Readme for "The Korean War" by Patrick L. Shephard (Apolyton forum name: Patine)

This scenario is a very focused one, concentrating on the Korean conflict in detail, a conflict I've seen no other scenarios
on in the Civ2 community (please correct me if I'm overlooking one). Other than what's said in Korea.txt, here's a few notes.
This scenario easily fills the Korean War "gap" in "Early Cold War East Asia" (Asia7) in my "History of Asia, Part B"
scenario set (found on the Spanish Civilization Site and in the bowels of the Apolyton forum). Each civilization gets its own
infantry and armor types (though the South Koreans and Chinese must first research Mobile Warfare to get access to their
armor; until then they must rely on obsolete cavalry as their mobile attack units) each with variable attack and defense,
depending on the nation (the United Nations, however, get American and Commonwealth infantry and armor, and UN infantry, but
not armor, as separate units). Archaic artillery with Metallurgy (equivalent in strength to canons) are replaced with artillery (same as normal) and field guns (lower attack, higher defense, and, like howitzers, ignore city walls) though there
are no howitzers. Jet fighters and bombers are there instead of stealth to replace the WWII air units (which most players still use), these jet units are midway between standard fighters and bombers and the normal stealth in stats. Helicopters are toned down for the era, AA guns are available, long-range rockets and atomic bombers (inferior to cruise and nuclear missiles, respectively) are in place, and steam frigates (with stats like galleons) transport units for the South Koreans
(a pre-Industrial civ). Given the large map covering a small area, and the rapid movement up and down the peninsula in the early months of the war, all units' movement rates are triple normal, and the road movement multipier is 8, not 3. Events center on banning negotiation between determined allies and enemies, and facilitating the Inc'on invasion and the arrival of Chinese volunteers along the Yalu River, both in the early part of the war. Improvements and wonders are based on, but somewhat altered from, the "History of Asia, Part B." The rest is easily navigated.