Strangely enough, the idea was not pursued seriously other than by Sörgel and a handful of others. Perhaps the idea can be used to fuel a modern "fantasy" campaign, though.
Eurafrika Attacks
The Eurafrika Attacks campaign is going to take Herman's idea and mess with it a bit. First, we're going to move the idea back to the dark days of the First World War, and give Europe a running start at the project. For our purposes, by 1927 or so the project is complete and Europe is seriously deep in debt. Weimer Republic-style deep in debt. This facilitates the rise of a pseudo-fascist dictator called Hynkel, who now has the power of Europe and Africa at his disposal and uses it to start the Second World War in 1930.
Eurafrikan forces quickly move into the Middle East and Ukraine, and soon they convince a China desirous of revenge against colonial powers to join them. Thus, we get a WW2 with an axis composed of Eurafrika and China against the allied powers of the United Kingdom (who never quite joined the Eurafrikan cause, though a faction of the country is heavily invested in the project and desires Hynkel's success), the Soviet Union and Japan, with the United States practicing semi-neutrality until submarine attacks on its shipping draw it into the war in 1934.
The Hook
So what's the point of this campaign, other than novelty. Well, novelty is probably the main point - a sort of mixed up WW2 that occurs years before it is supposed to and without some of the more disturbing elements of that war.
The real hook, of course, is the use of a bunch of interesting military equipment from the "interwar" period in a hot war. Between the Spad and Spitfires in the 1920s and early 1930s there were all sorts of interesting aircraft, ships and land vehicles designed and constructed, but never really used. Now some of these vehicles have a chance to show what they were made of, and at the same time a few anachronisms might make their way into this WW2, especially cavalry.
A campaign could be organized around a particular military unit and its march into Eurafrikan territory, modeled on the film The Big Red One (1980) starring Lee Marvin and Mark Hamill, which followed a group of soldiers in the U.S. 1st Infantry Division from North Africa to Sicily to Normandy and eventually to the liberation of a concentration camp. A fictional campaign might move through Baghdad to the Balkans and Carpathians and finally into the heart of Europe.
There is also room for espionage in London, Paris, New York and Cairo, jungle fighting in the Congo basin, the Soviet couteroffensive against re-invigorated China in Mongolia, resistance movements in Europe, anti-colonial movements in Africa, or the defense of Japan against a new wave of seaborne invasions from China (will the "divine wind" protect the island nation again?). You can also play on the new geography of the Mediterranean and Sahara, tying in with notions of Atlantis buried beneath the sands of the Sahara being rediscovered, or pre-human settlements that were hidden under the Mediterranean being revealed.
The campaign offers many opportunities for realistic and supernatural gameplay in a period often forgotten due to its being sandwiched betwen the Roaring 20's and the Second World War.
A trio of Siskins patrol southern England for French bombers |
Perhaps a League of Europe forms after the Great War? On a wave of idealism, this vast project is begun to unite the peoples of Europe and the Mediterranean.
ReplyDeleteCould be fun. Lots of "weirdish" science, as you said, lots of interesting tech was designed in the 30s that was never used. Airships fleets definitely though.
You also get an altered Mediterranean Sea - smaller, with more land - and a Sahara that is being turned back into savannah - so it approaches the fantasy milieu.
ReplyDeleteIt also just occurred to me - the big one shot would be a "Guns of Navarone"-style mission to destroy one of the giant dams and re-flood the Mediterranean so the combined Anglo-US fleet could sail in and do some damage.
Interesting. All sorts of possibilities.
ReplyDeleteCheck out The Madagaskar Plan and The Afrika Reich by Guy Saville...premise is Germany won WW2, Afrika is divided up and the island of Madagascar is where they plan to relocate the Jews...the stories are not grand scale alternate history but focus on one mans missions against the Nazis...I just got my copy of Grit and Vigor on Friday, I think it would make a good setting...
ReplyDeleteCheck out The Madagaskar Plan and The Afrika Reich by Guy Saville...premise is Germany won WW2, Afrika is divided up and the island of Madagascar is where they plan to relocate the Jews...the stories are not grand scale alternate history but focus on one mans missions against the Nazis...I just got my copy of Grit and Vigor on Friday, I think it would make a good setting...
ReplyDelete