Minor Axis Units – Strategic Use Guide
(This was revamped and word enhanced by AI for awareness but all ideas came from me.)
Utility RolesMinor Axis infantry are perfect for jobs you don’t want to waste German troops on:
Blockers – delay Soviet advances while your main German force positions for an attack.
Gap fillers – plug holes in your line when you’re thin on units.
Meat shields – soak up hits in battles so your higher-value German units survive longer.
Rule of thumb: let them take the hits, not your Germans.
Extra ArtilleryMinor Axis artillery are identical in stats to German artillery.
If you run out of German artillery sculpts, you can buy Minor Axis artillery to keep your combined-arms firepower going.
Sculpt & Sniper PreservationGerman infantry are the only Axis Infantry that can become snipers in the Stalingrad City board.
If you run out of German infantry sculpts outside the city, you can’t get new snipers by purchase.
To prevent this:
When you need more infantry for the wider map and you’re low on German sculpts, buy Minor Axis infantry instead.
This keeps German infantry sculpts in reserve for sending into Stalingrad where they can become snipers.
This won’t happen every game, but when it does, it can save you from a late-game sniper shortage.
Final Takeaway
Minor Axis infantry: Don’t buy them unless you’re protecting German infantry sculpts for sniper conversion. Use the starting ones for blocking, filling, and dying in place of Germans.
Minor Axis artillery: Worth buying if you need more guns or run out of German artillery sculpts.
Treat Minor Axis as expendable auxiliaries—freeing up German units for the real work.