@Krieghund Thank you!
Global 2nd edition Q+A ( AAG40.2)
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Different game, different rules.
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Different game, different rules.
My mistake, sorry for the confusion. It’s getting hard to keep track of all the subtle differences between these variants in my old age.
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Different game, different rules.
I don’t understand. The Global rules are the 1940 2e Europe rules.
The 1940 Europe 2e rules state all decisions to Submerge or First Strike are made before dice are rolled. It also says:
“Attacking or defending submarines that choose to
submerge are immediately removed from the battle strip
and returned to the game board in the contested sea zone,
removing them from the remaining battle sequences.”I’m seriously confused now. lol :|
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I don’t understand. The Global rules are the 1940 2e Europe rules.
The 1940 Europe 2e rules state all decisions to Submerge or First Strike are made before dice are rolled. It also says:
“Attacking or defending submarines that choose to
submerge are immediately removed from the battle strip
and returned to the game board in the contested sea zone,
removing them from the remaining battle sequences.”I’m seriously confused now. lol :|
If there are no enemy destroyers present, subs get to choose whether they will submerge or not, before any dice are rolled in the battle. (Therefore, if you are not attacking with at least one destroyer, it is impossible to attack or sink an enemy submarine if the defender elects to immediately submerge, which is his right)
If the subs do not submerge, then they will have surprise strike capability (no enemy destroyers are present) every round.
The subs roll first and enemy casualties are chosen before all the non-sub units are rolled.
Then in the next round of combat, when the subs would normally roll, the subs have a new opportunity to submerge. It is a sub by sub decision, that is, you can submerge some subs without submerging others, and every new round of combat you get to make the decision again. Once a sub is submerged, it is returned to the gameboard in that seazone (so can NEVER re-enter the battle)
Submerging is not the same as retreating. Submerged subs stay in the same sea zone. Retreating subs (any retreat must always be a group retreat with all the other boats) would be moved back to an adjacent sea zone from which at least one attacking sea unit travelled or originated.
Do you have any more unresolved questions about submarines still?
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My confusion was with Krieghund’s reply. The original question was:
“Does the attacking sub get a free shot before the defender can submerge?”The post above Krieghund’s reply showed the 1940 Europe rules exactly how you and I play, the submerging sub is gone before the Surprise Striking sub can fire on it. But, in that same post Krieghund answered the above question as “yes”, the attacking sub can fire on a submerging sub, which is why I’m confused. Based on the Europe 1940 2e rules this doesn’t seem to be allowed.
But Krieghund’s reply in this thread was “Different game, different rules”, making me think his official ruling is that the attacking sub can fire on the submerging sub.
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Oh, OK.
Easy answer.That link was to Axis and Allies: Europe thread.
That is a completely different game. It came out in the year 2000 and is set in the Spring of 1941.
Different game, different rules.
There was also an Axis and Allies: Pacific game that came out years ago. I don’t believe they combined like this 1940 game does. I’ve only seen them in the stores - never out of the box, and never played them, myself…
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Hey guys, in the middle of a game of Global 1940 SE right now and need some help please. I think I’ve found a discrepancy in the Pacific rulebook, page 35. It says there under Capture of One of the United Kingdom’s Regional Capitals that: “An economy whose capital is held by the Axis can’t collect income, spend IPCs, or repair units.”
It’s the ‘repair units’ part that I’m having trouble with as it seems to fly in the face of the normal rules regarding the capture of a Capital. The only units that can be repaired in the game are Aircraft Carriers and Battleships, if I’m not mistaken, and there is no IPC cost associated with this. So did the wording mean to say “or repair facilities”?
Can anyone please advise? I’ve not seen this issue come up here on the boards before so I wonder if anyone else has noticed it. If it is indeed correct as written, perhaps Krieghund could elaborate on the reasoning/thought processes that went into its inclusion in the Global game. Thank you very much.
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Hi Gamerman. Those early A&A games do not link up as one. Both are good. I especially love the Europe game, but if is hard to win as Germany as the other 3 powers income is more than double Germany’s. Russia can make it very hard for them too.
Worth playing it if you know anyone with a copy.
Pacific is on a VP timescale, so meaning there is sn obvious end to the game.
Japan can win, but need to be quick.
Both games got me into A&A after a long time in the wilderness. -
Lozmoid, it’s not an error. While a power’s capital is held by the enemy, it skips all but the Combat Move, Conduct Combat, and Noncombat Move phases, so it can’t repair units, which is done during the Purchase Units phase.
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Ah yes, so simple! It all makes sense now. Thank you again, Krieg. :-)
But in that case, may powers that are allied to the UK still repair their own naval units at the UK’s Naval Bases situated on the map whose UK regional capital is under enemy control? For example, let’s say Japan has captured the regional capital of Calcutta. The Pacific UK economy may not repair its ships at all due to being restricted to only the Combat Move, Conduct Combat, and Noncombat Move phases… but can ANZAC repair ANZAC ships at these UK Naval Bases? Or the United States (if it was allied to the UK at that point)?
Thank you again for clearing this up.
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If anyone saw my post about repairing capital ships before I deleted it, ignore it…. I think it was wrong.
Just reading the rules about naval bases, I think that’s a good question, Lozmoid. It appears that other allies still can repair at UK naval bases in the Pacific that are still controlled by the UK, but I will wait along with you for Krieghund’s answer. :-)
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Yes, they can.
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That’s brilliant, Krieg - thanks very much.
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If you DOW the true neutrals, can you fly over them without attacking them?
–Jeff
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as a follow up, what about flying over true neutrals in noncombat? can you do so only if you conquer the neutral during combat or not at all?
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I don’t remember for 100% sure. You’ll have to wait for Krieghund on that one.
You definitely can’t fly over a neutral in non-combat if it has never been attacked.
I’m not even sure if you can fly over a neutral that was previously attacked but not conquered. -
are you even sure whether or not you can fly over the neutral if it IS conquered in the combat phase?
thanks
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are you even sure whether or not you can fly over the neutral if it IS conquered in the combat phase?
thanks
No, not sure about that right now. Would have to look it up in one of the FAQ threads - easier to wait for Krieghund. He’s answered that, but I can’t remember. I’ll have to write a note in my rulebook this time.
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As I recall, the official answer was:
Once a neutral is attacked it’s no longer neutral (not even pro axis or pro allies). It becomes full on “friendly” to the opposing side, in so far as it’s even a landing space for them similar to Dutch rules.
Thus, you can fly over during noncombat after you committed to at least one round of attack in the combat phase, which I’m reasonably confident was the final answer (but I’ve been known to be wrong).
High price to pay for switch all other neutrals, especially since I can’t think of many territories where there’s not an equivalent flight pattern re route that would work in the same number of spaces? I guess you’re thinking of attacking Spain to overfly and reinforce The Rock during noncom?