Battlestations: Pacific/Serpent

Escort
"US troop carrier plane must land on an Allied base, but the Japanese must intercept and destroy them. the US must escort the remaining C-47 Dakota planes untill they can land whilst the Japanese have to destroy the US troop carriers before they can land at the southern enemy base."

- Map description

This map is extremely easy for the Allies, as they have far more aircraft than the Japanese will ever have. In the southwest of the large island chain are four Japanese carriers of varying classes. All four spawn only Zeroes. They must destroy the US troop carriers flying along the island chain. If they reach the southern end of the chain, the Allies win. The Allies have access to four airfields which follow the island chain the whole way.

The hard part for the Japanese is getting at the troop carriers. They are escorted not only by US players, but also by two squads of two P-40 warhawks each - more than doubling the number of Allied aircraft in the skies.

The troop transports fly about 1.7 kilometres apart. This makes getting to them extremely difficult, especially for the furthest ones. These will inevitably be the ones that will get the US the victory.

As the troop carriers fly around, US forces emerge from various places to knock out the Japanese carriers as they come by. The first carrier is doomed at the start, as a South Dakota-class battleship escorted by a Clemson will be literally invincible to anything the Japanese players can throw at them. The second carrier is sunk by two squads of three B-17s. These B-17s approach from the northeast corner of the map, and can be intercepted if struck early enough.

This can potentially save your second carrier, but you'll inevitably lose time you'll need in order to hit the C-47s. It is extremely difficult for the Japanese to win on this map as a result.

Interestingly enough, the Allied C-47s have the Tactical Map icons of heavy bombers, not the troop carriers they really are.

Siege
"Japanese kamikaze will try to take an anchored US fleet by surprise. The US must protect their anchored fleet from the kamikaze attacks whilst the Japanese have to escort their kamikaze squadron to their target."

- Map description

Unfortunately, this map isn't particularly balanced either - the Allies will have an easy time eliminating the slow-moving kamikazes and the Ohka carriers, especially if they are intercepted at a sufficient range. The kamikaze waves come in two types, one after the other: six suicidal Vals, and then three Ohkas. Winning the map as Japanese is made even more difficult by the strange AIs of the kamikazes. Many times they overshoot their targets and land in the water behind them. This counts as a shot-down kamikaze when strength is concerned. Therefore this map very much favours the Allies. That said, however, it is still possible for the Japanese to win here.

In the northwest corner of the map lies a massive fleet of Allied ships. From the southeast arrive several wings of suicidal D3A Vals, and occasionally Ohka Carriers. All the kamikazes appear in singular squadrons, not the usual squadron of three. Protecting the Allied fleet are the Allied players, flying F4F Wildcats or F2A Buffalos. The Japanese players must escort the kamikazes to their targets and sink the Allied fleet. The Japanese have access to three planes - the A6M, the Ki-43, or the J1N. The J1N is quite powerful on this map, as they can sink the two carriers in a couple runs. The Allied fleet consists of one of each:
 * Renown-class BB
 * South Dakota-class BB
 * King George V-class BB
 * De Ruyter-class CL
 * Cleveland-class CL
 * Atlanta-class CL
 * Fletcher-class DD
 * Northampton-class CA
 * Yorktown-class CV
 * Lexington-class CV

The strategy to the map is really quite simple - the Allies must simply shoot down every Japanese kamikaze that heads their way, and the Japanese must (try to) keep their kamikazes alive long enough for them to hit a ship. Alternatively, however, it is possible to bomb the Allied ships using Gekkos.

Competitive
"Three different fronts await your protection. Can your divided forces triumph in such an encounter? as a US force, you have to save all three Allied Headquarters. you are assigned to command light units."

- Map description

Island Capture - Small
Emphasis on this map is the centre island, which is the only shipyard on the map. This makes it extremely easy to attack the final headquarters for the victory.

Click on a Headquarters to see which units it can spawn.

Island Capture - Medium
This map is considerably larger than Small. The map is now a huge island chain that consists primarily of bases and a Headquarters in the centre. The centre headquarters provides light cruisers, making it the focus of the battle. That said, however, it can be tough to hold onto because of its proximity to each side's default airfields, which can make paratrooper drops on it. Well balanced, this map is popular amongst many players.

Click on a Headquarters to see what it can spawn.

Island Capture - Large
This map is one of the largest maps in the game and has a huge number of headquarters. There are, in fact, more headquarters than supply bases on this map. HQ 6 is unique to the Allies at the start, as it is the only headquarters on the map that spawns Clemsons (or Minekazes if owned by the Japanese) instead of Fletchers. Although the Clemsons will rarely cause considerable damage to the Japanese, it can still allow the Allies to make better use of their command points. As such the map is reasonably balanced, but the large number of headquarters can create lengthy battles.

Click on a Headquarters to see which units it can spawn.