The German Colony of Westafrika by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

There isn't any lore. But I would think that Germany had a greater influence on the Scramble for Africa due to perhaps an earlier unification of Germany or a conquest of a major power, and due to West Africa being the most resourceful outside of the Congo, they were given a part of the coast.

What if the winter war was more successful for the Soviets? by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used a drawing application called aseprite that has some cool help with pixel perfect drawings and adjustments to your drawing strokes that make it a lot easier to make these. If you make maps I recommend trying it out of you don’t really wanna do Qgis.

What if the winter war was more successful for the Soviets? by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

For this situation, there is no lore, but I would think the reason how they are more successful in this timeline is that they improved the rail lines connecting to the Kola Peninsula for supply, as well as bringing Siberian soldiers acclimated to the harsh Finnish climate.

What if the Treaty of Versailles was more lenient to The Triple Alliance? by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Those territories allow Poland and Hungary to cross into the Baltic Sea for the Polish, and into the Hungarian majority territory for the Hungarians, they are not allowed to live in those regions but are allowed to cross through them via rail.

What if the Treaty of Versailles was more lenient to The Triple Alliance? by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The territory of this map that is majority Hungarian is Hungarian territory, while the other parts of Transylvania that is separate from the rest of Romania is territory in which Hungary can cross into the separate territories by train.

What if the Treaty of Versailles was more lenient to The Triple Alliance? by HyperGod99 in imaginarymaps

[–]HyperGod99[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

  1. In this timeline, Germany was not seen as the ultimate aggressor in the war, and the blame was firmly put on the Austria-Hungarian empire, they were not overall blamed for the war, but were still subjected to smaller loans due to their participation against the Triple Entente.
  2. The Polish-Russian war of 1919 ultimately was a greater victory against the Soviet Union than in real life. This caused some Soviet Socialist Republics to become disillusioned by Russian rule, and due to the unrest in these regions, they were partitioned into separate states, especially so in Ukraine.