
Most young boys (and some adventurous girls) play with Toy Soldiers; some never stop! I'm proud to say that I am one that never has stopped. Toy Soldiers, painting the figures, history and miniature wargaming is what this site is all about. May the God who gives encouragement give you the same attitude of mind toward each other that Christ Jesus had, so that with one mind and one voice you may glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
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Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Scales and Periods, Part . . . oh, heck, I've lost track!

Labels:
Fantasy,
Games Workshop,
Miniature Wargaming,
Warhammer

Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Games and Scales I play, Part 8 . . . The Bad Guys





Labels:
Fantasy,
Games Workshop,
Miniature Wargaming,
Warhammer

Monday, January 18, 2010
Games and Scales I play, Part 7

GW produces the Warhammer series of rules which have been adapted for Ancients, ECW, WW I, etc. GW also publishes the excellent Warmaster set of rules and Warmaster Ancients. They have been innovative with multi-part hard plastic figures which historical miniature lines are starting to benefit from.
Anyway, I like Warhammer and used to play it a lot; it's the ruleset I use for ancients. My fantasy gaming is basically Warmaster and Lord of the Rings these day, but we used to have quite a bit of Warhammer Fantasy in the house. My favorite army, because I could use it for historical play, is the Kingdom of Bretonnia. Heck, I like flags and heraldry! Figures are a combination of Citadel Miniatures (GW) and Wargames Foundry.

Labels:
Games Workshop,
Miniature Wargaming,
Warhammer

Sunday, January 17, 2010
A Dining Room Battle: Encounter at Shklov, June 1944
The Battle of Shklov is a fictional WW II battle that was fought on December 26, 2009 on the Dining Room table of our house. We decided to play a 2000 point Flames of War game using the Encounter Scenario from the basic rule book. The scenario begins with the attacker, advancing and encountering strong opposition, calls for assistance - but so has the defender! An interesting scenario with mobile forces and delayed and scattered reserves coming to the rescue.
The two opponents:
1. Oberstleutnant Dad leads a Kampfgruppe built around the 4th Company, 2nd Battalion, 6th Grenadier Regiment. (Most of the time I like to lead a force heavy with infantry as they comprised the majority of combatants in WW II) The company is able to field two platoons of infantry and one platoon of heavy machineguns. Both infantry platoons are armed with panzerfaust anti-tank weapons and the Company headquarters has a panzerschreck anti-tank team along with panzerfausts. Fortunately for 4th Company, additional forces have been added to build the Kampfgruppe (task force). A German paratrooper platoon with panzerfausts has been attached and an assault gun platoon consisting of 3 Stug G IV's will provide some armor support. In additon, an artillery battery of 10.5 cm howitzers and some sporadic (and I do mean sporadic!) air support is available. In a surprise move to my opponent, I decided not to deploy my combat engineers and decide instead to have a platoon of Tiger 1E tanks from Schwere Panzer-Abteilung 501 (Heavy Tanks!).
Both sides start to set-up; the German commander puts his Tigers in the village of Shklov on the left flank while Soviet Scouts conducts a recon of the German forces.
Now a quick die roll to determine who goes first and the Soviets attack!
Brigada (Brigade) Kommisar M. A. Dedov commandeers a T-34/85 medium tank (the one with the flag) and decides to join the heavy tanks of the 42nd Guards Tank Battalion. It will be Dedov who first spots the Germans at Shklov. Dedov's force will be isolated for most of the battle as he ties down the German reinforcements. The damaged Tiger is one of the objectives to be captured in the Soviet deployment area.
German artillery preparing to fire, their right flank protected by Stug G IV assault guns.
The Soviet counterpart to the German artillery in the battle: A Guards Rocket Mortar Battalion consisting of BM-13 Katyusha Rocket launchers. Colin made a good decision to dig them in on the first turn; unfortunately, they would suffer from shiny new model syndrome and miss 99.9% of the time. The one time they do hit the target, they destroyed half of the German artillery.
German paratroopers on the right flank guard an objective and wait for the inevitable Soviet assault.
Soviet reinforcements of T-34's and Infantry arrive . . .
"Ummm sir . . . that's a lot of Russians."
The platoon leader is destroyed in the first volley . .
Two Tigers are destroyed quickly by accurate Soviet fire. The German Radio Truck is the Objective in Shklov.
German infantry launch their assault.
BOOM!
The elite 9th Naval Rifle Brigade, armed with submachineguns, leap from T-34 obr43 tanks and assault the Germans in the woods between Shklov and the paratroopers on the other flank.
For Mother Russia! German defences start to crumble in the center.
The Comrade Colonel sends his T-34/85's two times without infantry support against the paratroopers, who, after a valiant defense have to retreat. The pig sty is the objective.
Labels:
Flames of War,
Miniature Wargaming,
WW II

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