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Template:Collitem

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The template creates a box to display an item of collections with its description.

Parameter

Name Description Default value Status
1 ID without prefix (IDS_) optional
file item image {{{1}}}.png optional
name item name {{#shipstr:IDS_{{{1}}}}} optional
desc ingame used description {{#shipstr:IDS_{{{1}}}_DESCRIPTION}} optional
2 width of the image in px 150 optional
width width of the image {{{2|150}}}px optional
notes for comments optional

Examples

{{Collitem|PCZC692_BD_1_2}}
will display:
PCZC692_BD_1_2.png
Hawaii

Port Hawaii is located on the volcanic island of Oahu, lit by the dawn sun. The Port pays tribute to the memory of the Pearl Harbor naval base, which went down in history after the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941, marking the beginning of World War II in the Pacific.

Ford Island, which hosts a naval airfield, lies in the center of Pearl Bay. On the port side of the Captain's ship, you can see the piers and warehouses of the supply depot facilities, as well as sheds and water pumps. On the right side are the docks, slipways, industrial buildings, and shipbuilding cranes of the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard.

The quay with a ship moored nearby is lined with residential buildings of typical Hawaiian architecture of the 1940s. Behind them, you can see red-and-white radio antenna towers—they connected the naval headquarters with ships throughout the eastern Pacific.
{{Collitem|PCZC692_BD_1_2|200}}
will display:
PCZC692_BD_1_2.png
Hawaii

Port Hawaii is located on the volcanic island of Oahu, lit by the dawn sun. The Port pays tribute to the memory of the Pearl Harbor naval base, which went down in history after the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941, marking the beginning of World War II in the Pacific.

Ford Island, which hosts a naval airfield, lies in the center of Pearl Bay. On the port side of the Captain's ship, you can see the piers and warehouses of the supply depot facilities, as well as sheds and water pumps. On the right side are the docks, slipways, industrial buildings, and shipbuilding cranes of the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard.

The quay with a ship moored nearby is lined with residential buildings of typical Hawaiian architecture of the 1940s. Behind them, you can see red-and-white radio antenna towers—they connected the naval headquarters with ships throughout the eastern Pacific.
{{Collitem|PCZC011_Bismarck_Bismarck|file=PCZC011_Bismarck_Bismarck-big.png}}
will display:
PCZC011_Bismarck_Bismarck-big.png
Bismarck

The badge of the German battleship Bismarck (commissioned in 1940) originates from the family Coat of Arms of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, whose name the ship bears.

During her only naval operation, Bismarck, escorted by the cruiser Prinz Eugen, was to break through into the Atlantic to attack Allied convoys, but the secretive dash did not go unnoticed: the ships were spotted and later intercepted by the British. On May 24, in the Denmark Strait, a shell from Bismarck struck the British battlecruiser Hood, and the ship exploded. However, Bismarck, too, was damaged and had to abandon her breakthrough mission. During an air raid carried out on May 26–27 by the combined forces of the Royal Navy, Bismarck was immobilized and ultimately sunk with artillery fire.
{{Collitem|PCZC436_CAPT_1_1_child|notes='''Video:''' [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwNMyEUwO68 Bad Advice: Always Use AP Shell]}}
will display:
PCZC436_CAPT_1_1_child.png
Tender Childhood

You probably weren't aware that the handsome, red-bearded man known as Cap was born in the small town of Dundalk on the coast of the Irish Sea. He spent his entire childhood and youth working on a farm, where he helped his father to herd and shear sheep. During those formative years, Cap mastered playing the mouth organ and ukulele. He even won a prize in a local music festival for young talents!

Cap's mother knitted fleece socks, and his father sold them at a local market. Together, his parents had a dream: to bring happiness and put smiles on the faces of everyone. For this reason, they decided to make their son a navigator—one who would be able to travel around the world spreading their family socks to its inhabitants. The red-haired guy's passion for the idea increased with each passing day, mostly due to his father's stories about one of their prominent ancestors—a Viking who was a brave seafarer.

Video: Bad Advice: Always Use AP Shell