@yazoinkergrapft Yes, the United States is allowed to declare war. If it does, the sea zone immediately becomes hostile, as there are enemy surface warships in it. However, since the United States is not declaring war until the Collect Income phase, during the Combat Move, Conduct Combat, and Noncombat Move phases the sea zone is still friendly, so the United States can still occupy it freely. On Japan’s next turn, its units in the sea zone will be starting the turn in an enemy-occupied sea zone, so the normal rules for that situation apply (those units must either move away in combat movement or attack).
A&A 1940 Global - Classic 1984 Reference Charts
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I made these based on 1940 Global (2nd ed) rules and they are obviously intentionally designed to look like the player’s Reference Charts from 1984. We played several games with them and made a few corrections to some mistakes we noticed, but I think they are good to go now.
http://www.mediafire.com/folder/ab81wo2i2d12e/1940_REFERENCE_CHARTS
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Those charts are quite nice! I appreciate the inclusion of the political situation for each power, as well as any national objectives/bonuses.
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@crsluggo Thank you. Summarizing that information each in a relatively uniform space was the most difficult part to be sure, so I appreciate that.
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Just ran across these and they’re a real help. Nicely done and much appreciated.
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@randomcat yeah I really like them, I currently use them and to make them I just printed them on paper and used packing tape to “laminate” it on a thin piece of cardboard
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@shorethief Ingeniously Nostalgic!!!👏👍
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Thank you @RandomCat and @TinCanoftheSea ! Fun to hear of others appreciating these.
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@tincanofthesea I’m not sure when you downloaded these but please note that the Reference Chart for Japan that I originally uploaded had an error in Formosa, which has been corrected – you might want to double check that you have the correct version.
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@nolimit glad you like them :)





