
Karl Titjek is a mere farmer that bought a farm, expecting a peaceful retirement. As a veteran of the Battle of Schwarzwald, Titjek knew Kramer personally. However, as time proceeds, Titjek grew dissilusion to the Nazi regime. Especially after his village got slaughtered by Mestrel's orders. When Titjek confronted Kramer about it, Kramer hopelessly said that it's an order. There was one time when Titjek got captured by the SS, Kramer silently released him. Titjek attempt to convince Kramer to go with him and join the resistance- but he said: "I cannot abandon my life here. I must stay with the Germans. Go!" He hoped that one day, the light of life will shine upon him and he will stop supporting the Nazi genocides.
EVENTS Unternehmen Luna’s Failure to Launch In 1965, the Second Eurasian Liberation Army (SELA), led by Captain Robert MacMillan, along with Benita de Gregorio, and Marie Franc has managed to sabotage German’s Unternehmen Luna, the direct competitor of Kogane no Tsuki, the Japanese space launch to colonize the moon. This caused the destruction of Peenemunde Launch Station after SELA called for mortar strike on the location, and death of SS-Sturmbahnfuehrer Walter Kronnberg; the notorious Widerstandsjaeger of the Einsatzkommando. End of Sino-Japanese Resistance War (1971) The last organized Chinese resistance movement, composed of Second Eurasian Liberation Army members, Kuomintang Army, and more has been finally crushed in a last battle in Harbin. The Atlantropa Crisis Atlantropa, the architectural marvel of the Greater German Reich has reached its completion in draining the Mediterranean Sea. However, the Japanese Empire expressed their criticism regarding this settlement especially as Atlantropa is located in the Mediterranean Sea; somewhere between the Japanese sphere of influence in Asia and German sphere of influence in Europe and North Africa. Since its completion in 1969, Kriegsmarine and Kaigun has moved multiple ships here.
Resistance Second Eurasian Liberation Army (SELA) The Second Eurasian Liberation Army is established by Captain Robert MacMillan after the destruction of the Eurasian Liberation Army in the Battle of Schwarzwald that resulted in the destruction of Schwarzwald Bunker; the headquarters of the Eurasian Liberation Army. Robert MacMillan met the survivors of Battle of Schwarzwald and decided to reorganize under the Second Eurasian Liberation Army. In 1962, MacMillan regrouped with the Asian Liberation Corps. To prevent the second destruction of their headquarters, SELA decided to establish two “Corps”: Euro Corps headquartered in France and Asia Corps headquartered in the Korean Peninsula. As of current (1975), the SELA is the largest organized anti-Axis resistance organization. American Liberation Forces (US Government-in-Exile) Headquartered in the Appalachian Demilitarized Zone, the American Liberation Forces consist of conscripts, volunteers from Appalachian Demilitarized Zone, and remnants of the US forces that got disbanded in the Second World War.
THE TABLES IN EUROPE In the year 1944, the success of Operation Overlord has caused the world to hold their breath. The last offensive at Ardennes have failed at large, causing the breakthrough of Allied troops to Belgium. However, by January 1945, the Wehrmacht bolstered by the Waffen-SS managed to hold a line called the “Rundstedt Line”. Defenders of the Rundstedt Line Holding at a Belgian Village This important event helped secure the time for Werner Heisenberg to finalize the Uranprojekt, allowing two pivotal bombings: the bombing of Washington DC(cancelling the Manhattan Project) and the bombing of Moscow. This bombing shocked the government of United States and Soviet Union. The death of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Josef Stalin in these bombings put the Allied forces on ground at a disarray of command. Soon, many units fight separately, and many surrendered to the Germans. At the end, the US forces have been pushed back to their starting point in Normandy before the United States armed forces withdrew them from Normandy. THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK Meanwhile, in Asia, the bombing of Pearl Harbor has destroyed multiple aircraft carriers important for American power projection. This allows Japanese forces to embark on an undisturbed campaign in Asia, building naval battery network in the Phillipines Sea to knock back any American advance. Fort Tojo, a “concrete battleship” of Japan Hideki Tojo used this shock momentum to push for more bombing campaigns inside the United States- particularly Hawaii- along with submarine blockade against American logistics. As the nuclear bombing of Washington DC and Moscow completed, Japanese forces went on an offensive momentum again, unifying and consolidating control in all Asia. Bombing of Hawaii, 1945 THE INVASION OF NORTH AMERICA (OPERATION ADLERSNEST, 1947-1955) After seizing their imperial ambitions, Japan decided to invade North America with the help of Anglo-German forces launching an offensive from the west coast. The United States and Canada quickly ceased to exist and Mexico under influence of the Axis forces Nations The Greater Germanic Reich Area (sqm): ~7,500,000 km² (Europe from France to western Russia, including Scandinavia and the Balkans under German control) Leader: Adolf Hitler (still alive due to extended survival from historical divergence; otherwise, Reichsmarschall successors if needed) Ideology: Pan-Germanic Fascism – totalitarian, expansionist, militarized society, worshiping the Führer and racial hierarchies. Leaderboard: Germany dominates continental Europe with puppet states in France, Poland, Italy, and Scandinavia. Occupation zones are heavily militarized, with resistance suppressed through fear, propaganda, and secret police operations. Social Life: Civil life is heavily regimented. Citizens participate in mandatory state programs like military drills, racial indoctrination, and youth paramilitary groups. Education emphasizes Germanic superiority, engineering, and military sciences. Public dissent is punished swiftly by the Gestapo and SS. Urban life thrives under centralized planning, but rural areas are militarized and taxed for resource extraction. Military: The Reich maintains the most advanced land and air forces in the world. Panzer divisions dominate the battlefield alongside jet aircraft like the Me 262. Tactical nuclear weapons and chemical/biological research are integrated into military doctrine. The Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe project power into Africa, the Mediterranean, and North America. Germany’s military-industrial complex is unmatched, with automated factories and experimental weapons production. Technology: Germany leads in nuclear physics, rocketry (V-4 ICBMs under development), jet propulsion, and mechanized warfare. Cybernetics and rudimentary electronic computing are used for command and control. Civilian technology lags behind military technology due to prioritization of war production. Geography: From the snowy forests of Scandinavia to the plains of Eastern Europe and the industrial hubs of Western Europe, Germany controls a diverse and resource-rich land. Strategic ports along the North Sea, Baltic, and Mediterranean allow global reach. The Rhine and Danube river systems are militarized for rapid logistics. Occupied territories serve as labor and resource bases. The Japanese Empire Area (sqm): ~13,000,000 km² (Japanese Home Islands, Korea, China, Southeast Asia, India, and Pacific islands under occupation) Leader: Emperor Hirohito (with Prime Minister Hideki Tojo as head of military operations) Ideology: Imperial Militarism – emphasis on obedience to the Emperor, expansion of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, and suppression of non-Japanese cultures. Leaderboard: Japan dominates East Asia, Southeast Asia, and parts of South Asia. Puppet states govern China and India, while the Pacific islands are heavily militarized. Social Life: Society revolves around loyalty to the Emperor and service to the state. Nationalist propaganda and Shinto rituals are infused in daily life. Education emphasizes martial discipline, loyalty, and technical skills. Urban centers are militarized and industrialized, while rural areas serve as agricultural and resource production hubs. Resistance is brutally suppressed. Military: Japan maintains a highly disciplined army and navy with advanced amphibious capabilities. Naval aviation is a core strength, with long-range carriers and bomber squadrons projecting power across the Pacific. Special operations units perform targeted assassinations and sabotage missions. Japan is experimenting with early missile technology. Technology: Japan integrates German technologies, especially in nuclear and jet research, with its own innovations in naval aviation, radar, and communications. Industrial capacity is fueled by plundered Asian territories. Japan is developing advanced aircraft carriers capable of carrying nuclear payloads. Geography: Japan controls a wide arc from the Home Islands to China, Southeast Asia, and the Indian subcontinent. Mountainous regions provide natural defense, while rivers and plains in China and India facilitate occupation and resource extraction. The Pacific islands serve as strategic naval bases to project power westward to North America. Fascist Britain Area (sqm): ~10,000,000 km² (British Isles, South Africa, Egypt, select African colonies, and parts of the Caribbean) Leader: Oswald Mosley (Prime Minister and Supreme Commander of the New British Empire) Ideology: British Fascism – nationalism fused with authoritarianism, corporatism, and racial hierarchy; glorifies empire and militarization. Leaderboard: Controls the British Isles and key African colonies; nominal influence over Caribbean and parts of India before ceding control to Japan. Maintains a partnership with Germany for mutual strategic and economic gain. Social Life: Public life revolves around loyalty to the Empire. Propaganda glorifies Mosley and the new fascist order. Education emphasizes imperial pride, military readiness, and racial superiority. Resistance and leftist movements are crushed with secret police oversight. Urban centers have militarized policing; rural areas provide raw materials and labor. Military: The Royal Army has been restructured for mechanized operations and colonial policing. Naval supremacy is reduced compared to historical WWII levels but still capable of enforcing control over shipping lanes and African coasts. British special forces operate alongside German and Japanese allies. Air power is modest but used for colonial enforcement and tactical strikes. Technology: Britain focuses on colonial control technologies: armored vehicles, long-range artillery, and limited nuclear research (largely dependent on German assistance). Civilian technology is functional but militarized, emphasizing industry and transportation.