A pair of sixes
A pair of sevens
A pair of eights
A pair of twelves.
Why is it that some numbers are one colour and some are two colours?
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Post by Oberst_Klink »
Post by Oberst_Klink »
Plain and simple; I must have missed this one out in the manual. Anyway, Fred - there you go.ORIGINAL: shapelord
From the manual:
"The colors of the markers tell which side can trace to the location: Red markers mean only the Red Side can trace; Blue markers mean only the Blue Side can trace; And Gold markers mean both sides can trace. The number in the marker is the location supply for that hex for the current side."
ORIGINAL: shapelord
From the manual:
"The colors of the markers tell which side can trace to the location: Red markers mean only the Red Side can trace; Blue markers mean only the Blue Side can trace; And Gold markers mean both sides can trace. The number in the marker is the location supply for that hex for the current side."
Post by Oberst_Klink »
Depends on the graphics mod, Fred. In my case it's yellow'ish...ORIGINAL: Fred98
ORIGINAL: shapelord
From the manual:
"The colors of the markers tell which side can trace to the location: Red markers mean only the Red Side can trace; Blue markers mean only the Blue Side can trace; And Gold markers mean both sides can trace. The number in the marker is the location supply for that hex for the current side."
I too read that. The markers are not gold.
Note if you change sides the other side cannot get supply from any of those hexes.
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Post by Spectre195 »
Post by Spectre195 »
ORIGINAL: Lobster
It isn't confusing if you have been playing war games for very long. A circle with half of it filled has been accepted as a supply unit or supply source designation for as long as I can remember. It's not confusing at all.
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