Bloody Kasserine Errata April 6,1992 Game Turns: The first turn of the game is February 14. The last turn of the game is February 24. Retreats and Advances: A unit may not retreat more hexes than it has movement allowance to move, and if forced to do so is eliminated instead. A unit may always retreat one hex, however, even if it does not have sufficient movement points to do so, provided it is not into an enemy ZOC or prohibited terrain. For example, an Italian infantry unit (movement allowance of 3) suffers a defender retreat 3 result, and must retreat three hexes. It could retreat the three hexes if all three were clear terrain, as clear terrain costs only 1 MP per hex, or if part or all of the retreat were by road, regardless of the terrain. However, if the retreat forced the unit to move through high ground, rugged crest, swamp, or wadi other than by road, the unit would have insufficient movement points to move the full three hexes and would be eliminated instead. COMMONLY ASKED QUESTIONS Q: If an unengaged defending unit ends the Player Turn adjacent to an engaged attacking unit, is it obliged to either move away or attack in its own Player Turn? A: No. No unit which begins its Player Turn adjacent to an engaged enemy unit must attack it, unless another friendly unit enters its hex (thus reinforcing the hex and requiring a counterattack). Q: The attacker sets up an attack at low, but acceptable, odds. The defender then adds artillery to the defense which lowers the odds below those allowed for on the combat results table. What happens? A. It is still a legal attack, since the attacker set it up originally at legal odds. However, no die is rolled, and the attacker is automatically eliminated. Q: What happens if a unit is required to end its retreat in violation of stacking? A: It must continue to retreat until it is no longer in violation of stacking. If it does not have sufficient movement allowance to do so, it is eliminated. NB submitted by John Kula (kula@telus.net) on behalf of the Strategy Gaming Society (http://pages.about.com/strategygames/), originally collected by Andrew Webber (gbm@wwwebbers.com)