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+# Japan — V3 Start 1836
+
+## Basic Info
+- **Capital**: Edo (Tokyo equivalent)
+- **Head of State**: Emperor (symbolic) + Shogun equivalent / Prime Minister (real power)
+- **Government**: Constitutional military government — evolved from Tokugawa-equivalent shogunate through 150 years of modernization. Imperial Diet established. Military and industrial zaibatsu-equivalent dominate politics.
+- **State Religion**: Shinto-Buddhist syncretism (no significant Christian/Islamic presence — isolation legacy)
+- **Technology Tier**: 1.5 (approaching Tier 1. Electricity in major cities, railway network on Honshu, modern navy with dreadnoughts, chemical industry)
+- **Population**: Medium-large (Honshu + Shikoku + Kyushu core, ~30M?)
+- **Literacy**: High (150 years of modernization, compulsory education system)
+
+## Territory
+
+### Home Islands
+- **Honshu / Shikoku / Kyushu**: Fully industrialized core. Railway network. Modern cities. The economic engine.
+- **Hokkaido**: Colonized ~1600s+. Agricultural frontier + mining. Ainu population marginalized/assimilated.
+
+### Pacific Empire
+- **Sakhalin**: Split with/contested by Jianzhou Republic. Coal mining.
+- **Kuril Islands**: Japanese chain connecting to Kamchatka.
+- **Kamchatka Peninsula**: Continuous coastal settlement. Fur trade hub. Naval base.
+- **Aleutian Islands**: Trading posts, fur trade.
+- **Alaska**: Significant settlement — fur trade + fishing + timber. Japan's most developed American territory.
+- **Pacific Northwest (Columbia region)**: Outposts and trading posts. Not yet continuous settlement. Competing with Kalmar (from Atlantic side), English (expanding west), and New Song (scattered).
+
+### Claimed / Contested
+- **Sakhalin (full)**: Jianzhou holds south, Japan holds north. Both want the whole island.
+- **Pacific NW interior**: Multiple powers' claims overlap.
+
+## Opening Situation
+
+### Strengths
+```
+ ├ 150 years of industrialization — deep institutional capacity
+ ├ World-class navy (Pacific dominant)
+ ├ High literacy / educated workforce
+ ├ Pacific empire provides resources (fur, timber, fish, some minerals)
+ ├ No internal ethnic tensions (homogeneous population)
+ ├ Strong national identity (island nation, unique culture)
+ └ Strategic island position (hard to invade)
+```
+
+### Weaknesses
+```
+ ├ Resource-poor home islands (limited coal/iron compared to England or Song)
+ ├ Pacific colonies are FAR AWAY and thinly settled
+ ├ Alaska/Kamchatka = expensive to maintain (long supply lines)
+ ├ Silver economy legacy: transition to industrial economy still adjusting
+ ├ Not quite Tier 1 yet (behind England/Germany/Song/Italy/Ilkhanate in some areas)
+ ├ Jianzhou Republic rivalry: constant friction over Sakhalin/NE Asia
+ └ Isolated culturally: 150 years open but still insular mentality
+```
+
+## Core Gameplay
+
+### Path to Tier 1: The Final Leap
+Japan is ~90% of the way to Tier 1 industrial power. The gameplay is about closing that last gap:
+```
+ Need:
+ ├ Secure resource supply (coal/iron — from where? Korea? Sakhalin? Pacific colonies?)
+ ├ Develop chemical/electrical industries to match European leaders
+ ├ Expand university/research system
+ ├ Naval arms race: maintain Pacific dominance against English encroachment
+ └ Grow Pacific colony population (currently thin)
+```
+
+### The Jianzhou Rivalry (Primary Regional Conflict)
+```
+ Japan vs Jianzhou Republic:
+ ├ Sakhalin: both want the whole island (coal resources)
+ ├ Kamchatka: Japan dominant but Jianzhou has continental-side posts
+ ├ Trade competition: both export heavy industrial goods to Korea/Song/international market
+ ├ Historical grudge: Jianzhou FORCED Japan open (~1670s) — national humiliation not forgotten
+ ├ Military balance: Japan has navy, Jianzhou has land army + industry
+ └ Neither can destroy the other — Jianzhou too industrial to conquer, Japan too naval to invade
+
+ V3: Permanent diplomatic tension. Crises over Sakhalin. Arms race.
+ If one side weakens (internal crisis) → the other pounces.
+```
+
+### Pacific Expansion vs Consolidation
+```
+ EXPAND: Push further into Pacific NW, claim more American territory
+ ├ Compete with Kalmar/England/New Song for western North America
+ ├ Expensive (long supply lines)
+ ├ But: secures resources + prevents others from encircling Japan
+
+ CONSOLIDATE: Develop existing colonies (Alaska, Kamchatka)
+ ├ Cheaper, more sustainable
+ ├ Turn Alaska from fur-trading posts into real province
+ ├ Build infrastructure (railways in Hokkaido → to Sakhalin ferry?)
+ └ Less flashy but more solid
+
+ V3 decision: player chooses emphasis each era
+```
+
+### Korea: Ally, Rival, or Victim?
+```
+ Korea is Japan's neighbor — small, industrial, independent
+ ├ Japan invaded Korea TWICE historically (~1590s) and both times failed
+ ├ Korea remembers this — deep distrust
+ ├ But: both face common threats (New Song, Jianzhou)
+ ├ Alliance possible (anti-Jianzhou bloc? anti-Song bloc?)
+ ├ Or: Japan could try to vassalize Korea (risky — Korea is armed and industrial)
+ └ V3: diplomatic play between alliance and domination
+```
+
+### England: Pacific Rival
+```
+ England expanding in Pacific (Australia west coast, Indian Ocean, possibly Pacific islands)
+ ├ English and Japanese interests collide in: Australia, Pacific NW, Indian Ocean trade
+ ├ But also: common interest in checking New Song's maritime dominance
+ ├ Anglo-Japanese alliance? (like historical 1902 Anglo-Japanese Alliance)
+ └ Or: Pacific naval rivalry → arms race → possible war
+```
+
+## Flavor
+
+### The 150-Year Modernization Legacy
+- Japan's modernization started with HUMILIATION (Jianzhou forced opening ~1670s)
+- Every generation since has been driven by "never again" mentality
+- Military-industrial complex deeply embedded in politics
+- "Catch up with the West/Song" is the national ideology — but Japan is nearly there now
+- What happens when you CATCH UP? Identity crisis: what drives Japan when the goal is achieved?
+
+### The Fur Empire
+- Alaska/Kamchatka fur trade was Japan's first colonial economy
+- Sea otter pelts = "soft gold" of the Pacific
+- By 1836: fur populations declining (overhunting)
+- Need to transition Pacific colonies from fur extraction → diversified economy
+- Flavor events: fur trade decline, conservation debates, indigenous relations
+
+### Cultural Crossroads
+- 150 years of contact with Jianzhou, Song, Ilkhanate, Portugal, Korea
+- Japanese culture: unique fusion (traditional + imported technology/ideas)
+- But still deeply distinct from neighbors
+- Literary/artistic flowering: woodblock prints of Pacific landscapes, samurai-industrial hybrid aesthetics
+
+## Relationships
+| Country | Relationship | Notes |
+|---|---|---|
+| Jianzhou Republic | **Primary rival** | Sakhalin dispute, historical humiliation (forced opening), arms race |
+| Korea | **Wary neighbor** | Historical invasions, but possible alliance against Jianzhou/Song |
+| New Song | **Major power, cautious** | Song is much larger but Japan has naval edge. Trade partner + rival. |
+| England | **Potential ally/rival** | Pacific competition but shared interest vs Song. Anglo-Japanese alliance? |
+| Kalmar Union | **Pacific competitor** | Vinland + Pacific NW overlap. Minor friction. |
+| Mongol Khanate | **Minor neighbor** | Sparse, weak. Japan could exploit or ignore. |
+| Ilkhanate | **Distant trade partner** | Indonesian trading post connections. No direct conflict. |