Convoy Dislodging
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Convoy Dislodging
I have a short question that is probably easily answered and quite simple but I can't find an answer to it. Can an army that is being convoyed dislodge a unit in the territory it's being convoyed to?
For Example:
Army in Naples move to Greece via convoy
Fleet in Ionian Sea convoy unit in Naples to Greece
Enemy unit in Greece hold
Would the army in Naples be able to dislodge the unit in Greece almost as if the convoy order from the fleet was a support move for the army or would the convoy order bounce and the army remain in Naples?
For Example:
Army in Naples move to Greece via convoy
Fleet in Ionian Sea convoy unit in Naples to Greece
Enemy unit in Greece hold
Would the army in Naples be able to dislodge the unit in Greece almost as if the convoy order from the fleet was a support move for the army or would the convoy order bounce and the army remain in Naples?
Re: Convoy Dislodging
No, it needs a support in order to dislodge the unit in Greece. It can cut support in Greece, though.
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Re: Convoy Dislodging
The manual doesn't mention such a situation explicitly, because nothing changes from the standard position: one unit attacking another. The convoying fleet is just an artificial 'province', and provides an exception from the rule that ground units cannot enter water tiles.
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Re: Convoy Dislodging
That's the best way I've heard that explained. I need to throw that into the faq.Szpoti wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 11:57 amThe manual doesn't mention such a situation explicitly, because nothing changes from the standard position: one unit attacking another. The convoying fleet is just an artificial 'province', and provides an exception from the rule that ground units cannot enter water tiles.
Re: Convoy Dislodging
I'm not sure that's good explanation though. Even a double-supported attack using a convoy can be stopped by dislodging the convoying fleet using the unit on the attacked province. Hence, it doesn't behave as a province.jmo1121109 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 4:25 pmThat's the best way I've heard that explained. I need to throw that into the faq.Szpoti wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 11:57 amThe manual doesn't mention such a situation explicitly, because nothing changes from the standard position: one unit attacking another. The convoying fleet is just an artificial 'province', and provides an exception from the rule that ground units cannot enter water tiles.
Extending the example above,
- the army in Naples moves to Greece
- fleet in Ionian convoys this army
- army in Albania + army in Serbia supports Naples to Greece
- enemy fleet in Aegean attacks fleet in Ionian
- enemy fleet in Greece supports Aegean to Ionian
In this case fleet in Ionian will be dislodged and the attack against Greece will fail DESPITE the attack was supported by multiple units. This would be the case also if Greece attacks Ionian and Aegean supports it.
If Ionian was a province, from which the army is attacking Greece, the attack would succeed. Bottom line: thinking about convoys as provinces is not a good analogue I think.
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Re: Convoy Dislodging
Perhaps a better phase than an "artificial province" would be a "artificial highway". That way you can use more convoys to extend the highway.
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Re: Convoy Dislodging
I'd like to draw your attention to the fact that the original text used inverted commas. Careful reading, careful reading.rokakoma wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 9:04 pmHence, it doesn't behave as a province.jmo1121109 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 4:25 pmThat's the best way I've heard that explained. I need to throw that into the faq.Szpoti wrote: ↑Sat Mar 23, 2019 11:57 amThe manual doesn't mention such a situation explicitly, because nothing changes from the standard position: one unit attacking another. The convoying fleet is just an artificial 'province', and provides an exception from the rule that ground units cannot enter water tiles.
Re: Convoy Dislodging
Fair point, although, I was rather reflecting to jmo, before he makes the phrase an official naming by adding it to the faq.
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