NOW HEAR THIS
Some notes that at this stage might be useful, nay critical, compiled from more or less everyone's war minister
Armor
There are more or less 5 types of vehicals in any capacity in the modern battlefields of the Great Eurasian War Period.
1: The Geweerauto (Guncar)
The Geweerauto is a Dutch invention, usually deployed with cavalry
Strengths: Speed, hit and run attacks, quick assaults
Weaknesses: gunfire, any sort of attack, getting stuck
In short, the geweerauto is clearly a vehical that is used for supporting cavalry ideally, deployed among the formation to preform, more or less, the duty of a mobile machine gun station,which cavalry units typically lack, albiet an extremely vulnerable one
2: The Arsenale
The Arsenale is an italian armored car
Strengths: Armor, fast, machine gun
Weaknesses: poor capacity, bad offroad.
The Arsenale is more or less the average armored car, employing armor that might stop a rifle bullet, but not a cannon dedicated massed fire. It provides a protected mobile bunker, but is terrible off-road or in any terrain that's no vehical cessable.
3: The Kugar
A serbian invention, now given to Russia to produce, the Kugar is the most advanced armored car of the age
Strengths: Heavy front armor, heavy gun, offroad mobility, small profile
Weaknesses: Poor rear armor, uncovered top
The Kugar mounts a much more powerful machine gun than the Maxim on an Arsenale, and is heavily armored in the front as well. It's slightly less fast than the Arsenale, but makes up for it in strength. Despite this, it's gunner's mount is left unarmored.
4: Truck:
A truck. More or less good on roads, but terrible off-road, with a mediocre car engine
5: Daimler
A german engineered truck, with an extremely powerful engine and wheels, outstripping any other vehicle of today
Tactics
French (by this point the most tactically innovative and advanced army)
The "Feu D'assaut" (Fire and Assault)
Creeping Bombardment: A bombardment meant to hide one's own forces from sight while negating enemy fire. It's basically walking your bombardment forward, from about 50 to 100 meters in front of your advancing line
Telephone Wires: Rolling out telephone lines form spools behind the assault, giving troops a way to communicate with artillery units for support
German: "Konzern Besetzung" (Consolidated Occupation
A tactic wherin a force slowly advances over ground, consolidating all of it before moving onto the next. It proved very effective in the initial attack in seizing russian cities and preventing the majority of unrest, as it relies on huge masses of soldiers spred out over the entire front to fully bring the area under one's total control.
Russian: "Broshennyy k volkam" (Bait for Wolves/Thrown to the Wolves)
A strategy that takes russia's slow mobilization and overlarge territory into account, it more or less includes ceding a large number of cities and lands deemed 'indefensible' to drain enemy supplies and men to holding those zones, and bitterly defending at one or two strong-points to grind the enemy to a stalemate, leading to, among other things, indecisiveness after the first german assault on the trongpoint of Minsk, after wich the germany army withdrew for the winter, rather than press their Konzern Besetzung forward.
Japanese: Den Kogun (Lightning March)
The Den Kogun forces soldiers to march their absolute limit each day, slowly rotating front marching units so that the unit that much march the furthest on one day must march the shortest on the next day, and keeping the troops as fresh as possible. While not a tactic suited to holding territory, it can swiftly bypass enemy fortifications.
Norwegian-
British-
American-Hold and Defend
the tactic is the simplest of all, involving simply holding the nearest city to the front for as long as possible, waiting for reinforcements
Dutch: "Zelfheling" (self-Healing)
A tactic involving using mobile units to plug gaps in a static line until other troops can be allocated properly
Austro-Hungarian: "Verlassenkreig" (War of Abandonment/War of Isolation)
After a general advance into enemy territory, one zone of the enemy defense is designated as their primary strongpoint. This strong-point is then besieged and tied down while all points nearby are repeatedly battered into submission, at which point the Strong-point is encircled, starved of supplies and munitions then assaulted when alone and in now-unfriendly territory. When used right, this can result in a total victory in a country-sized area within a relativly short time (example. Ukraine)