Europe in early 1920, in a still-unnamed timeline I've been fiddling with for a while now.
Translated descriptions:
EUROPE
On the eve of the Kapp-Lüttwitz Putsch
While the traitors to the republic and country gather around Kapp and Lüttwitz, the Hungarian Wars and Italian-Serbian war are losing steam in southwestern Europe. In the East, the collapse of the Bolshevik dictatorship begins, as the so-called "Red Army" begins to break under the continuous assault of an alliance of republican and reactionary forces coming from all sides. In the West, the weakened Entente powers send old war materiel and advisors, while in Germany the anti-republican scum is being coaxed into a "crusade" against the Bolsheviks.
In FINLAND, both republican and soviet rule have fallen in the wake of the civil war. Friedrich Karl von Hessen, a noble who fled Germany, rules as Fredrik Kaarle, King of Finland. His power is based on the Freikorps and Jäger troops in the country, who stand ready for a bloody suppression of any new uprising. In Helsinki, new nobles and officers arrive daily, fleeing the Revolution in Germany or Bolshevik rule.
Along the BALTIC COAST sit the half-formed states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, who are bound together in the PREUßENBUND, a reactionary alliance against the Bolsheviks. This alliance is strengthened by the imperialist troops of the North-Western Army, troops from Finland and several Freikorps units. Together with Poland, the Preußenbund is the strongest anti-Bolshevik force in the Russian Civil War.
Further explanation:
The basis of this timeline are changes made in 1917 and 1918 - the French army is in a drastically worse position in 1918, the German one in somewhat better shape, and the Americans are not involved. In Germany, the revolution happens "on schedule", accompanied by a failed Entente offensive; British troops attack, only to find the French side of the attack stymied by large mutinies, forcing them to withdraw when the Germans bring in more reserves than expected.
The revolutionary government in Germany immediately sets to making peace on the basis of "no annexations, no reparations" - also called 'peace without victory', typically by the American press. The first set of armistice negotiations fail, however, with French officials making territorial demands reaching as far east as the Rhine.
When this news is leaked to the French public, the uproar is as tremendous as it is instantaneous - in only days, it becomes clear that the French government has lost its support, with the barely-quelled army mutinies returning as pamphlets calling for strikes against the "bourgeois butchers" in Paris circulate in the trenches.
The peace signed in early 1919 ends the war in the west, bringing the German troops home and allowing for the Austro-Hungarian forces to vacate large areas being ceded to Italy before the Italian occupation begins. It's this occupation that ignites one of the two wars that is beginning to die down when the map is set, in early March of 1920. Italian troops encounter localized resistance when occupying the regions gained from Austria, which only stiffens as they cross into land theoretically owned by the newly-independent Bosnia and Croatia-Slavonia.
In Hungary, the end of the war is unable to bring peace. After a coup, a communist government takes power in Budapest, forming the Soviet Republic of Hungary. Surprisingly, they find broad support among the more conservative members of Hungarian society - but not for their internal policy. Under the new government, the quickly-reforming Hungarian army marches out to secure the borders of the old Kingdom.
Czechoslovakia and Hungary sign an armistice in Vienna, not long after German-Austria unites with Germany, freeing up Hungarian troops to fight their other neighbors. Over the past year, this war has died down, all sides unwilling to give up their claims but more and more unable to press them.
In the east, the new states formed after the withdrawal of German troops have either collapsed into rival governments (in Ukraine, the Hetmanate, Directorate, remnants of the People's Republic and the Soviet Republic all claim to be the only true government) or formed a somewhat shaky alliance against the Bolsheviks. The Preußenbund, or "Prussian League", is nominally under the leadership of Wilhelm of Prussia, grandson of Wilhelm II, though he is careful to present himself as, at most, first among equals.
The still-shaky Prussian League can itself be split into two main groups - the various small states, including Finland, of the north, which are more under Wilhelm's influence due to the large number of German Freikorps troops present (who are, at least in theory, loyal to him alone) and the lack of larger forces of their own. In the south stands Poland, affiliated primarily for the purposes of coordinating military efforts against Bolshevik forces.
Meanwhile, further east, the various White forces of the civil war are finally able to catch their breath and advance again after the Bolshevik offensives of 1919. The Prussian League's advance has forced the Red Army to all but abandon many of their new gains, and the Whites are beginning to return to their previous strength.
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When working on this one, I decided to go for an in-universe author's perspective, rather than an "external" neutral view. The result is a clear stance on some things (for example, what territory is marked as occupied) and the ability to use some fun non-neutral wording such as "anti-republican scum". I was originally intending to make an English version of the map as well, but then I realized doing all the text (including finding archaic German names for some places, like "Wiburg") was a good chunk of work, and got lazy about it.
I've also posted it
here.