Greek | Royal Navy | United States Navy | Greek language | Navy | Greek mythology | U.S. Navy | Royal Australian Navy | French Navy | Ancient Greek | Royal Canadian Navy | Indian Navy | United States Navy Reserve | Imperial Japanese Navy | Soviet Navy | Greek alphabet | Spanish Navy | People's Liberation Army Navy | navy | Old Navy | United States Secretary of the Navy | Navy Cross | Imperial Russian Navy | Polish Navy | German Navy | Turkish Navy | Italian Navy | United States Navy SEALs | Royal Netherlands Navy | Chilean Navy |
Flotilla Leaders were generally named after famed historical (and generally, naval) characters and vessels building for other countries that had been commandeered for the Royal Navy were not allocated into the letter system (e.g. ex-Turkish ships received "T" names and ex-Greek ships "M" names with a Greek mythology theme).
Among these variations are rules for the French Navy (which is interned early in the war), the Greek Navy, a third Russian port on the Black Sea, Allied mini-submarines (such as the 'X-craft' submarines that were used to attack the German battleship Tirpitz late in the war), and additional ships that were not represented in the original game.