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Jack2142
Jul 17, 2014

Shitposting in Seattle

vyelkin posted:

Remember when Al-Andalus reinstated the monarchy for a one-time relations boost with France and then condemned itself to a century of reactionary monarchism and eventually a devastating civil war, lmao that owned

Yeah, I voted against it for the record!

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Grammarchist
Jan 28, 2013

No matter how crazy this war gets, I keep finding myself looking toward the Emerald Isle. That little guy hasn't done anything yet, and you know it's going to be good!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMX7k3qsnBk

habeasdorkus
Nov 3, 2013

Royalty is a continuous shitposting motion.

Grammarchist posted:

No matter how crazy this war gets, I keep finding myself looking toward the Emerald Isle. That little guy hasn't done anything yet, and you know it's going to be good!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMX7k3qsnBk

Straight up Normandy invasion and capturing Paris outta nowhere.

MaxieSatan
Oct 19, 2017

critical support for anarchists
Ireland is gonna rally the Anglo-Scottish resistance and establish the Socialist Republic of Albain

Rody One Half
Feb 18, 2011

It's long past time for the People of the isles to throw the Franks back into the channel

Luhood
Nov 13, 2012

MaxieSatan posted:

Ireland is gonna rally the Anglo-Scottish resistance and establish the Socialist Republic of Albain

If he doesn't call it Albainia I'm so done with this thread. :colbert: Not really though, but still.

Cerebral Bore
Apr 21, 2010


Fun Shoe

Luhood posted:

If he doesn't call it Albainia I'm so done with this thread. :colbert: Not really though, but still.

Chairman O'Hockshey wows to build a bunker in every back yard.

Crowsbeak
Oct 9, 2012

by Azathoth
Lipstick Apathy
B. Rump states keeps it disunited. Also keeps Benin off our backs

hashashash
Nov 2, 2016

Cure for cancer discovered!
Court physicians hate him!
Just an FYI, updates are gonna slow over the next month because exams are coming and I need to focus on them, but they'll pick up again around the end of May and we'll be heading into the final chapters before you know it.

As for the next update, I've already played through it, just need to crop the images and actually write it. So I'll probably get that done tonight.

AJ_Impy
Jun 17, 2007

SWORD OF SMATTAS. CAN YOU NOT HEAR A WORLD CRY OUT FOR JUSTICE? WHEN WILL YOU DELIVER IT?
Yam Slacker
Almoravids garroted, our brothers and sisters are finally free.

hashashash
Nov 2, 2016

Cure for cancer discovered!
Court physicians hate him!
Chapter 8 — The Panama Crisis — March 1940 to March 1941


The siege of Marrakesh would count amongst the bloodiest in history, with the Iberians surrounding and blockading the city whilst launching ruthless firebombing campaigns over the course of March and April, gradually wearing down its defenses and fortifications. It was only two months later that the shattered, beleaguered garrison finally accepted a ceasefire, laid down their arms and surrendered their capital.

And with that, in the early morning hours of the 2nd of May, Iberian flags were hoisted above the highest minarets and towers of Marrakesh.



Sultan Ajjedig would never surrender, but with the heart of his empire lost, he was forced to abandon his capital and escape aboard a warship. Behind him, the Maghreb was left to capitulate to the advancing Iberians and Beninese.




And with armies also advancing into South Africa and India, Ajeddig’s only refuge was in Usturaliya, his great eastern dominion. The Sultan’s uncle — Jassar Almoravid — had ruled the colony for the past two decades, successfully transforming it into an economic and seafaring power, but he welcomed his nephew with open arms all the same.




Back in the Maghreb, anti-Iberian resistance movements had already surged. The Almoravids had ruled the region for a millennium, and though they weren’t always loved, they certainly weren’t hated to the same extent as the Andalusi and Iberians were.



As devastating tribal raids against occupying forces, supply lines and military constructions grew increasingly common, the matter was finally broached in Qadis, with the Shura deciding that the best solution would be to found a “socialist union of the Maghreb”, granting the proletariat self-rule…



With certain stipulations, of course.

Firstly, the straits would remain under Iberian occupation, that would never change. Secondly, the Maghreb wasn’t ready for complete self-rule, so Izri Tafsut — a Moroccan communist agitator who’d lived as an exile in Iberia for many decades — was appointed to lead the new government, ensuring that the country remained under the firm, guiding hand of Qadis. And lastly, with Marrakesh reduced to craters and ruins, the new administration was moved to Oran, conveniently close to Iberian territory.




A few days after the Workers’ Republic of the Maghreb was declared, the architect of the Maghrebi invasion was struck by desert fever, with shaking chills and night sweats forcing him to his tents.

Tiqnu’s job was done, however, and with most of his divisions being redeployed to the Pyrenaic and Italian fronts, he could afford a few weeks of well-deserved rest.



At the same time, the spiralling situation in the old world had finally wakened the Great Powers of the West. With their internal problems quelled, the Three Viziers of the Berber Union announced their entry into the world war by invading the Occidental Dictatorship, a member of the Paris Pact.



This invasion was a long time coming, but it still sparked fears that a new wave of “submission campaigns” were on the horizon, with the Berber Union bent on re-asserting their dominance in South Gharbia.



To the immediate north, meanwhile, the Ibrizi War was still seething and spitting between communists and fundamentalists. There had been no decisive battles since April of 1938, and despite immense casualties in the trenches, the frontline seemed to barely move in that time.



Pushing across the Pacific Ocean, the Rising of Indochina was also off to a rocky start, with fascist forces capturing the rebel stronghold of Xiangabouli after bitter fighting.



To their west, meanwhile, the battlefields of India were already drenched with the blood of thousands.

With West Bengal, Bihar and Orissa having fallen to the invaders by early June, the Viceroy of the Almoravid Raj also had to contend with several native uprisings across the width of northern India, inspired by Bengali victories.



Back on the European theatre, the Frankish advance on Smolensk had been slowed by the merciless Russian winter, so the Commandant began redeploying his strength to the south, where a new front had just opened against the Balkan communists.



The Balkans had been relatively stable so far, with most of the fighting concentrated in Romania and Ukraine, so there weren’t many troops garrisoning the region.

That would prove to be a fatal mistake, however, because the Frankish incursion into the Balkan peninsula was powerful and decisive, with Zagreb, Sarajevo and Bucharest falling in the first week of June. Scarcely a week into their new offensive, and the Frankish army had already reached the outskirts of Belgrade.



The Chairman of the CSE quickly began throwing bodies at the advancing Frankish army, redeploying large numbers from Suez and Caucasia in the process. This was immediately followed by vicious counter-attacks on those fronts, however, with Egyptians pouring into the Sinai and retaking Jerusalem in a particularly successful offensive.



Communist lines were overextended and splintering, so Belgrade dispatched an urgent request for reinforcements to Qadis.

Supreme Leader Mizanur wasn’t going to send Iberians to die in the Balkans, however. Instead, he appointed a highly-talented tactician as the commanding general of the Italian front, ordering him to put pressure on the Franks in an effort to divert them from the east.




Ricardo Etxeberria, a Basque officer who served with distinction in the Maghrebi campaign, quickly devised a series of naval invasions from Tunis. Nobody had uncontested dominance of the seas, so the invasions were very risky, but 10 divisions managed to make landfall in Palermo and Calabria by the end of July.



The invasions were quickly followed by 600 fighter and 400 support aircraft, enough to wrest control of the skies from enemy planes and provide invaluable cover for the invading troops, which quickly struck out to secure nearby towns and ports.



Palermo simply didn’t have the numbers to fight on three different fronts, so large parts of southern Italy were occupied in the weeks that followed. By the 15th of July, only Naples and Palermo itself defied the Iberians, with the vast majority of their army trapped in the mountainous province of Campania.



On the Pyrenaic front, meanwhile, Ibn Bibil was preparing for his own offensive. Crossing the River Garrone had proven to be a difficult task, so the general decided to circumvent it completely by invading Narbuna, another neutral state caught in the crossfire.



And the operations quickly yielded gains, with the Iberians subjugating the city-state and outflanking the Franks, encircling 6 divisions and capturing Montpellier in a decisive victory.



Despite their successes, the combined offensives into Occitania and Italy didn’t do much to distract the Franks, with Commandant Vernier intensifying his incursion into the Balkans instead. By the dying days of July, the Chairman of the CSE was forced to flee his capital, leaving Belgrade to the mercy of the advancing Frankish army.




Obviously, the Chairman immediately began massing troops for a counter-offensive to retake Belgrade, but that meant his other fronts were left vulnerable. And within the space of a month, an entire year of communist gains were lost to the Egyptians, with Beirut and Aleppo and Damascus falling in quick succession.



The situation in the east was becoming desperate, so Supreme Leader Mizanur ordered the recently-recovered Tiqnu al-Dhib to advance against Egypt, with the general spearheading an invasion of Libya just days later.



On the Pyrenaic front, the Iberian breakthrough had quickly been stifled by Frankish reinforcements, but they had managed to reach the River Rhône before being halted.

Any further attempts to push north were quickly smothered, so Ibn Bibil decided to focus his numbers to the east, where there were gaps in the Frankish line. So on the 8th of August, the Iberians crossed the Rhône in force, earnestly pushing towards Toulon — the fallen capital of the People’s Republic of Provence.



Further east, Iberian forces had converged around Palermo and Naples, the last holdouts of the Republic of Palermo. After a brief respite in the early days of September, general Ricardo Etxeberria ordered his artillery to begin shelling the cities, determined to end their resistance and redeploy his strength to the north before winter arrived.



Reduced to ruins and rubble, Palermo capitulated on the 22nd of September, followed by Naples a week later. With hundreds of thousands of prisoners-of-war accompanying them, the Iberians began massing along the Italian front, with Ricardo launching an offensive towards the River Po in mid-October.



In the Far West, meanwhile, the communist forces of Ibriz had staged a remarkable comeback. A brilliant counter-attack had encircled a dozen Islamic divisions in the town of Fassur, and after bloody fighting across the past two months, the starving and under-supplied northerners finally surrendered.



That decisive victory allowed the communists to flood northwards, overwhelming and capturing key passageways through the northern mountains, and by the end of September they were marching down the road to Madinat Shamali.



Unfortunately, these successes were not paralleled in the Far East, where an influx of Frankish troops had turned the Indochinese campaign against Gerald Lazard.



Just then, however, the Supreme Leader of Iberia was focused entirely on his own continent. The Franks had managed to shatter communist lines in the Balkans yet again, reaching the Aegean Sea in the dying days of October, but their invasion of Russia had scarcely progressed in the past half-year.



Wary of the oncoming Russian winter, Commandant Vernier opted for diplomacy where he was failing militarily, successfully enticing the Tsar of Scandinavia into joining the Paris Pact and intervening against the Russian Empire.

And with a combined Frankish-Scandinavian offensive launched towards Smolensk on the 31st of October, Russian prospects were not looking hopeful.




Across the vast breadth of the Atlantic Ocean, the Berber invasion of Occidentia had just come to an end, with Imariz enforcing a temporary military occupation of the region.



Unsurprisingly, however, this wasn’t the end of Berber ambitions. They were planning something big, and on the 11th of November, the Three Viziers announced a change to their foreign policy by declaring that they would defend republican and democratic ideals against the forces of fascism and communism — this was the Imariz Initiative, and with it, another faction is born.




This declaration wasn’t met with much fanfare in Europe, where fascism and communism were locking horns over the right to dominate a continent — a battle that was far from decided, though the Iberians managed to reach the River Po on the 16th of November, capturing Bologna and Modena and Parma in the process, before laying siege to the Italian capital of Venice.



This offensive was paralleled by an eastward push on the Pyrenaic front, where every mile gained was offset by thousands of casualties, though the Iberians finally reached the outskirts of Toulon just as the snows overtook Europe.



With Belgrade faltering in the east, however, the Iberians couldn’t afford any respite. Supreme Leader Mizanur ordered his generals to advance, and on the 10th of December, both Ibn Bibil and Ricardo Etxeberria launched attacks on Toulon, capturing the city in the first hours of the new year.



Toulon was handed over to Provencal authorities, but the Iberians retained military control in the region, creating a frontline that stretched across hundreds of miles between Bordeaux and Venice.



The Franks, on the other hand, had just captured Tsargrad and reached the outskirts of Smolensk.



The Commandant of the Frankish Realm was focused entirely on breaking the back of the Russian Empire, and after a series of determined offensives were repelled over the course of 1940, the early days of 1941 finally saw fighting erupt in the towns and villages surrounding Smolensk.

The Russians didn’t wait for the Franks to bomb their capital into oblivion, however. Instead, they burned the countryside to a crisp and retreated further east, determined to continue the fight by any means possible.



Whilst Frankish troops were marching into Smolensk, Vernier’s marshals were busy orchestrating concurrent invasions into Anatolia, with several divisions landing along the northern coast in early February.



The Chairman of the CSE, along with the remnants of his army, had decided against fleeing. They would make their last stand in Athens, in the heart of the well-fortified bastion of Greece. There, eastern communism would live and die with them.



This was followed by another wave of bad news, as word reached Qadis of the capture and execution of Gerald Lazard, the Warlord of Indochina, and the capitulation of Free Indochina with him.




From across the tussled waves and changeable currents of the Pacific Ocean, meanwhile, some much-needed good news arrived. After surrounding and annihilating the remnants of the Islamic army in Madinat Shamali, the capital of the Islamic Republic of Ibriz, the fundamentalist regime capitulated to communist forces in the dying days of February.

After two years of trench warfare, crippling battles and pyrrhic victories, the Ibrizi War was finally at an end.




The northern-southern split stretched back much further than that, however, and the country was bitterly split along ideological and religious lines. So in the same town that saw the war’s bloodiest battle, the supreme leader of the People’s Republic of Ibriz delivered a speech in which he blamed everything on New England and Berber Union, an axis of evil that only benefitted from the decline of Ibriz.



And he didn’t stop there. In an effort to reunite his people under a common banner, the supreme leader decided to give them a common enemy — Panama, once a province of Ibriz.



Unfortunately for him, however, this was precisely the excuse that Richmond was looking for.

The Kingdom of New England was never going to tolerate a resurgent Ibriz, so once war was declared, Prime Minister Charles Windham immediately announced his intervention in the conflict to “preserve the stability of Ibriz and Gharbia in this time of crisis”.



To the south, meanwhile, the Three Viziers weren’t going to stand by whilst their historic rivals seized the Panama Canal and subjugated the entirety of North Gharbia.

Instead, they declared that they would be defending Panama against the unsanctioned aggression of Ibriz and New England alike, sending a carrier and several battleships to seize control of the waterway a few days later.



Richmond retaliated by dispatching an entire fleet of battleships and cruisers, and after a tense standoff between the navies of New England and Berber Union, a flurry of explosive shots were exchanged on the first morning of March.



Both Ibriz and Berber Union were members of powerful, globe-spanning alliances, leaving Richmond to fend for itself. That wouldn’t do, so in a decision that drew outcry from their populace and jeering from their enemies, the Parliament of New England announced their entry into the Paris Pact a few days later.



Since the People’s Republic of Ibriz is a member of the Ad Hoc Alliance, the Iberian Union is forced to answer their defensive call-to-arms, bringing them into war against Berber Union and New England.

And with that, the western hemisphere has finally joined the world war.



The outbreak of war in the west had been sudden and unexpected, but even as the high command of Iberia reeled from these developments, a breathless courier arrived with news from the east.

After a desperate battle in the narrow streets and dank alleyways of Athens, the Chairman of the CSE had been caught by a stray bullet, dying in the early hours of the 12th of March. And with that, over the course of just a a year, the Communist States of Eurasia had been defeated, occupied and knocked out of the war.



Iberia stands alone.




———

Factions:



Members of the Ad Hoc Alliance, and their enemies:




Members of the Pact of Paris, and their enemies:




Members of the League of Monarchies, and their enemies:




Members of the Imariz Iniatitive, and their enemies:



Unaligned parties:

Soup du Jour
Sep 8, 2011

I always knew I'd die with a headache.

Cyanide capsule, anyone?

Ikasuhito
Sep 29, 2013

Haram as Fuck.

:stare:...well ok then. I guess it's the world vs Iberia after all.

Super Jay Mann
Nov 6, 2008

The absurd bad luck in diplomacy throughout this LP has been astounding.

Pakled
Aug 6, 2011

WE ARE SMART
RIP Balkan Communists, you burned too brightly for this sinful world

Lord Cyrahzax
Oct 11, 2012

Hahahahahahaha :getin:

hashashash
Nov 2, 2016

Cure for cancer discovered!
Court physicians hate him!

Super Jay Mann posted:

The absurd bad luck in diplomacy throughout this LP has been astounding.

The Berber Union and New England were always gonna be hostile to a communist Great Power lodged between them, there really wasn't any bad luck involved with that. I'm pretty sure they both sent volunteers to fight against them as well.

New England joining the Paris Pact is just stupid, but understandable.

MaxieSatan
Oct 19, 2017

critical support for anarchists
:ohdear:

Crazycryodude
Aug 15, 2015

Lets get our X tons of Duranium back!

....Is that still a valid thing to jingoistically blow out of proportion?


So, uh, any chance we're about 5 years ahead of time on that nuclear program?

Ralepozozaxe
Sep 6, 2010

A Veritable Smorgasbord!
Good thing we built that secret moon base with a super lazer on it. It'll be coming in real useful right about now.

Kangxi
Nov 12, 2016

"Too paranoid for you?"
"Not me, paranoia's the garlic in life's kitchen, right, you can never have too much."
This is not fine.

Danny Glands
Jan 26, 2013

Possible thermal failure (CPU on fire?)
I wanna go back to byzlp.

orangelex44
Oct 11, 2012

Definition of orange:

Any of a group of colors that are between red and yellow in hue. Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Old Occitan, from Arabic, from Persian, from Sanskrit.

Definition of lex:

Law. Latin.
Holy poo poo, Russia has 25 divisions left. France just bodied everyone. I don't see a way to survive this one, HOI4 doesn't really allow for anything except total victory. We can withdraw back to the Pyrenees, but there's literally no one left that can seriously threaten the Pact except Iberia. I wasn't expecting the Balkans to just fold up like that, they should have had plenty of troops and good defensive terrain.

RabidWeasel
Aug 4, 2007

Cultures thrive on their myths and legends...and snuggles!
In retrospect, in a lovely hell world with even fewer states being even nominally democratic it's not exactly surprising that the fascists did better than expected.

gently caress you, though, Russia. Without them loving with Austria things could have been totally different and they didn't even do a decent job of slowing down the loving French.

CommissarMega
Nov 18, 2008

THUNDERDOME LOSER
If there ever was a time to exploit the hell out of the AI, this would be it :stonk:

It would even be narratively satisfying!

hashashash
Nov 2, 2016

Cure for cancer discovered!
Court physicians hate him!

CommissarMega posted:

If there ever was a time to exploit the hell out of the AI, this would be it :stonk:

It would even be narratively satisfying!

Don't worry, I'm trying my best to exploit them where I can. A couple rays of light are that they destroyed their navy against Russia's, so there's basically nobody with naval superiority in the European theatre, and I've produced a ton of planes so we'll have aerial superiority in the fight to come.

Akratic Method
Mar 9, 2013

It's going to pay off eventually--I'm sure of it.

Any day now.

If ever there was a Mega-LP to end with the player nation losing HoI, Al-Andalus was it. At this point I’m just hoping South America stays alive as a last bastion of democracy.

But who knows, maybe Benin will save the earth!

Mr.Morgenstern
Sep 14, 2012

Come on now, we can't give up on hope!



This is the stupidest thing I have ever made.

ChaseSP
Mar 25, 2013



Akratic Method posted:

If ever there was a Mega-LP to end with the player nation losing HoI, Al-Andalus was it. At this point I’m just hoping South America stays alive as a last bastion of democracy.

But who knows, maybe Benin will save the earth!

Hahaha South America is going to be loving destroyed. Look forward to a world of fascists and dictatorships until nuclear war kills us all.

ZearothK
Aug 25, 2008

I've lost twice, I've failed twice and I've gotten two dishonorable mentions within 7 weeks. But I keep coming back. I am The Trooper!

THUNDERDOME LOSER 2021


Crossing my fingers that Benin will join with the Berber Union to save the world after New England and the Ibrizi communists burn their manpower against each other.

[edit] Also the Republicans won in Japan! Good things can happen in this world!

Also we don't have to feel guilty about our focus putting us at war with the Balkan Federation anymore.

ZearothK fucked around with this message at 22:06 on Apr 14, 2019

Kangxi
Nov 12, 2016

"Too paranoid for you?"
"Not me, paranoia's the garlic in life's kitchen, right, you can never have too much."

Mr.Morgenstern posted:

Come on now, we can't give up on hope!



This is the stupidest thing I have ever made.

:golfclap:

The Bold Kobold
Aug 11, 2014

Bold to the point of certain death.

Mr.Morgenstern posted:

Come on now, we can't give up on hope!



This is the stupidest thing I have ever made.

:hai:

RubricMarine
Feb 14, 2012

Man, even at the lowest estimate, the Franks have over double our divisions... though I suppose that they won't stop going east at Russia, seeing as they're at war with the Manchus. On the other hand, we're going to have to contend with the full brunt of the Egyptians now. And looking at the New English, they have as many or more divisions than the Ibrizi... and they're totally fresh. Hope those Berbers can come to the rescue there.

Edit: Oh poo poo, I just noticed that Albionoria joined the Paris Pact as well, so that's like a full 200+ divisions heading towards Ibriz. Unless the Berbers immediately reinforce, which I don't think they will, seeing as we aren't really allied, just both fighting perfidious New Albion.

RubricMarine fucked around with this message at 22:42 on Apr 14, 2019

CommissarMega
Nov 18, 2008

THUNDERDOME LOSER

Hashim posted:

Don't worry, I'm trying my best to exploit them where I can.

I should hope so; I'm a Muslim who leans socialist, so the hellwar is really demoralizing :(

LJN92
Mar 5, 2014

Any chance France will run out of steam? Because I'm pretty sure they can't just take all the casualties in the world.

Jack2142
Jul 17, 2014

Shitposting in Seattle

The Big Blue Blob has acheived its apex form.

SlothfulCobra
Mar 27, 2011

That's a very good news/bad news situation. The League of Monarchies is gone from Europe, conquest of Italy and Palermo done, some alright pushing the line forward. Ibriz reunited. Berbers and Japanese declared their dedication to democracy. It looks like also France has been losing islands out in Oceana, so it looks like Australia's going to be a strong player even if the Indochina uprising wasn't. Crusader Egypt is even losing some ground in Africa.

Bad news is that Asia's going to be pretty solidly League territory for a while, although there's a chance India may fall. France has made some pretty absurd territorial gains on the continent, and it's probably going to start throwing in new armies in the west. Ibriz got stupid and now is in another huge war. No idea if any of the overseas or east Asian enemies will try showing up on the European stage though. France is very far east, and I am very worried about Cherson. :ohdear: Sure hope the Russians start turning things around at some point.

If Benin flips to a side, it could decide the entire war, but they don't stand to gain much themselves from flipping. Crusader Egypt is at least as much of a threat to them as the Communists, if not moreso. The Balkans have fallen, but they were on the Andalusi shitlist either which way.

RabidWeasel posted:

gently caress you, though, Russia. Without them loving with Austria things could have been totally different and they didn't even do a decent job of slowing down the loving French.

How would it be different? All the Russian loving with Austria did was allow socialist Germany to conquer Austria before falling to France.

AJ_Impy
Jun 17, 2007

SWORD OF SMATTAS. CAN YOU NOT HEAR A WORLD CRY OUT FOR JUSTICE? WHEN WILL YOU DELIVER IT?
Yam Slacker

Hashim posted:

Don't worry... I've produced a ton of planes so we'll have aerial superiority in the fight to come.



:getin:

Cogliermo
Feb 23, 2017
How does the Andalusi navy compare to the Franks right now? I just have a feeling that the AI might be leaving Britain under garrisoned, and that's a major portion of their core territory.

Cogliermo fucked around with this message at 00:39 on Apr 15, 2019

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QuoProQuid
Jan 12, 2012

Tr*ckin' and F*ckin' all the way to tha
T O P

we did it everyone! we managed to become the undisputed leader of the communist bloc!

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