Here’s the full overall description of everything new in Update 6.4:
Collection Book Types
Captains come with a full range of experience levels, from fresh recruits setting sail for the first time to battle-hardened veterans with countless victories under their belts. To cater to this diverse player base, we're unveiling two distinct types of Collection Books: Primary and Advanced.
The Primary Collection Book is tailormade for those embarking on their maiden voyage. We've curated a selection of collections that are designed to be accessible and achievable, ensuring that new Captains can swiftly gather rewards and immerse themselves in the world of naval conquest.
For the Advanced Collection Book, we've crafted a challenge worthy of our most seasoned sailors. With a series of collections that demand a deeper understanding of naval strategy and gameplay, these challenges are perfect for Captains who have weathered the fiercest storms and triumphed over the toughest foes.
So, whether you're charting your first course or already steering a battle-hardened fleet, the Collection Book has something extraordinary in store for you.
Collection Book New Pages
[Primary Collection Book] Captain's Journey: Embark on a Captain's Journey, and chart a course from being a novice to becoming a seasoned Captain. This captivating collection places you as the protagonist of your own naval tale. Set sail from humble beginnings, with your thirst for adventure and the sea just taking root.
You will be able to obtain the following rewards:
- Milestone 1 (1 item): Ship slot
- Milestone 2 (3 items): Ship slot
- Milestone 3 (5 items): Special title - Recruit
Required ships
- Japanese Tier III destroyer Wakatake
- American Tier III cruiser St. Louis
- German Tier III battleship Von der Tann
Required additional content
- Title Beginner
- Port Marseille
[Primary Collection Book] Seafarer's Journey: Start your voyage with eagerness and curiosity, for every journey begins with a single step. Seafarer's Journey is tailored for you, the intrepid explorer, who seeks to navigate uncharted waters and unravel the mysteries of the sea.
You will be able to obtain the following rewards:
- Milestone 1 (2 items): Ship slot
- Milestone 2 (4 items): 5,000 XP
- Milestone 3 (6 items): Special title - Traveler
Required ships
- British Tier III Premium battleship Dreadnought
- Japanese Tier IV destroyer Isokaze
- American Tier IV cruiser Phoenix
- German Tier IV battleship Moltke
Required additional content
- Title Beginner
- Port Marseille
[Advanced Collection Book] Kaiserliche Marine: The Kaiserliche Marine Collection is an assemblage of warships and commanders that pays homage to the naval might of Imperial Germany. This collection delves into the era of the German Empire, highlighting the technological advancements and strategic prowess of the Kaiserliche Marine.
You will be able to obtain the following rewards:
- Milestone 1 (2 items): Epic Commander Alfred von Tirpitz
- Milestone 2 (6 items): Special title - Sea Wolf
- Milestone 3 (8 items): Special portrait frame - Kaiserliche Marine
Required ships
- German Tier IV destroyer V170
- German Tier IV cruiser Karlsruhe
- German Tier VI battleship Bayern
- German Tier VI battleship Mackensen
Required Commanders
- German Epic Commander Karl von Müller
- German Legendary Commander Maximilian von Spee
- German Legendary Commander Franz von Hipper
- German Legendary Commander Reinhard Scheer
[Advanced Collection Book] Operation Rheinübung: Step into history with the Operation Rheinübung collection, honoring World War II's audacious naval operation. This collection brings to life the bold endeavor undertaken by the German Kriegsmarine, led by Admiral Günther Lütjens, as well as the valiant efforts of the British forces in pursuit of Bismarck.
You will be able to obtain the following rewards:
- Milestone 1 (2 items): Epic Commander John Tovey
- Milestone 2 (6 items): Special title - Relentless
- Milestone 3 (8 items): Special portrait frame - Operation Rheinübung
Required ships
- British Tier VI battleship Renown
- British Tier VII Premium aircraft carrier Ark Royal
- British Tier VII Premium battleship Rodney
- British Tier VII battleship King George V
- German Tier VIII battleship Bismarck
- German Tier VIII Premium cruiser Prinz Eugen
- British Tier VII Premium battleship Hood
Required Commanders
- German Legendary Commander Günther Lütjens
New Frames & Titles
- Kaiserliche Marine frame (obtainable from the Kaiserliche Marine Collection Book page)
- Operation Rheinübung frame (obtainable from the Operation Rheinübung Collection Book page)
- "O’zapft is!" frame (obtainable from the September Blitz Pass)
- The Flood’s Legacy frame (obtainable from the October Blitz Pass)
- Revolutionary War frame (obtainable from the November Blitz Pass)
- Recruit title (obtainable from the Captain's Journey Collection Book page)
- Traveler title (obtainable from the Seafarer's Journey Collection Book page)
- Sea Wolf title (obtainable from the Kaiserliche Marine Collection Book page)
- Relentless title (obtainable from the Operation Rheinübung Collection Book page)
- Patron title (obtainable from the September Blitz Pass)
- Floodborn title (obtainable from the October Blitz Pass)
- Vanguardist title (obtainable from the November Blitz Pass)
New Techline Additions
Pan-American Tier I cruiser Hércules
British River-class frigates, designed to escort convoys in the North Atlantic, were sold off heavily after World War II. USS Asheville, a Canadian-built ship, remained in the U.S. Navy until 1946 but was later sold to Argentina. There, she served under the name "Hércules," and then "Juan B. Azopardo" until 1973.
Pan-American Tier II cruiser Almirante Barroso
In an attempt to rebuild and reinforce its fleet after the revolution of 1889 and the mutinies of the 1890s, Brazil ordered a series of armored cruisers from Armstrong. However, due to financial difficulties, only one ship actually entered the Brazilian Navy—Almirante Barroso, transferred in 1897. She was the first ship in the country to be equipped with a radiotelegraph. Almirante Barroso served with the Brazilian Navy until 1931, representing Brazil in Argentina and Chile.
Pan-American Tier III cruiser Vicente Guerrero
In 1938, after the decommissioning of battleship Anáhuac—the former Brazilian Deodoro—Mexico planned to strengthen its fleet with a large ship and buy out cruiser Navarra from Spain, which in the Mexican Navy could have received the name "Vicente Guerrero." However, after Mexico expressed support for the Republicans in Spain between 1936 and 1939, the parties failed to reach an agreement.
Pan-American Tier IV cruiser Córdoba
In 1933, after the purchase of two Novik-class destroyers from Estonia, the superiority of the Peruvian naval forces was overwhelming, so the Colombian government considered several options to urgently strengthen its Navy, including the option to purchase British ships. If the choice had fallen on British ships, the Colombian fleet could have been strengthened with Danae-class cruisers.
Pan-American Tier V cruiser La Argentina
Cruiser La Argentina was built according to the 1926 program in Great Britain. The British Arethusa-class light cruiser was used as the basis of the design, with the armament being enhanced to add training functions to the ship. La Argentina became part of the Argentine Navy in 1939.
Pan-American Tier VI cruiser Almirante Cochrane
In 1937, the Chilean government planned to order the construction of a cruiser at British or Italian shipyards. At that time, the most modern Italian ships of a suitable type were cruisers belonging to the Duca degli Abruzzi class. If a ship had been ordered from Italy, the Chilean Navy would have received a ship identical or close to cruisers of this class.
Pan-American Tier VII cruiser Coronel Bolognesi
HMS Ceylon, a Crown Colony-class cruiser, served in the Pacific and Indian Oceans at the end of World War II, and in the 1950s, she participated in the Korean War and the Suez Crisis. In 1959, HMS Ceylon was sold to Peru, where she served under the name "Coronel Bolognesi" until the early 1980s.
Pan-American Tier VIII cruiser Ignacio Allende
In 1947, the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance was signed in Rio de Janeiro, whereby Argentina, Brazil, and Chile were to strengthen their fleets by purchasing old U.S. Brooklyn-class cruisers. If those countries had ordered the construction of new cruisers in the United States, then the most modern Worcester-class ships would have been used as the basis for the projects.
Pan-American Tier IX cruiser Santander
In accordance with the Rio de Janeiro Treaty of 1947, the old Brooklyn-class cruisers were to be transferred to the Colombian Navy to strengthen it. If Colombia had decided to order a new ship, it could have been Santander, a cruiser based on the American Worcester.
Pan-American Tier X cruiser San Martín
After World War II, Argentinian leaders planned on ordering the construction of new cruisers in the U.K. or the U.S.A. The main requirement was for their main guns to be dual-purpose. The most suitable ships for these parameters at that time were cruisers of the Worcester class that designers would have been guided by if such ships had ever been ordered. One such ship could have been San Martín.
New Premium Ships
British Tier VII battleship Rodney
A Nelson-class Battleship that featured an innovative arrangement designed under the restrictions of the Washington Naval Treat of 1922. The ship was armed with 406 mm main guns that were concentrated in three turrets on the ship’s bow. She was the first battleship in the Royal Navy to be armored according to the “all or nothing” concept.
Soviet Tier VII destroyer Tashkent ‘39
Destroyer flotilla leader Tashkent was designed and built at the Odero-Terni-Orlando shipyard in Italy. Three Soviet-made 130 mm B-2L (Model 1936) twin-gun turrets were supposed to be placed on the ship; however, at the design stage, the B-2L and B-2M projects were merged into one—B-2LM—which caused delays during testing. When she was commissioned into the Navy in October 1939, three single-gun 130 mm B-13 gun mounts were placed on the ship as temporary weapons. It was with that artillery on board that the ship met the beginning of the Great Patriotic War. Tashkent received her standard weaponry of three B-2LM mounts by July 1941.
Pan-Asian Tier IX battleship Sun Yat-Sen
The project of a Sovetsky Soyuz-class battleship incorporated considerable upgrades in the 1950s. The main battery mounts have been replaced by 457 mm twin-gun mounts—one of the options considered for the project during the development of Project 24. The medium-caliber guns and long-range AA artillery have been replaced by 152 mm dual-purpose mounts, while the small-caliber AA artillery is represented by ZIF-75 and ZIF-31B gun mounts. Such a ship could well have been handed over to China as part of Soviet assistance in their navy development program.
Commonwealth Tier IX cruiser Hector
In 1936, Great Britain started designing a cruiser based on a smaller version of the hull of Southampton-class cruisers. As a result, the Fiji-class ships were developed, but if Great Britain had decided to build full-sized AA defense cruisers, a project could have been implemented that embodied an AA defense cruiser based on the hull of a Belfast-class ship.
Commonwealth Tier X destroyer Vampire II
Vampire II is a destroyer of the Australian Daring class, a modified variant of Daring built in Australia. She is currently moored in Sydney, Australia, as a museum ship.
Dutch Tier VIII cruiser Black Harleem
A heavy cruiser design armed with German 203 mm guns and 120 mm dual-purpose artillery manufactured in Sweden.
American Tier VIII destroyer Black Benson
Benson and her sister destroyers were a mainstay of the U.S. Navy in WWII. Her weaponry and systems were the peak of technology at that time. She was armed with upgraded quintuple-tube torpedo launchers.
Unique Camouflages
- Mayan Mystery for Ignacio Allende
- Muisca Gold for Santander
- Inca Treasure for San Martín
- Industrial for Rodney
- Soviet for Tashkent ‘39
- Sun Yat-Sen 2059 for Sun Yat-Sen
- Irish Emerald for Hector
- Octodroid for Vampire II
- Star-K for Kitakaze
- Star-E for Edinburgh
- Steel Lancet for Gearing
- Angler for Shimakaze
- Octodroid for Worcester
- Maverick for République
Epic Commanders
[Epic] German Commander Alfred Von Tirpitz
- Naval Bill
- Horizontal Protection Expert+
[Epic] German Commander Günther Braun
- Unstoppable+
- Horizontal Protection Expert+
[Epic] Japanese Commander Andromeda
- Daredevil+
- Inertia Fuse High Explosive Shell+
[Epic] Soviet Commander The Skullcrusher
- Adrenaline Rush+
- Giant Hunter+
[Epic] British Commander Triangulum
- Fire Supremacy+
- Mist Weaver+
[Epic] British Commander George B. Rodney
- Fully Prepared+
- Horizontal Protection Expert+
[Epic] British Commander John Tovey
- Demolition Expert+
- Armor Piercing Capped Shell+
Additional Information
- Emergency Repair extra HP recovery has been adjusted from 15 to 20%.
- The UI display of Commander retraining has been improved.
- A ship filter has been added to the Shop for player convenience.
- Realistic Battle has been removed from the Leaderboards.
- The beginner rewards have been refreshed.
Bug Fixes
- Incorrect anti-aircraft range shrinking has been corrected.
- Respawn mode: Consumable and skill replenishment has been corrected.
- Sevastopol’s surrounding water animation has been corrected.
- The center turret alignment (often referred to as the "turret bug") issue has been corrected.
Ship Balancing
American Tier VII cruiser New Orleans
- Main battery firing range increased from 9.48 to 9.72 km
American Tier VII cruiser Indianapolis
- Main battery firing range increased from 9.72 to 10.14 km
American Tier VIII cruiser Wichita
- Main battery firing range increased from 9.6 to 9.9 km
American Tier IX cruiser Baltimore
- Main battery firing range increased from 9.9 to 10.2 km
American Tier X cruiser Des Moines
- Main battery firing range increased from 9.9 to 10.2 km
American Tier X cruiser Buffalo
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.8 to 10.98 km
French Tier VII cruiser Algerie
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.8 to 11.1 km
French Tier VIII cruiser Charles Martel
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.8 to 11.1 km
French Tier IX cruiser Saint Louis
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.4 to 11.76 km
French Tier IX cruiser Carnot
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.52 to 12 km
French Tier X cruiser Henri IV
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.82 to 12.18 km
German Tier VII cruiser Yorck
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.08 to 10.62 km
German Tier VIII cruiser Admiral Hipper
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.62 to 11.04 km
German Tier VIII cruiser Prinz Eugen
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.62 to 10.92 km
German Tier IX cruiser Roon
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.04 to 11.28 km
German Tier X cruiser Hindenburg
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.04 to 11.34 km
Japanese Tier IX cruiser Azuma
- Main battery firing range increased from 12.12 to 12.42 km
Japanese Tier X cruiser Yoshino
- Main battery firing range increased from 12.72 to 13.14 km
British Tier X cruiser Goliath
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.68 to 10.8 km
Pan-Asian Tier VIII cruiser Wukong
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.8 to 11.1 km
Pan-Asian Tier VIII cruiser Irian
- Main battery firing range increased from 10.44 to 10.8 km
Soviet Tier VIII cruiser Mikhail Kutuzov
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.4 to 11.64 km
Soviet Tier X cruiser Petropavlovsk
- Main battery firing range increased from 11.94 km to 12.12 km
Japanese Tier X destroyer Shimakaze
- HP increased from 15,200 to 15,600
Japanese Tier X destroyer Hayate
- HP increased from 16,800 to 16,900
Soviet Tier X destroyer Grozovoi
- HP increased from 16,800 to 17,100
British Tier X destroyer Daring
- HP increased from 16,700 to 16,900