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Zakalwe

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  1. Curve and early Catherine Wheel are an integral part of my CMBB experience - along with bottle of decent Syrah. Somehow Unreadable Communication seems to soothe my ego when I'm plotting yet another disaster... To stray off-topic... In a recent PBEM I actually managed to lose a Valentine to German ATR fire. A rather demoralising experience. Zak
  2. I don't think BFC could patent it. Wego systems have been around in board wargames (though usually both unwieldy and unpopular) since the 70's, and at least the V for Victory/World at War -series by Three Sixty/Atomic used a Wego system several years before CM. Zak
  3. Just finished playing this one and encountered a slight bug that threw off the victory calculations. I should have scored a major victory, but instead I got a major defeat. I lost over 2200 points for exited units, and the AI got about 2400 for destroyed ones. I decided to open the scenario in the editor, and discovered that only the first platoon of each set of Soviet units was eligible for exit victory points. If this is fixed, the scenario should run OK. Nevertheless, I had fun revisiting the old COI/ASL stomping grounds (played this one several times with both systems – as I recall, this was a Soviet cakewalk in ASL). OK, time for the AAR: SPOILERS: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I sent my tanks in two columns. The smaller one consisting of two T-34 platoons, advanced in the centre, hoping to spot enemies and draw fire (recon by death in the true ASL style). All the other tanks were sent to the right flank. A Tiger on the slope of Hill 538 almost immediately brewed one of them up. The rest managed to reach safety behind some pine forest clusters. While the force in the centre was keeping the Fascists busy, being wiped out in the process, I assembled a horde of KVs and T-34s on the right flank. They all broke cover at the same time (took three turns of careful plotting) and charged the lone Tiger on Hill 538. The Tiger took at least fifteen hits to kill, and the hillside was pitted with scorch marks. Needless to say, quite a few burning Soviet tanks littered the low ground, but the swarm proved effective. Finally I kept the tanks on Hill 621 busy by peeking and dashing from cover – even managing to knock out one Panzer IV. The force on the right swarmed to the German rear. I exited most tanks, but sent a platoon of KVs and a platoon of T-34s to seize the flags. Both platoons lost one tank to the infantry and the ATG, but forced the Germans to attack. Using the constrained LOS between the hills, I was able to hold off the German AFVs until the end. One KV met a fiery death, but claimed a Panzer IV. An intense scenario, which also has something to offer for those who aren’t familiar with the original. Zak
  4. I prefer company to battallion scale engagements for blind PBEM play. The point tally is unimportant, as a well-designed lopsided battle can be very good. Medium maps are fine, but map size is not very important for me if the battle is otherwise interesting. Duration can also be variable, since I have some very patient friends who are quite willing to spend the first 20 turns seeking contact, but at times it can be great fun to open a match with a bang. Since you were the one to inquire, Abbott, I'd like to point out that 'A Cold Winter's Morning' has just about the right size/scale/time ratio for a PBEM match. I just posted a (mostly positive) review at the Scenario Depot, BTW. Zak [ November 15, 2002, 03:49 PM: Message edited by: Zakalwe ]
  5. Some spoilers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Yes, about evenly. The assault on the right (from the Soviet perspective) had very good success, while the other attack was initially repulsed, but the pressure from the flank swung it in my favour. Like I said, I tried it again, and this time my troops got nowhere fast, so the first victory may have been just dumb luck. Two squads managed to take out the German MG on the right on the third turn, so that helped a lot. Zak
  6. Close enough, it's from "Use of Weapons". To be pedantic, it's Iain M, Banks when he's writing SF, the mainstream stuff is just plain Iain Banks. (Either way he's quite brilliant.) Zak
  7. Ha! Spend half an hour carefully plotting a truck convoy so they will smoothly and gracefully negotiate a twisting road to safety. Congratulate yourself for remembering to apply PAUSE judiciously. Your opponent's armoured car gets a freaky LOS from a hill for about three seconds... One 20 mm burst results in a pile-up ready to be slaughtered at will... ...and I'm loving every bloody minute. Zak
  8. I managed to win the Bridgeheads quite easily with the use of the new human wave command. Basically I moved carefully forward on the first turn and then gave every single unit a human wave command. End result: lots of dead soldiers, but all the alive ones were Russian. The next time I tried it, everything went pear shaped really fast, so it may have been just dumb luck... Zak
  9. Hmm, the one that is standing in Bovington looked awfully small to me.</font>
  10. There have been few purely North African tactical games lately, I admit. The only one springing to my mind is Operation Crusader (Atomic/Avalon Hill), which was a brilliant grand tactical/operational treatment of the Crusader battles using a wego system several years before CM. (It also had a particularly delightful supply system). All the more reason for BFC to be the first... Seriously though, at least here in Europe, most WWII enthusiasts are quite familiar with the North African Campaign. The images of Rommel and the Desert Rats of Tobruk are instantly recognisable and highly evocative. Even Finnish übergrogs have been raised on movies and (especially) comic books on the Desert War. Visually a North African game could be stunning. There is a wide variety of terrain – eroded escarpments, sheer cliffs, wadis, salt flats, rocky waste, oasis’s, olive groves, vineyards, forests, and even sand dunes... The engine rewrite will in all probability allow for a whole new spectrum of environmental effects applicable to the North African Theatre of Operations. Heat haze, blinding sun and sharp shadows, dust, sandstorms, and extremes of temperature might be very rewarding things to experience. If the new graphics engine can convey even a fraction of the feeling of the North African light and space, people will be blown away. Of course, the game probably will not be limited to North Africa only. The inclusion of the Italian (and possibly Balkan campaigns) allows for a huge variety of actions and environments. I think it would be a wonderful thing to experience the new engine in a new setting. Besides, as the new engine is supposed to be more flexible and modular, the waiting between each instalment might be considerably shortened.
  11. Well, North Africa has always been a mainstay of wargaming. In fact, there has never been a shortage of NA wargames (either computer or board) during the history of wargaming, so somebody has to buy them, right? I'm no übergrog , and yet there are half-a-dozen NA games on my shelves. In a way it will be a sort of homecoming for wargaming when the CM series hits the sands of Africa. Hal Hock's boardgame Tobruk can be seen as the ancestor of CM in the way it treated armoured combat... Zak
  12. You may be right, the wheels were quite small. Still, I could swear I have seen a picture of a few 82 mm mortars being towed by a couple of sorry looking horses. Of course, due to CMBB engine limitations, that's neither here nor there concerning the game. (A kingdom for a panje-cart!) Stiil, the scout car issue is a bit puzzling. I think it should easily carry a 82 mm mortar team. Two 6-man MG teams is way too much, though - conjures images of buses overloaded with people, livestock and baggage. Zak
  13. IIRC, the later versions of the 82mm BM (41/43?), had wheels and could be towed. Zak
  14. Well, the M3 (White) Scout Car was not exactly a small vehicle. The name is somewhat misleading, as the official British designation was: "Truck, 15-cwt, 4x4, armoured personnel". Soviets mainly used the vehicle for liaison and as a prime mover. Still, the mortar issue is a bit strange. Maybe the fact that the later Soviet 82mm mortars had wheels and could be towed has something to do with this. Zak
  15. I've been practising Soviet tactics (and especially T-34 tactics) for about a fortnight now, so I decided to put my skills to test in this scenario. I took the Russians and gave the German AI +1 experience and +25% handicap. A quick game resulted in a 79-21 tactical victory for the Red Army. A short replay follows... SPOILERS: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (all directions refer to Soviet perspective) I massed all my armour on the left, with infantry as riders. One platoon advanced on foot. The company HQ, two Maxims and one ATR formed a firebase near the road. I sent the tanks at full speed to the left. After a while, a German ATG knocked out one of the tanks, but all others reached the shelter of the woods on the left. Then they advanced in short leaps and bounds (heavy use of the pause command here). One Stug started to move against the formation, and was spotted and repeatedly plinked by the ATR. By careful timing I overwhelmed the Stug and killed it while losing one T-34. The infantry dismounted at this stage (some involuntarily) and set up a line about 200 m from the woods next to the flag. The T-34s engaged the guns and silenced them with the aid of infantry. One T-34 lost its gun in the process. At the same time, the second Stug appeared, and again the combined fire of the T-34s first immobilised and then destroyed it. One flanking T-34 was destroyed by infantry. Then I parked the remaining tanks about 70 m from the German infatry positions anfd proceeded to pound them into pieces. After a few turns the bypassed infantry started to move towards the flag, and my MGs and infantry cut them down in the fields. The last turns saw me just pressing the go button. I probably could have bettered the score a bit, but I had no stomach for pixel atrocities. Overall a nice, fast and fairly challenging scenario. It does highlight the importance of getting close and massing fire when facing superior German AFVs with Soviet tanks. Zak
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