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HOI4 Dev Diary - Pre-Release and International Women's Day ***read the threadmark before posting***

Hi everyone and welcome to the last dev diary before Waking the Tiger releases tomorrow! We are so hyped and kinda wish we could release it already, but sadly tomorrow it is ;D Basically everything has now been covered in diaries, but if you want a reminder, check out the Patch log or the massive recap dev diary or any of the other 28 dev diaries for Waking the Tiger.

Since tomorrow is also International Women’s Day, and it's going to be extremely busy with the release, we felt today could be a cool day to highlight some of the ways we are featuring womenfolk in Waking the Tiger. For the high level country running perspective HOI4 takes on play, where only high generals and such are portrayed, there aren't a lot of women historically (hello 1930s), so we try to make an extra effort when we have a plausible candidate or historical references to women’s impact on the war.

Oh, and before I hand over to the content designers, we have a special gift from our awesome artist, something she has been working on in her spare time for the game: a new loading screen (as part of the free Cornflakes Update) featuring female russian snipers. You can grab it now as a wallpaper too:

sniper_wallpaper_1920x1080_small.jpg

If you want to learn more on female snipers in the soviet army this is a good place to start on wikipedia.

Soong Mei-Ling:
As the wife of the Chinese Leader Chiang Kai-Shek, Mei-Ling served as a trusted advisor for him. Perhaps even more importantly, she was the the main driving force behind the Chinese efforts to gain the support of the United States. It was she who negotiated with Claire Chennault to hire him as a special advisor to build up the Chinese Air Force. Later, she was only the second woman - and the first Chinese citizen - to address both houses of the US congress, again imploring them to send more aid to China in its fight against the Japanese.
Capturesml.JPG


In the game, she is a special advisor to China with a - for now - unique trait called “First Lady”, which gives +5% stability and war support, representing her extensive work to help her husband and sponsor several relief organisations. Having her as an advisor will also make the US more likely to take decisions like sending the Flying Tigers or sending lend-lease equipment.

Yoshiko Kawashima:
Yoshiko’s life story sounds almost a little too fantastic: Born as a princess into the clan of the Chinese Emperor, she was given up for adoption after the revolution - and taken in by a Japanese intelligence agent.

As a young adult, Yoshiko moved around China and Manchuria on various intelligence gathering missions - taking lovers and making enemies along the way. The Japanese later came to use her contacts to old Manchu nobility - and indeed her ancestry - to convince Puyi to become the Emperor of Manchukuo.

After Puyi accepted his new position, Yoshiko decided to raise a cavalry unit to fight the “bandits” (some criminals and some various brands of Communist guerillas) roaming the countryside. Eventually, she came to command several thousand soldiers. Later on, she became quite critical of the Japanese conduct in Manchukuo and was gradually removed from public sight.
Captureyk.JPG


Her end was, if tragic, not particularly unexpected: Captured in Beijing by Nationalist Chinese forces at the end of the war, she was tried for treason and executed in 1948.

In-game, she is available as a general for Manchukuo, with the trait “cavalry officer” to represent her history as a leader in the pacification campaign.

Women in the workforce
The World War placed a heavy strain on the conscriptable population of the nations involved, resulting in many men being drawn from the workforce to fight on the frontlines. To keep the production lines going, it was only logical to look at the much-untapped other half of the population. Historically, millions of women in countries such as Canada, the UK, and the USA took up the jobs the men had left to join the army. In the game this is modeled as a decision that provides a 3% recruitable population bonus, which makes up for the -3% recruitable population bonus from Total Mobilization.
women in the workforce.png


Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl
“Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl” is the name of the Canadian icon of strong female factory workers during the war. Based on a picture of Veronica Foster who made Bren light machine guns for the John Inglis Co., it became a propaganda icon to encourage Canadian women to work in industry. Almost 1 million Canadian women ended up doing so during the Second World War. As a propaganda tool, Ronnie can be seen as a model for the later and better-known Rosie the Riveter in the USA. In the game, “Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl” is the flavor name for Canada’s “Women in the Workforce” decision.

upload_2018-3-7_14-31-34.png


Rosie the Riveter
“Rosie the Riveter” is the name of the well-known American icon of strong female factory workers during the war. Among others, she was depicted on the famous “We Can Do It!” poster, which wasn’t very well-known during the war, but which was revived as a feminist icon in the 1980s. Posters such as these were used to encourage women to take up factory jobs to keep the war industry going. These campaigns were often targeting housewives in an attempt to get them to enter the workforce, with slogans such as “Can you use an electric mixer? If so, you can learn to operate a drill”. In the USA, the amount of working women increased by over 50%, showing that “women could do a ‘man’s job’, and do it well”. This ended up drastically increasing the amount of jobs that were deemed to be ‘acceptable’ for women to take, and therefore was a major influence in the growing emancipation of women during the 20th century. In the game, this is the flavor name for the USA’s “Women in the Workforce” decision.

We_Can_Do_It!.jpg


And more…
There is one more powerful woman to establish as the ruler of a certain key HOI4 nation, but this requires a long and obscure series of events and actions to take place first… Why not celebrate International Women’s day by trying to find out how to make it happen once you got your hands on Waking the Tiger?

And that’s it for today, folks! Make sure to tune in at 16:00 for World War Wednesday where Dan and Daniel attempt to unite all under heaven as Manchukuo! Tomorrow we will also have a release stream where we continue our campaign.
 

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Ooh, fancy! I like the Women in the Workforce idea a lot :) Although, given that the Soviets were super into getting women into the workforce, the communist threshold for this decision could be a little lower than the democratic one. Also, what with the cool new wallpaper, I must ask: sniper aces for land divisions when?*

*Tank aces would be pretty cool too. Just sayin'
 
With all respect to the artist, but PDX really needs to learn to properly draw our waifus!
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/VictoriaLouiseUniform.jpg

In fairness, she is a good 24 years older by the start of the game since that photograph was taken in 1909.

As someone who loved going through the Home Front section of the Imperial War Museum as a kid, I'm quite looking forward to seeing what other events featured regarding the role of women we'll see as we play through this expansion!
 
Nice flavor and nice way of celebrating women's day.

In addition you could also include something to honor the women in soviet union who made a huge effort in producing weapons in military factories. Maybe next year?
 
Wonderful! Looking forward to having a play with all the new content added! :) Just wondering if I could be a villain and request an additional filter on the launcher that shows you only ticked / activated mods? As when you have squillions of mods like I do, it gets a bit hard to tell what you've got on or not! Thanks for reading and happy IWD (from yesterday)!
 
Can I just say that I loved seeing national focii with actual costs associated with them (the inflation system for economic focuses)? It'd be nice if this was expanded to industrial and construction focii, too.

As in, when I build forts, there is some sort of penalty to industry or construction speed or whatever to reflect the massive effort it is to build extensive fortifications quickly?

Oh, and I'm honouring women's day by appointing the Chinese first lady :p
Womens day -- remember focii with costs.png
 
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No its basically just time spent on the focus, the Chinese tree is very long and wide so you can't just waste focus points/time if you really don't need to. I skipped that focus personally as I preferred getting more foreign aid while reforming the army

That's the internet for you, my only beef with the whole Womens day thing was the new female Manchurian general getting far higher stats than her contemporaries for no valid reason.
 
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Were her coming to the throne not a little outside the game's timeframe (1952), I'd be tempted to guess this is Elizabeth II. She was a mechanic in the ATS during 1945 as well, so on theme with the women in the workforce/army decisions.
It's actually Victoria, kaiserine of the German Empire, after all the male leaders die on...
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the Hindenburg, if it doesn't burn over New Jersey like it did historically. You can watch iSorrowProductions to find out how you can do it for yourself!
 
I just noticed Ernst Busch is missing from the game

Hmmm. Made me look.

Friedrich Wilhelm Ernst Busch[1][2] (22 January 1900 – 8 June 1980) was a German singer and actor.

Bush originated from a Kiel worker family. He started in life as a shipyard worker before he decided to make use of his acting and singing talent.[3][4]

Busch first rose to prominence as an interpreter of political songs, particularly those of Kurt Tucholsky, in the Berlin Kabarett scene of the 1920s. He starred in the original 1928 production of Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera, as well as the subsequent 1931 film by Georg Wilhelm Pabst. He also appeared in the movie Kuhle Wampe.

A lifelong communist, Busch fled Nazi Germany in 1933, accompanied by his wife, Eva and with the Gestapo on his heels, initially settling in the Netherlands. By 1938 they had divorced, without acrimony, as their lives diverged.[5] Eva settled in Paris while Ernst initially made his home in the Soviet Union where he worked with Gustav von Wangenheim on the 1935 film "Kämpfer" ("Fighters"). In 1937 he joined the International Brigades to fight against the Nationalists in Spain. His wartime songs were then recorded and broadcast by Radio Barcelona and Radio Madrid. After the Spanish Republicfell to General Franco, Busch migrated to Belgium where he was interned during the German occupation and later imprisoned in Camp Gurs, France and Berlin. Freed by the Red Army in 1945, he settled in East Berlin, where he acted in the first play to be produced in the American-occupied zone, Robert Ardrey's Thunder Rock.[6][7] He would go on to start his own record label and work with Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator at the "Berliner Ensemble". A beloved figure in the German Democratic Republic, he is best remembered for his performance in the title role of Brecht's Life of Galileo and his recordings of workers songs, including many written by Hanns Eisler. He also made a memorable recording of Peat Bog Soldiers.
 
Hmmm. Made me look.

Friedrich Wilhelm Ernst Busch[1][2] (22 January 1900 – 8 June 1980) was a German singer and actor.

Bush originated from a Kiel worker family. He started in life as a shipyard worker before he decided to make use of his acting and singing talent.[3][4]

Busch first rose to prominence as an interpreter of political songs, particularly those of Kurt Tucholsky, in the Berlin Kabarett scene of the 1920s. He starred in the original 1928 production of Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Opera, as well as the subsequent 1931 film by Georg Wilhelm Pabst. He also appeared in the movie Kuhle Wampe.

A lifelong communist, Busch fled Nazi Germany in 1933, accompanied by his wife, Eva and with the Gestapo on his heels, initially settling in the Netherlands. By 1938 they had divorced, without acrimony, as their lives diverged.[5] Eva settled in Paris while Ernst initially made his home in the Soviet Union where he worked with Gustav von Wangenheim on the 1935 film "Kämpfer" ("Fighters"). In 1937 he joined the International Brigades to fight against the Nationalists in Spain. His wartime songs were then recorded and broadcast by Radio Barcelona and Radio Madrid. After the Spanish Republicfell to General Franco, Busch migrated to Belgium where he was interned during the German occupation and later imprisoned in Camp Gurs, France and Berlin. Freed by the Red Army in 1945, he settled in East Berlin, where he acted in the first play to be produced in the American-occupied zone, Robert Ardrey's Thunder Rock.[6][7] He would go on to start his own record label and work with Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator at the "Berliner Ensemble". A beloved figure in the German Democratic Republic, he is best remembered for his performance in the title role of Brecht's Life of Galileo and his recordings of workers songs, including many written by Hanns Eisler. He also made a memorable recording of Peat Bog Soldiers.
I am very confused.
 
Soong Mei-Ling was bad for the Nationalists, she protected the corrupt who needed to be dealt with. The trait is the opposite of what she should have. She was good at diplomacy though, but she definitely did not increase war support domestically. The stability gain is questionable. If you mean stability from elites, sure. But the common people disliked her. At the least, make Army Reform/corruption reform focuses impossible if she is in power.

There was a female Head of Intelligence minister in Darkest Hour for Nationalist China: Jiang Yiying. She detected Japanese plans to attack Pearl Harbor and the Chinese warned the US (which was ignored)

https://baike.baidu.com/item/姜毅英/721975?fr=aladdin

Baidu Google Translate said:
Jiang Yiying (1908-2006), female, Jiangshan, Zhejiang, intelligence officer of the Kuomintang Military Regiment Bureau, has long engaged in intelligence work such as password deciphering , and has detected major information on Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor .

Jiang Yiying was born in a carpenter family in Xintangbian Town, Jiangshan City. After graduating from Zhejiang Liyi, he was admitted to the Zhejiang Police School. After graduation in 1932, Dai was selected to participate in special police training class A training. After graduating, she joined the army to engage in radio transceivers and secrets translation work. She first served as a commander of the Xiamen Army radio station, later served as the chief radio officer of Xiamen Radio, and also served as an inspector's desk code breaker. Due to the detection of the Japanese military's southward intelligence received awards, she was promoted to director of the fourth radio station of the military and military headquarters and chief of the Translator
 
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I am very confused.

I knew nothing about Ernst Busch.

The reference to him made me look him up.

So I sought knowledge from that great source of knowledge: Wikipedia.

Thinking that others might wish to know about Ernst Busch, I shared the information with others.

(but...I'm afraid I learned about the wrong Ernst Busch...oh oh... there is another WW2 figure named Ernst Busch?)
 
probably more immediately relevant to the game than an actor/singer/communist.

That Ernst will have to wait until "Lungs of Iron 5: Sing your way to victory" :D
 
We don’t have many women in land units, but there are many in the Air Force and Navy!;)
HniZN9c.jpg
Norway actually has women in literally every branch, along with conscription of girls alongside guys. To cope with the gender differences that would arise from trying to train girls alongside guys in special forces training units, not to mention that literally no girls seemed to be able to meet the physical requirements for joining in the first place, they eventually just formed an all-female unit. There's a handful of nice YT documentaries and videos here.

I suppose and assume the women are integrated into the special forces units with the guys once they finish training.
 
I'd like to follow up on the question asked earlier in this thread on whether female ace generation was, or will be, addressed in this new expansion? I didn't see a response and wanted to know if I missed it.
my suggestion is: play the expansion and find out

Played, and from what I can tell, the ace news events still don't seem to fire - I haven't seen any news events about aces being shot down, despite some being shot down.

And I don't think the female ace generation works yet.