I assume you are asking about a land territory. The answer would be no. When you attack a land territory, you attack all country’s units that are in that land territory. So if Russia attacks an Italian territory that has German units in it, then Russia just declared war on Germany.
Sea zones are different. In a sea zone, you can attack one power’s units while other “neutral” power’s ships will simply sit there.
AARHE: proposed naval combat rules change
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Thats what they are supposed to do. THAT should already be in the rules. They are escorts for any type of attack. The allocations are for all types of naval combat
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@Imperious:
Thats what they are supposed to do. THAT should already be in the rules.
Ok thats all good then. I’ll update it.
Read the file again when you have the time.
Might pick out more communication errors.They are escorts for any type of attack. The allocations are for all types of naval combat
I thought escorts are only during opening-fire step (because thats when attacks are selective).
Main round step allocates according to hit allocation chart.Should a friendly destroyer be able to take a battleship hit for a friendly battleship?
If not I would clarify …Opening-fire
Screening
1. Attacker then defender declare screens for submarine warfare and air combat.
Submarine Warfare
1. Attacking then defending SS (submarine) fires.
2. Attacker then defender performs ASW.
3. Remove casualties.
Air Combat
1. Attacking then defending ships perform Anti-air. Remove casualties.
2. Attacking then defending air unit’s fire.
3. Remove casualties.
Battleship
1. Attacking then defending BB (battleship) fires.
2. Remove casualties.
Main-round
1. Other attacking sea unit’s fire.
2. Other defending sea unit’s fire.
3. Remove casualties.
Retreat DecisionThe selective fire of air units (in air superiority) and submarines makes it messy if I simplify it further.
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I think this is how it should look.
Opening-fire naval combat sequence:
Submarine warfare
1. Attacker then defender declare screens for submarine warfare and air combat.
Submarine Warfare
1. Attacking then defending SS (submarine) fires at surface ships.
2. Attacker then defender performs ASW.
3. Remove casualties from targeted ships.Air Combat
1. Attacking then defending ships perform Anti-air. Remove casualties.
2. Attacking then defending air unit’s fire.
3. Remove casualties.Battleship
1. Attacking then defending BB (battleship) fires.
2. Remove casualties.Main-round
1. Other attacking sea unit’s fire.
2. Other defending sea unit’s fire.
3. Remove casualties.Retreat Decision
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yep





