KCDennis wrote:My nephew and I are playing our first game of AACWII, after waging numerous campaigns of the original. I just ran into something I can't find an explanation for. Playing as the Confederates I'm looking to reinforce my forces in Tennessee and freed up Stonewall Jackson's division. But when I try to move it there by rail it will only go so far and then I get a message that this unit is not permitted in that terrain. It seems like the limits of where it can go may match the department boundary line. Is that the case? Is the restriction linked to the game turn. It's February of 1862 if that matters.
Captain_Orso wrote:KCDennis wrote:My nephew and I are playing our first game of AACWII, after waging numerous campaigns of the original. I just ran into something I can't find an explanation for. Playing as the Confederates I'm looking to reinforce my forces in Tennessee and freed up Stonewall Jackson's division. But when I try to move it there by rail it will only go so far and then I get a message that this unit is not permitted in that terrain. It seems like the limits of where it can go may match the department boundary line. Is that the case? Is the restriction linked to the game turn. It's February of 1862 if that matters.
If you are asking, if there are area restrictions, as to where you may send any leaders or units, no, there are none.
Rod Smart wrote:8<
There is a map square in eastern Tennessee that is inaccessible mountain. You cannot march a unit there. Probably a few of them out in Colorado too, but never had reason to travel west of Denver. It's off the beaten path though, and other than trying to turn Tennessee a nice uniform blue, there's no reason to try to go there.
As to the original question, Straight Arrow is likely correct. It's probably the weather. I run into this while playing as the north, and trying to ship new recruits from New England by rail through PA in the snow.
Either take the long way around, or check the weather before you leave.
KCDennis wrote:Thanks for the explanation gents. I had never ran into weather so bad that the trains wouldn't run.
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