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Some Royal Navy Ships

Prime Minister Class Light Cruiser H.M.S. Admiral Dolphin soon after completion. The Prime Minister Class was the UKA's first attempt at building its own cruisers. Small, armed with seven 152mm guns, and slow, with a maximum speed of 29 knots, they have been a useful, but far from outstanding warship.

Views of the destroyers H.M.S. Victor Podagrosi and H.M.S. Max Cromett II of the Max Cromett II Class. The fastest and most powerful detroyers in the world, the Max Cromett IIs are capable of a maximum speed of 39 knots and are armed with eight 127mm guns and seven 533mm torpedo tubes. The numbers painted on the sides are flotilla designations, used only in peacetime.

The battleship H.M.S. Queen Maureen II is the most powerful surface combatant in the Royal Navy. Purchased from the Imperial Romans after the Roman Emperor sold off most of the ROman Navy following the Battle of the Azores, the Queen Maureen II is armed with nine 381mm guns, eight 152mm guns, and twelve 90mm guns, and can carry three seaplanes. It is capable of 32 knots.

The H.M.S. Phoenix I was the most famous and significant warship in the history of the United Kingdom of America's Royal Navy. Displacing 12,000 tons, capable of 16 knots, and armed with 4 10" Rifles, 6 7" Rifles, 8 70lbr Rifles, a steam-activated glider bomb launcher, and a ram prow, Phoenix was the queen of the northern Pacific from its launch in 2007 to its sinking by Fort Ord U.S.A. torpedo aircraft off Cape Mendocino in 2014 while under the command of the future King Josh. Phoenix was the victor in the Battle of Kodiak in 2007, was instrumental in the conquest of Maui in the same year, and sank the Colombian ironclad Corona del Sol in 2012. As the symbol of the power of the British North American Colonies, Phoenix was the cornerstone of the power of Admiral Ffolkes and the Alaska League in their rise to power in the Pacific North West Coast of North America.

The H.M.S. Ffolkes I was the second major warship constructed by the UKA. Originally armed with 8 15" muzzle loading smooth bore guns in the casemate, it was overhauled and rearmed with two twin 5"/38 gun turrets with the machinery and magazines in the old casemate area, as well as 2 trainable triple 21" torpedo tubes on the fantail. While heavily armored, she was not a particularly successful ship, and was sold to the Republic of Peru in 2028, where she remains in service today as a coast defense ship.

The UKA Royal Marines

The Royal Marines provide a number of vital functions for for the Royal Navy. The foremost of these is the ability to conduct amphibious invasions on a scale up to several brigades in size. All major surface combatants carry a Royal Marine company for smaller raiding operations and security duties. Royal Marine units provide local security for naval shipyards and bases, and Royal Marine antiaircraft units provide major defensive support for Naval bases in key areas.


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