I have a couple of questions/suggestions about two of the advantages listed so far:
“R3 United States – Uncle Sam: America now receives 4 free infantry units every round during the place new units phase (2 in Eastern United States, and 2 in Western United States).”
I assume that this is meant to represent the vast amount of volunteer enlistment that was triggered by Pearl Harbor (and perhaps, in later rounds, as the initial burst of enthusiam began to flatten, the compensating expansion of conscription – for instance when the draft age was lowered from 21 to 18). This is fine, but it seems to me that the phrase “Uncle Sam” is a little vague in conveying this concept. Would the rallying cry “Remember Pearl Harbor!” perhaps work better?
“R9 Soviet Union – Mobile Industry: All operational Russian factories may now move 1 space during their non-combat movement phase. Factories that have moved during the non-combat phase may still produce units during the place new units phase of the same turn.”
I initially thought this referred to the relocation of Soviet industry from the western part of the country to its eastern regions (like the Urals) in 1941, but then I noticed that this is a Round 9 advantage, which seems awfully late in the war. Also, I’m not sure if this option to move is only operational once, or whether it’s reusable; in the latter case, “mobile industry” would mean “self-propelled factories” (a problematic concept) rather than “relocated factories” (which is easier to grasp). So I’m not sure what to make of this one.