Sad cause Fedorov and MKb doesn’t really belong to moscow vibe. You’re bringing Berlin power to Moscow slower pace, which doesn’t make sense… RIP Moscow
Normandy, fair, more firepower.
Berlin, quite disappointing… would have expected something more interesting instead the only thing almost no one used in Berlin for the most part… Welcome to spammers for open maps, like strasse…
The Tunisia flamethrower squads looks very cool. I made a thread suggesting something along these lines, and it looks like you implemented it in an excellent way. I would instantly purchase it, if premium accounts in this game did not cost the same as average family incomes in some 3rd world countries.
You might have just ruined the Moscow campaign by adding that cursed weapon - the MkB42(H) from Stalingrad, though. I don’t want AK-47s and assault rifles in WW2 campaigns, and certainly not in EARLY WW2 campaigns. It will completely ruin the balance and immersion. The Fedorov is acceptable, the MkB is not, as it is much more OP and immersion-breaking (STG-44s were out only in 1944 ffs).
The little flamethrower is cool. It reminds me, I hope to see the small, disposable German flamethrower come to Berlin someday. The mortars are pretty exciting too, they’re gonna cause a lot of damage.
I’m sure we’ll get Medics in all current and future campaigns eventually. In one of the Pacific promo pictures you can see a Japanese soldier with a Medic Band
Can someone explain to me the difference between the M1, M1A1, and now the M1928A1 Thompson? I cant tell in the slightest besides the sights and I have the first 2. Idk what to expect for the new one.
M1 is a military modifed version of the Thompson, M1A1 is a modified version of the M1, and 1928A1 is a military named version of the 1928 with a grip change and is essentially the first Thompson to enter into military service.
Edit: The 1928A1 is in the test range of the Normandy campaign already.
If you rather spend 1 minute to find a source to that statement, you will find that the earliest confirmed exhibit outside of trials is dated much later.
By one account, the gun saw action as early as April 1942 when 35 of the only 50 prototypes then in existence were parachuted into the Kholm Pocket near Leningrad as part of a resupply of the defenders.
By March 1943, 2,734 MKb 42(H) were accepted into service.