Another thing you could do for the Chinese fighter if you would prefer it to be the same color as the Chinese troops is get one from Historical Board Gaming. They have these Allied Supplement sets in several different colors. One of them is called Celery Green which is the same color as the British pieces in old copies of Revised. This color is very close to the same color as the Chinese infantry pieces. The Allied supplement sets include P-40 fighter planes. You don’t even have to get the entire set because HBG sells these pieces individually. You can pick up 2 or 3 P-40s and there you go! Your very own Chinese fighter unit.
As for Artillery, HBG also has these Neutral sets in several colors and one of them is a yellow-green color. That color is a little brighter than the Chinese infantry, but it works okay with them and certainly is different from the US artillery. The Neutral sets have an artillery piece called a “75 Veld” which I think is Polish or Belgian but works fine for Chinese since they mostly had older stuff anyway.
Question: Bombing airport - Prevents scramble?
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Hi everyone,
We discussed this scenario during our game this weekend:
Japan (me) made two combat moves against India in the same round:
1. Tactically bombing its airport.
2. Attacking the remaining british fleet, situated in the adjacent seazone 39, with my fleet.
The bombing was a success by adding 5 damage. Is it then possible/not possible for the UK player to scramble in the following battle in SZ39?
I apologize if it states the rules in the rulebook, but I couldn’t find any info about this. Hope you have the time enlighten me in this case.
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The bombing was a success by adding 5 damage. Is it then possible/not possible for the UK player to scramble in the following battle in SZ39?
…Scramble takes place as a defender’s move at the end of the attacker’s combat movement phase. Bombing occurs after that.
See
@rulebook:Scramble
Scrambling is a special movement that the defender can make at the end of this phase [i.e.the combat movement phase]. It must be done after all of the attacker’s combat movements have been completed and all attacks have been declared. The attacker may not change any combat movements or attacks after the defender has scrambled….HTH :-)
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Ok, that makes sense, thank you very much
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This rule is very important. It also means that, if you attack both at land and at sea, the planes can only chose one of the combats to participate in, before knowing the results of any other combat. This can be very interesting in amfibious landings and often outside places like india, egypt, uk and italy.
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Most definitely! And I understand that now, I mean it should litterally be descriped as a faze between the declaring combat moves faze and the conduct combat faze
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Most definitely! And I understand that now, I mean it should litterally be descriped as a faze between the declaring combat moves faze and the conduct combat faze
Fully. Declaring intercept, scramble and kamikaze decisions should be their own phase to provide clarity in the rules. Not for any other reason. Actually resolving those things can still be in conduct combat.





