A fictional Axis (or German) victory in World War II is a common concept of alternate history. World War II is one of the two most popular points of divergence for the English language alternative history fiction genre (the other being the American Civil War).[1][2][3][4] Such writings express ideas of what the world would be like had the Axis powers of Germany, Italy and Japan won World War II.[3]
I feel the victory cities objectives will somehow skew the game towards a short-term or mid-term victory strategy. As much as I hate playing a 12 hour game, I will feel satisfied only if I played the game to its world domination conclusion.
The year is 1943 the beginning of the end To the largest and deadliest conflict in human history, World War 2. But this time, you choose the worlds fate. The Allied powers are on the brink of defeat (or so they think), Japan and Germany are more determined than ever to win this war. Will you side with the axis and takeover the world? or will you stop the German war machine in its tracks? Will you make Japan assert its supremacy over the pacific? or will you make the sunset on the Japanese empire? The choice is yours. Follow the events of the Pacific theatre and invent your own future through the 1943 Conquest in World Conqueror 4. Please note that this page is for advisory purposes only. The tips and tactics described here are only to help other players in Conquest 1943, but these are not necessary for victory in this Conquest. Feel free to play your own way with your own tactics. If you want to, you can share them here too. Have fun!
Without an Arab victory at Nihavand, Iran would have become a largely non-Muslim land of diverse religions and similar but discrete languages where local polities competed for control over an economy centered on self-sufficient agriculture, landowning aristocrats, and sleepy cities of no substantial size. Influences from India, China, and various Buddhist sources would have eclipsed those from Iraq and the Muslim west. In short, the greatness that Iranians associate with their national heritage derives in substantial part from the incorporation of what we now define as geographical Iran into the Arab caliphate and, consequently, into the Muslim world community.