Poland '39 [Ziplock game] ========================== Counters. The German 1/7 paratroop regiment should be a one-step unit on its counter front. A properly printed substitute is provided in this issue (Command #19). The Polish ABR cavalry "brigade group" remnant unit is missing its red asterisk on its reverse side. Pen one in. The German 217th Infantry Division should have its set up hex underlined on its counter front to indicate it starts play in East Prussia in the free set up scenario. 3.3 Reinforcements (correction). There are German reinforcements; see 8.5 below. 8.5 German Reinforcements (new rule). The German 1st Mountain Division enters during the German movement phase of Turn 3. The 72nd Division enters during the German movement phase of Turn 10. They may enter any map-edge hex in Greater Germany or Slovakia. The units may move and fight on the turn of entry. They may enter using Operational Transfer. 12.13 Concentric Assault (correction). Concentric assault gives a one column rightward shift. German Reinforcements. Remove the German 72nd Infantry Division from the game. We are now informed it spent the Polish campaign at Trier, in the west. In its place (and in addition to the 1st Mountain Division which retains its reinforcement status from the original counter-mix), substitute the five new reinforcement German infantry divisions included with this issue (Command #20). [The above rule supersedes 8.5 above which is an older errata.] Soviet Mobile Groups DZ, MI and PO. Throw away the counters for these units given in the original counter-mix and substitute these new, four- step/two unit incarnations (LG's status remains unchanged)(counters in Command #20). These three groups now become optional units that the player commanding the Soviets (which, of course, varies, depending on the scenario you're playing) must decide to include or leave out of his OB when he sets up. To include them, the Soviet must remove three regular corps from his OB - one infantry and two non-infantry. (That three-corps removal brings in all three of these groups.) The Soviet takes or omits these three groups on an all-or-none basis, and the decision must be made before set up begins.