Saturday, March 30, 2013

The Cornfield at Sharpsburg

Our gaming group is in the middle of playing the fight around the cornfield during the Sharpsburg ACW battle.  Miniatures are 15mm and rules are "Regimental Fire and Fury."

Union advancing through the cornfield from left, Confederates advancing from the right

Big clash at the foot of the hill beyond the cornfield

Confederates are holding but more Union troops arrive to bolster their line

Back and forth close quarters fight continues.  The Rebel regiments are getting thinner.

The worn and spent rebel line along the road collapses and the worn Union regiments occupy their positions.  Rebel still hold the rest of their line.  The mass of troops a the right of the photo are Hood's troops starting their move to relieve the  spent Rebel regiments.  More Union regiments are also moving up.
 
And that's where we left the battle for the day.





Sunday, November 18, 2012

A Band of Vikings Bent on Some Mayhem

These are the Eureka Miniatures Beowulf and Retinue 28mm Figures.  Eureka makes two sets, one with the figures in action and the other with the figures at rest.  These are the resting set.  Excellent figures.

US WWII Infantry Squad

Finished up a squad of US Infantry.  28mm Battle Honors figures.  Lots of good detail on these proportionally sculpted minis.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Kursk Battles--5 July 1943 6 Guards Army

Our gaming group played out the 5 July day of battle in the II SS Panzer Corps vs. 6th Guards Army sector of the Kursk Battles.  5 July was the first day of the German assault.  It was all they could muster in 1943 and the German generals had planned for success.

Opposing the German II SS Panzer Corps were elements of the Soviet 22nd and 23rd Guard Rifle Corps of their 6th Guards Army.  The 6th Guards Army was arrayed mainly along two fortified defensive lines; one defined the front lines and the other lay about 10km to the rear.  The German plans for the first day called for rupturing both these.

Historically, two of the three SS Panzergrenadier Divsions carried the brunt of the 5 July fighting and succeeding in nearly reaching the second line but could not create a breach on 5 July.   The terrain forced the II SS Panzercorps into a narrow corridor that allowed for great concentration but limited maneuver.   Tank losses were light for Germans but their panzergrenadiers took noticeable casualties.

The game we played used Megablitz rules system by Tim Gow.  These rules are simple in layout and I hoped they would allow the players to wrestle with the problems of large-scale coordinated attacks instead of getting caught up in the glamor of heavy armor and machine-guns.  I chose the Kursk battles because in testing the Megablitz rules I wanted to see how well the attrition combat model worked.  I have run other division-level games (one stand = one battalion, for example) and the combat model tends to suck up all the game time and not leave players feeling they had choices other than an indecisive grind.  A "Kursk-type" battle should test the combat system of Megablitz and we would see if the players "feel" the casualties but still leave them with options of rotating in fresh units or sitting back and pounding with artillery.  Or if the players persist in head-banging, then a very sore head at the end of the day.

 I, as well as the players, felt the rules worked well.  The combat model produced a realistic outcome.  The Soviet front-line rifle divisions were pounded down to small battlegroups and sent fleeing to the rear.  But the Soviet player did mount a couple of limited counter attacks into the German flank that caused even more irreplaceable German casualties.  Of the two German panzergrenadiers divisions doing the assaulting, the division in the center took a severe beating and most of the panzergrenadiers were down 2, 1 or 0 strength (from 5 or 6 strength points).  The other division took more moderate losses.  Both German divisions breached the fortified lines (strongpoints, minefields, AT ditches) in multiple places and on the last turn had their vehicles across and racing for the second line.

I'll continue the fight to the 6th of July in our next game.  The Germans will be holding their beat up division in reserve and the two other divisions will carry the assault.  The 6th July will also see the mobile corps of 1st Tank Army and the 6th Guards Army reserve tank corps come rolling onto the battlefield.  I'll let the players do a very limited refit of infantry and tank losses in the overnight phase and bring up their logistics and fuel.

Couple of photos attached.  One shows the battlefield just before the Soviets deployed.  The black strips are the Soviet defensive lines.  The second photo shows the battlefield on the last turn of the day.




Please excuse the "improvised" nature of the battlefied as it was indeed improvised.  Future games should be a little more presentable, hopefully.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

1939 Russo-Finnish War Game...


...using Battlefront Rules.  Bob Scripp hosted the game at our weekly Army of Central Maryland club meet.

General setting was an attack by a Finnish infantry battalion upon a hastily dug-in Soviet position occupied by two companies and supported by two T-26 and a 76mm Artillery Battery.

As a Finnish player and also the photographer, all the photos are from the Finnish perspective.  

There are four objectives the Soviets are defending.  The Finns need to hold all four to win. The Finnish companies are arrayed left to right in 1,2,3 order.  A mortar section backs us up.

Finnish company three set out to capture two lightly held objectives, the village and the hill behind it.

The Finnish companies 1 and 2 set out to grab the other two objectives, another village and a hill.

Company 3 advances through the light woods towards an objective.

Company 1 moves around the Soviet right.  Company 2 prepares to assault a hill objective.  Scouts are moving out front to draw Soviet fire.

Company 3 moves towards village and hill objective.  No fighting yet but moving across the open is sure to draw some type of fire.


  Company three before and after an artillery strike.  Casualties evacuated, but the Finns keep advancing.

The Finns go up the hill and eventually take out and disorder the mortar section behind the hill but the Soviet battalion commander on the hill gamely takes out more Finns.


Companies 1 and 2 going in on the assault.  The Soviets surprisingly evacuated the hill rather than take the cross-fire.  The Soviet tanks have meanwhile begun to menace the Finns left flank.

Soviet counterattacks come in against the Finnish company 3 trying to hold two objectives and having taken 25% casualties.  This is going to be close.

Mortar and rifle fire pin down one Soviet attack but the other destoys a hapless Finnish squad.  The remaining Finns at the hill have moved behind the hill to make the Soviets come and take it.

Back with Company 1, it takes some casualties but enters the Soviet lines.  But here come the T-26's looking for trouble.

In the ensuing tank vs. infantry fight, one T-26 is destroyed and one Finnish squad is destroyed.

At this time the Soviets tossed in the towel.  The tanks were facing a tough maneuver roll, one infantry company was panicked with 75% casualties but the other was still in good shape but going to be facing Finns on two fronts.  It was still a close run thing.

Good game!


Saturday, September 15, 2012

Norman Infantry

Next up are some 28mm Gripping Beast Norman Dark Ages Infantry, armored and unarmored.  Now to find some rampaging Vikings.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Portuguese Cacadores

Portuguese Cacadores lined up for duty.  These are 15mm 19th Century/Old Glory15/Battle Honors miniatures.  Based for Fire and Fury.