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I've scoured the rulebook, the FAQ, and Google for the answer to the question. This is my last option.
Ports and March Orders:
Example situation #1 - A sea area is occupied by enemy ships. The adjacent land area is controlled by friendly units. I place a march order in the land area. Can the friendly ship in the port march on the enemy-held sea area?
Example situation #2 - A port has two ships in it. The adjacent sea is empty. Do the ships in the port need a march order to move out of the port, and then another march to from said sea area to a different sea area? Or can the ships from the port through the empty sea area to another sea area?
Thanks for your help,
Ben Stark
“They say it grows so cold up here in winter that a man’s laughter freezes in his throat and chokes him to death,” Ned said evenly. “Perhaps that is why the Starks have so little humor.”
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BenStark said:
Example situation #1 - A sea area is occupied by enemy ships. The adjacent land area is controlled by friendly units. I place a march order in the land area. Can the friendly ship in the port march on the enemy-held sea area?
Rulebook: "Just as units in normal areas, Ship units in a Port area must
receive an Order token during the Assign Orders step of the
Planning Phase."
Ships in Port may not March without their own March order.
BenStark said:
Example situation #2 - A port has two ships in it. The adjacent sea is empty. Do the ships in the port need a march order to move out of the port, and then another march to from said sea area to a different sea area? Or can the ships from the port through the empty sea area to another sea area?
Ships need a March order each time they move. They cannot move "through" an empty area.
Andrew
www.TradeCardsOnline.com/user/kauai
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