British and Indian
Britain far eastern forces in Malaya, Burma, and India were mostly made up of Indian troops, with a few European units, as well as troops from Burma and other far-flung part of the British Empire. From December 1941 until the end of 1943, they saw fighting in Malaya, Singapore, Burma and on the eastern fringes of India.
The British and Indians follow many of the standard British special rules, such as Mike Target (for artillery), Bulldog and Deadly (for infantry). However, the Indians have a unique rule of their own, War Cry. Indians always charge shouting war cries to gain the blessings of the gods and intimidate their enemies. Weak-hearted foes hearing this fearsome cry will flee without a fight. Enemy Units must re-roll their first successful Motivation Test to Counterattack a Unit with War Cry.
British troops are usually rated Confident 4+, Green 5+, Aggressive Is Hit On 3+, but they also gain all the rating benefits from the Bulldog and Deadly special rules.
Indian troops are usually rated Fearless 3+, Green 5+, Aggressive Is Hit On 3+, but they also gain all the rating benefits from the Deadly special rule.
The British and Indian forces represented in The Pacific consist of two infantry formations and two tank formations.