• Lets say Japan had dominated the game and had control of everything in the Pacific except mainland U.S. So they captured Hawaii, and Australia, but on the European theater the Allies had taken Germany and Italy. Who would win this match up? And also say Germany and Italy dominated the European theater and the only spots they haven’t taken yet are neutrals and mainland U.S and the Allies had taken everything in the Pacific including Japan. Who would win that?


  • Rule book says Axis powers need 8 capital cities on the Europe board, or 6 on the Pacific board to win the game. Allies must control Rome, Berlin, and Tokyo for one round and they win. So the axis would win both situations


  • How would they win in both situations? If the allies control one side or the other that means the Axis would have no victory cities on one map and almost all of them on the other map


  • Huh, I never realized that they changed the winning conditions in alpha 3. I guess the Axis would win in both situations. I guess I mean hypothetically than if you had to win by taking over the world who would win in these situations?


  • Usually the side with more PUs will win in long, drawn out games if you are going for total board domination.  The European Axis powers would have income in the vicinity of 225 PUs, while Japan in that Scenario is stuck around 102 PUs.  Any strategic advantage in piece positioning will not be able to overcome that income differential. If you ignored the VC rules, the European Axis would have an easy time winning the game while Japan could be contained and crushed.


  • That is also what I was thinking, it seems to me that it is more worthwhile for the U.S. to spend most of their IPC’s on the European side and just try to hold off Japan from capturing the 6 victory cities.


  • @GermanEmpire:

    That is also what I was thinking, it seems to me that it is more worthwhile for the U.S. to spend most of their IPC’s on the European side and just try to hold off Japan from capturing the 6 victory cities.

    Easier said than done. Japan starts off with 19 fighters and tacs, so after they take India, which they will, they can just build like 8 carriers and the rest subs making US have to retreat everything from the European theater just to hold Hawaii to stop Japan from winning in the pacific.


  • @ShadowHAwk:

    After they took care of india and china they will not have 19 airunits left.
    Taking india and taking care of china normaly involves losing air to take the countries, and india has 3 AA guns and the potential to build a pretty big stack of inf-art with it.

    Also the investment of 8 carriers is a lot more then japan can build in a single round, it takes at least 2 rounds to build that amount, and US can just send in a fleet of subs and sink them all.

    Japan will loose around 2 planes, on average, taking India. This is because Japan will have enough ground to stack Burma and prevent a UK attack against it, unless UK has put all of her planes in India, which would need to be around 8 at the very least. A well played Japan will have your fleet positioned off Japan/Philippines, so the US won’t be able to just kill that fleet. You don’t need to move your fleet off the coast of India to take India herself, maybe a couple fleet pieces can move there to protect your transports, if you need them in the assault. Besides it will take Japan a couple turns to regroup all of his units to strike Hawaii. After taking India, which normally happens around turn 7-9. Lets say it Japan takes India late, on turn 9, and then their planes are non combat moved to Yunnan. On the turn you take India you are building subs/DD’s. The following turn you build the carriers and the planes move to the Philippines/carriers you already have. Keep in mind that Japan should be be spending 70% of her income on fleet for most of the game anyways. Turn 11 you would put the planes on the carriers in Japan and set your fleet up for a strike on Hawaii, with Germany having 2 bombers to kill any blockers the allies might throw out. I have played many games against myself, and the only way to defend against this is to pull every US fleet piece, that isn’t a transport, from the Atlantic back to the pacific to stop Japan from winning.

    Maybe you aren’t playing against a Japan opponent who has the foresight to know when they are going to hit India by turn three because of the layout of the allied units, and their own units. The hardest part for Japan is getting enough ground to stack Burma, but once this is accomplished India always falls with the loss of only ground, plus the planes killed by AA fire. Even in my Games where US goes 100% pacific Japan is still able to take India unless UK sacs Russia early by keeping their fighters in India instead of Moscow. I think where most Japan players go wrong is not being completely consolidated in their efforts to take India, maintain the DEI, and keep China at bay by keeping their forces grouped on/around Yunnan. The real reason, IMO, why Japan can win so easily is because German bombers can can open any blockers the allies put up making it a nightmare for the US/Anzac in the pacific. If US were allowed to stall for a turn by putting up a blocker that would be huge in allowing a little more leniency in the way the allies play the map. Sigh I really can’t stand how powerful bombers are on this map :(.

  • '21 '20 '18 '17

    Sydney is so far out of position (+3 turn to return to SZ 6, +2 to return to a naval base within your Triangle of Control), that

    1. If Japan is trying to take it, you bought too few infantry and cheap units.  since you only get 3 production, the only safe move is to build something every turn from the beginning, and there is a risk in buying a ship fighter or saving the money.  ANZAC is very vulnerable in that they cannot chill out in SZ 54 safely while Japan has anything on SZ22/Carolines.  SZ 54 is your best mobility zone, so all Japan has to do to paralyze you is to threaten that zone.

    2. SO, if you have a proper number of units on Sydney, or within reach of Sydney (6 ground units + 3 planes),

    a) Japan can take you anyways, but it will cost them everything
    b) whatever they attack you with (all their transports and at least 1 grand fleet) is so out of position compared to the US (or vulnerable to being attacked from SZ 26)
    c) that it is backwatered and won’t be able to return to position in time to stop the US from clearing SZ 6 or save SZ 6.

    If Japan is taking Sydney, holding China, threatening India, and warding off the US, the allies are doing something fatally wrong up until J6…


  • I never said Japan should take Sydney. I’ve tried many times to go for Sydney and it just isn’t worth it. Japan is too out of position to take it. Hawaii is actually easier.

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