A 26:40 Greene can't move through or into a region that is British PC. They can be used for PC actions like you said such as using OPs to place markers under them in open/neutral regions as well as serving as a tracing point when determining political isolation.
I'll admit that I don't know the rules well enough but, shouldn't anyone south of the Winter Attrition Line be safe from taking casulties during winter?
+עומר הרץ The British are safe south of the line, but not the Americans. Somewhere in the rules or playbook I believe it describes that the Americans had a hard time keeping soldiers in the field and so the attrition rules do double duty of winter attrition and American desertions.
at 13:10 i believe you are incorrect about americans have to surrender if losing on a british PC marker. The relevant PC markers are the ones adjacent in the retreat path as I understand it. I.E. if the Americans have to retreat off of a space (doesn't matter who the PC is) they have to retreat to an adjacent space that 1. isn't where the attacker came from 2. either un-controlled (no PC marker and no enemy CU's) or controlled by Americans (PC, army or both). Feel free to correct me someone if that is wrong but that is how I read the rules. This can lead to you being nice and cozy in a spot where you have PC but then a combo of enemy armies and enemy control markers can ring you on all sides then if you don't break out you are one battle loss from getting wiped out.
A 26:40 Greene can't move through or into a region that is British PC. They can be used for PC actions like you said such as using OPs to place markers under them in open/neutral regions as well as serving as a tracing point when determining political isolation.
Rule 7.4 B - Restrictions on Movement
I'll admit that I don't know the rules well enough but, shouldn't anyone south of the Winter Attrition Line be safe from taking casulties during winter?
+עומר הרץ The British are safe south of the line, but not the Americans. Somewhere in the rules or playbook I believe it describes that the Americans had a hard time keeping soldiers in the field and so the attrition rules do double duty of winter attrition and American desertions.
Ah, I see. Thanks for the explanation.
at 13:10 i believe you are incorrect about americans have to surrender if losing on a british PC marker. The relevant PC markers are the ones adjacent in the retreat path as I understand it. I.E. if the Americans have to retreat off of a space (doesn't matter who the PC is) they have to retreat to an adjacent space that 1. isn't where the attacker came from 2. either un-controlled (no PC marker and no enemy CU's) or controlled by Americans (PC, army or both).
Feel free to correct me someone if that is wrong but that is how I read the rules. This can lead to you being nice and cozy in a spot where you have PC but then a combo of enemy armies and enemy control markers can ring you on all sides then if you don't break out you are one battle loss from getting wiped out.
Howe rhymes with How :)