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Showing posts from April, 2024

Terrain Makeover for Dos Amos

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In order to have somewhere to represent the world of Dos Amos and it's Caribbean setting, I need some suitable terrain. A mix of palm and 'regular' trees will do and for the built environment I have decided to repurpose some old buildings. These were some fine Paper Terrain Mediterranean buildings that I bought for the Aegean Strike game at Crisis Point a good few years ago. I was never happy with the rushed and plain grey card bases.  They look like a typical Barretts Estate, transplanted to a typical working town somewhere in the untouristy bits of the Med.  an aerial view of Grenada. Different colours on the roofs, lots of greenery and whitewashed walls  I decided to take a cheap and cheerful and hopefully easier route and have cut the bases down a bit, given them a coat of PVA and sand and added flock and foliage. I'll add some trees as soon as I've ordered them.  Thanks for looking. 

Musings on the next campaign

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Now that I've actually concluded a Khemed campaign, I've been wondering about what should be next. I've had tentative plans for a Khemed 85 campaign, which would  feature a 1980s MEU along with a Lebanon style Multinational Force with British armoured cars, San Marco Marines, French Foreign Legion and the like. However, these would need purchasing and painting. So, as I was musing over a cup of tea the other morning and had been looking at some of my previous forces that are in storage and my 80s 82nd Airborne forces stuck out. So I'm going to fight a mini campaign, using the Expeditionary Force campaign in Programmed Wargames Scenarios by Charles S Grant. Time and Place The location will be a Caribbean island not dissimilar to Grenada. The island is the tropical idyllic of Dos Amos (with some changes to fit in locations and  more suitable names.) This is taken from a wargames book that was hugely influential on my early wargaming career and is ...

Crisis Point Day 2

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Day 2 started with the dizzying highs and crashing lows of the CWC 2 Command system. The JS3 battalion attempted to get into the fight with the first dice rolls of the day. A double 1 command bonus! They then rolled a command blunder on the next roll!  More airstrikes we're called in by both sides. I don't recall any targets being destroyed, but suppressions caused the advancing Soviets to slow down their advance.  the Mig 15 was neither use nor ornament!  overall view of the action on day 2.  The JS3s finally get into action.  The battle raged on, with the Soviet T44s on the right flank making more ground and trading shots with the Czech armour. The infantry on the left finally began to benefit from supporting fire from the JS3s and some brave riflemen were seen to be shouting "urrah!" and charging some of the entrenched infantry. Break points were perilously close to being reached and brea...

Crisis Point- forces and Day One

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DAY 1  The Soviet aim was clear- advance across the board, reduce enemy forces but bypass strong resistance and continue the push to Prague. The Soviet forces available were:  224 Motor Rifle Regiment  Mech battalion 2 HQs 3 companies of 6 infantry + 3 M3 half tracks AA M14 half-track with quad .50cals Support company of 2 82mm mortars and 1 DsHK HMG Motor battalion  As above, but mounted in trucks 2 battalions of T44 tanks. 9 tanks + 1 HQ per battalion. The latest in Soviet armour technology and basically what you would expect a tank to look like if a T55 and a T34 had a baby.  Recce- elements of the regimental reconnaissance force- 3 M3 half tracks plus 4 Recce Support T34/85 tanks. In CWC2 these recce support forces are whatever that unit is, in this case, tanks, but with the Recce ability.  Artillery- 2 batteries of 3 152mm guns each, 1 battery of Katyusha rocket launchers Regimental Command element - CO, FAO, FAC. There was a pool of aircraft that woul...

Crisis Point 6th & 7th April 2024

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Initial briefing and scenario details  The annual gaming meet up, hosted and curated by Richard Crawley, took place this weekend in the usual delightful environs of Dungworth, on the edge of the Peak District, west of Sheffield and east of the moon..  This year, the theme was an alternative history of the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1948, following a failed Communist coup. There are better write ups of this scenario elsewhere-   Andy Ts blog  and  Richard Crawley's blog  have more background detail of the political and military situation of the Soviet reasoning behind the invasion. Suffice to say, myself and Andy were responsible for the CWC2 game, a move towards Prague by Soviet armour and mechanised infantry against a hasty defensive line of Czech forces in entrenched positions.  Below is the Soviet briefing. There was a similar one prepared for the Czech defenders.  And here is the initial sketch that I did for the scenario. ...