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unmerged(26608)

First Lieutenant
Mar 8, 2004
208
0
So, in an attempt to understand how the UK could support hundreds of non-native divisions in 1907 on the basis of a national culture population of about 35 million, I took over from the AI.

One of the odd things I found was two units stationed in the whited-out portion of the map, the Arctic. Specifically, they were pictured in the area north of Central Bering Sea. They were marching towards Springboken (sp?) in Namibia. They eventually successfully reached it (quickly, really. Travel time about 3 days)

Their location was listed as (St. George's Channel)
 
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MisterKurtz said:
So, in an attempt to understand how the UK could support hundreds of non-native divisions in 1907 on the basis of a national culture population of about 35 million, I took over from the AI.

One of the odd things I found was two units stationed in the whited-out portion of the map, the Arctic. Specifically, they were pictured in the area north of Central Bering Sea. They were marching towards Springboken (sp?) in Namibia. They eventually successfully reached it (quickly, really. Travel time about 3 days)

Their location was listed as (St. George's Channel)
They were unloading from a ship. All paradox games work like this.

You can do it with EU2. Unload some troops, pause the game and use page down to cycle through the troops. You'll see the troops in terra incognita.