>>5960851>>5960855>>5961065>>5961097>>5961214>>5961236>>5961387>>5961433Unanimous siege decision.
Alright then, writing.
The full spread of Zephyrs, too. I end up spending more time on these models lately since I'm not sure what to draw for an update until it's done, I haven't been giving myself the time to do them. I'm never sure whether or not pictures are even wanted compared to just getting things out sooner.
The Zephyr tank made its debut in the Emrean Liberation at the start of 1909, handily outclassing earlier, more primitive tanks made. It would have been available earlier, but Emrean Command waited until a significant number were available at once to maximize the shock of their counteroffensive. Different cities would put them together with slightly different features, hence why they are generally classified by city of manufacture, the "Atelier." After the war, production would become standardized across the Ateliers, into a form heavily reminiscent of the AdC model, the Atelier de Couronne (Arc en Ciel). These models would be exported in great quantity, and ten years after its first battles, the Atelier de Jumelles would create a new model designed solely for export, as newer models of tanks were being kept tightly held with the Emrean Republican Army. The Emrean Army itself expressed little interest in the model, as the 1919 represented the upper limit of what the design was capable of, and was already outmoded by secret projects. However, the rest of the world would take notice of it and eagerly purchase it.
The Zephyr 1919 would not have as glorious a history as its forbears, however, as the most notable conflicts it participated in en masse would be in crushing defeats by the resurgent Grossreich as it took over Fealinn and Felbach once more, some time after its production run had ended.