02-10-2016, 01:49 AM,
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plloyd1010
First Sergeant
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Posts: 3,489
Threads: 357
Joined: Jun 2012
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Chinese units?
Drew, and anyone else who might care, I am sort of drifting back to Chinese in PG. I have the Manchukou guys mostly done, but they are mostly punching bags. (I originally made them so the Mongols & Russians could beat them up.) I am thinking now about the Nationalists & Kuomintang right now, Mao & communists need a place too. In this thread I am thinking mostly of color schemes.
The Nationalist/Kuomintang emblem is a white sunburst on a blue disc. The Kuomintang emblem extends to the edge of the disc. I was thinking of that on a light jade background. Some green between the RKKA and US Army greens.
For the communists I am still vacillating on the emblem. Either Chinese Workers & Peasants Army (black hammer-sickle on white star), or the People's Liberation Army star (red, gold trimmed, star). The second is probably more historically accurate, but looks a lot like the RKKA star already in use. No good thoughts on background color yet.
Any particular thoughts on the subject?
... More and more, people around the world are coming to realize that the world is flat!
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02-18-2016, 12:23 AM,
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Shad
General of the Army
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Posts: 2,249
Threads: 293
Joined: May 2012
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RE: Chinese units?
I don't think you need to worry about emblems resembling those of other nationalities if those nationalities will never be on the same battlefield. The overall counter color scheme is more important.
I think multiple types of warlords is a bad idea. They all thought they were very important, but their uniqueness was minor at best. Better to just have one generic set of warlord counters for simplicity's sake.
Lastly, I'm interested in what sort of scenarios you design. According to the always objective Chinese television dramas all actions were small unit engagements characterized by individual acts of extreme bravery by low-ranking Red Army soldiers overcoming coordinated cruelty, corruption, and cowardice by Japanese / Nationalist elements. Good luck!
...came for the cardboard, stayed for the camaraderie...
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