusing - why are they there at all? Just think that all planes are in the air during your turn, if you like.
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I need a confirmation on this, please.
In the Notes on triple a it says:
*(PE) USA may not end movement in seazone adjacent to Japanese controlled territories when not at war with Japan
(Sea Zones 6,17,19,20,22,32,33,34,36, and 37).Meaning that any US ship may not end ist move in 23, 16,30 and so on.
Example sz 16 is adjacent to sz 6 and 17.
You can stop your Movement in neither of those sz (6,16,17).
Correct? -
The rule is simply that when not at war the USA cannot leave any boats in a seazone that is adjacent to Japanese controlled territory.
So no, no US ship may end it’s move in Zone 17 (Iwo Jima), but yes they can always sit in 16, 23, 30 or any zone that doesn’t have a Japanese controlled island or bordering a Japanese controlled territory (like on US1, Z37 is off limits because the Japanese control Siam)You can freely pass THROUGH these zones that you can’t end your movement in
The note is there because Triple A does nothing to stop you from breaking this rule -
Sz 23 on US 1 is ok for US; SS and DD and on US2, the US is free to end it’s movement in sz 16 and is still not at war with Japan?
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Right, since 23 and 16 have no islands, the USA can ALWAYS leave boats there
If I send the Philippines boats east, I almost always split them up so the Japs can’t easily get 'em both with a J2 DOW. I wouldn’t leave them both in 23
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Oh man, I miss understood this the whole time.
I had the opinion “adjacent” to the adjacent sz and I took really care of it all the time, so that If I would be Allies that my Ships are really not even touching them at all.Thanks for clearing that up Gamerman01!
I apreciate it.You can now go on and laugh about it, at least I have to :lol: :lol: :lol:
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Further to my last comment, if we must have combat movement as its own phase, I think it should be first, with repair ships happening as the first part of combat movement - or second with repair ships as its own phase happening first.
I find I always have to plan out what attacks I will make before I know what I’ll buy. That’s a bit annoying. Does anyone agree with this?
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ipcs from west india should go to uk while india is captured.
Can somebody confirm that?
Thanks -
No, West India is part of the Pacific Board in Global, so if India is captured and UK takes back West India, West India is still UK Pacific territory and hence West India does not add anything to UK Euro’s economy.
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I have a question
Axis forces perform a heroic amphibious assault against a territory occupied by plutocrat scum. We move the fleet 1 sea zone and then attack with a carrier, planes, destroyers, and transports unload during combat movement phase. The undermench have an airbase bordering the sea zone but they decide NOT to scramble so there is NO NAVAL BATTLE. Afterward, can the fleet (except the transports that unloaded) move out of the sea zone in noncombat movement phase? Secondly, if there had been a cruiser or battleship in the fleet and there was a shore bombardment, would we be able to move in NCM? Would the carriers, planes and destroyers move and leave the battleship/cruiser stay with the transports?
thank you
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The fleet can’t move in both combat and non-combat movement phases regardless of anything else happening. The planes could of course keep moving if you wanted in non-com to land though.
If the fleet started in the sea zone where the amphibious assault, then they could move out if there was no sea battle. If there was bombardment, then the bombarding ships would be stuck but the rest should be able to move in NCM.
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Great answer by Snigg
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OK thanks guys
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Rules clarification needed. If UK owns Northwest Persia prior to DOW by Germany against USSR, can USSR move troops into Northwest Persia prior to DOW? Or must they mass on Caucasus and wait to assault Iraq.
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The political situation rules for USSR refer to page 15, where in the blue sidebar it says that while neutral (USSR is neutral on the Europe map in your scenario), it can’t move units into or through territories belonging to another power (along with other restrictions)
NW Persia belongs to another power, so USSR is not allowed until at war with Italy or Germany
(USSR can’t move to NW Persia when it is neutral either, so in other words USSR can never leave USSR until at war) -
Thank you for the clarification Gamerman. That is what I thought but wanted to clarify before next Thursday’s 3 day gaming binge begins.
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Sure, any time
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Rule clarification please:
Sea battle including subs. 1 sub remains from the attacker, defender has some air units remaining. Can the attacker retreat because the defender still has units which can fire, or is that rule nullified because they can’t fire at the remaining attacker unit?
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Can the attacker retreat because the defender still has units which can fire,
…This part is correct.
The rulebook says:
@rulebook:
Air units can hit submarines only if a friendly destroyer is
in the battle.and
@rulebook:Can’t Be Hit by Air Units: When attacking or defending,
hits scored by air units can’t be assigned to submarines
unless there is a destroyer that is friendly to the air units
in the battle.So this is a “can’t hit”-rule and not a “can’t shoot” rule.
In other words: The submarine does not cancel the ability of air units to fire.Additionally, there is no rule that cancels the submarine’s ability to shoot.
It is a “can’t hit”-rule, too:@rulebook:
Can’t Hit Air Units: When attacking or defending,
submarines can’t hit air units.HTH :-)