Monday, 21 February 2022

GOUBELLAT TO BOU-ARADA ROAD… with BATTLEGROUP TORCH

A bit of action in North Africa, with a historical scenario written by my brother, for the Irish Rifles as they moved south and had to clear the road from Goubellat in late Jan 1943. The scenario can be found here:

https://treadwellswargames.blogspot.com/2022/02/clearing-road-to-bou-arada-11-january.html?fbclid=IwAR0H487IHH69jEHR_LDTuLvNwMqiIMFtoXGfKAAuq5LLORopLXEKUQxc3Uo


I took command of the Germans, from the Herman Goering Division, defending two farms east of the road that were the objectives of the Irish Rifle’s attack. My forces, 2 Fallschirmjager platoons with support, were dug-in here, behind a minefield that blocked the road (until British engineers could clear it). The German reserves were 2 8-rad heavy armoured cars, which had been encountered in the previous days harassing the British recce troops on the road. There was also a single Pz IV… to face his 3 platoons of attacking motor rifles supported by Lothian Horse Valentines. The weather on the day was very poor, sleeting cold rain and the ground was a quagmire, so special rules for off-road movement by vehicles were in play.

Having set-up, the Germans deployed and the first British probe advanced down the road from the edge of Goubellat.

The probe soon ran into trouble, the first Valentine to move off road instantly bogged down and was immobilised in the mud. The infantry dismounted from tank riding and into a nullah (ditch) (marked on the board by foliage, but hard cover. They would come under heavy MG fire and broke. The lead Valentine then took multiple hits from the ambush fire of the Pak-38 dug-in down the road and one round penetrated and destroyed the tank. So far so good for the Germans. Their own recce patrol had made their way up the hill on their right (two trees hill) for a good view to spot for the mortars and they launched harassing fire down at the edge of the town. So far, the Brits guns hadn’t got going.

They soon did, a recce Dingo doing the spotting and launching 25pdr barrage at the first, larger, farm. Direct hits resulted in a smashed farm and the FJ inside destroyed… unhealthy place to hide.

The British reserves were arriving, more Valentines and infantry, attacking through an olive grove by the road, were 80mm mortar bombs rained down on them. The British carrier section turned left and headed cross-country for two trees hill, a bold move, stalled as one after the other the carriers all bogged down and couldn’t get out again. That British flanking attack had totally stalled in the mud.

The German reserves arrived on turn 5, the two armoured cars leading up the farm track, and the Pz IV moving into a firing position from the edge of the olive grove to exchange fire at long range with the Valentines on, or by, the road. Turns out, they are slow, but my Pz IV struggled to break-through the armour at these ranges. Mind you, their 2 pdrs could do very little back, an ineffective tank fight then.

I send one armoured car off to the first farm and the second to the small farm to help cover two trees hill, and put something large and solid in the way of the incoming British 2 pounder fire.

So far, the Brits hadn’t got far, but another platoon joined the first and they pushed on through the olive grove and encountered my dug-in MG-42 teams, trading fire and pinning, whilst the Brits moved their Vickers MG up to aid clearing the vineyard ahead. The British also got their 3” mortars on table and opened fire here, my platoon were in trouble, out-numbered and being shelled… casualties mounted.

On the right, at two trees hill, the British sent their 3rd platoon to do the carrier’s failed job, dismounting from trucks to slog up hill. My single MG team got their heads down, but one squads wasn’t going to hold them for long. I send a second squad and MG team up as well, only for mortar fire to pin them down. The fight on two trees hill would see the British take it, wiping out those squads, but then stall under heavy MG and 20mm cannon fire from the small farm at the bottom. They dragged their 2 pdr gun up to take out that 8-rad, only for its crew to be cut down by MG fire.

The counters had really mounted up, aircraft were not allowed in the scenario, and their counters counted as 5s instead… I’d draw 1. Both had a respectable stack of counters, it was close.

The British pushed on through the olive grove, clearing the vineyard ahead of my last few stubborn defenders in their foxholes. They also moved up an engineers squad in a truck and they dismounted and approached the minefield. Harassing 25 pdr fire was stopping my MGs from engaging them. They started to clear the mines, which would allow the Valentines to move up to the larger farm and take that objective (I had little left to hold it). I had to unpin to get my MGs back with suppress-firing to stop those engineers, but the counter drawn pushed my BR total over the battlegroup’s MV total of 45, to 47… a risk, but required. The Herman Goering troops had to pullback, the British had cleared this stretch of road. The Pz IV was out of ammo anyway, so time for it to go.

It was close, the Brits were only 6 points from breaking, so 2 more chits maybe would have done it. Fun game… scenario special rules added a twist, with 5 British vehicles bogging down (and one working its way free at the end). We had a day of failing AP rolls, about 5 times in a row we rolled the required number and scored pins (need a 10, roll a 10, need a 4, roll a 4)… so the Germans lost no armoured vehicles, the Brits just the 1… which is a bit unusual.  

Big fan of Tunisia-based games… a great theatre for battles with different and variable forces, but not the wide-open tank-battles of the desert.

I few shots of the action at Goubellat… 

The battlefield, Germans holding 2 farms, British advancing from edge of Goubellat (far edge) Two trees hill is off the bottom right of the image.

FJ dug-in between the farms.

Blocking the road to Bou-Arada, dug-in Pak-38.

Small farm, with mortars behind. The Beetle is the FOOs transport.

First probe down the road, with tank riding infantry. Dingo is the FOO.

Valentines come under Pak fire.

25 pdrs hit the vineyard, where FJ MG teams are dug-in.

German reserves arrive, 2 8-rads and the Pz-IV.

Carrier section heads left into the mud, and bogs down.

SdKfz 233 reaches the larger farm, an objective with nothing holding it since the 25 shelling...

Valentines are stuck... one is bogged own, one destroyed.

The solo panzer takes aim, scores some hits, but Valentines are tough...

Edge of Goubellat under mortar fire.

The other 8-rad risks bogging down to get behind the small farm house.

On station covering two trees hill.

British infantry move across the hill top and take it.

Friday, 4 February 2022

The Battle of Graukirchen, 1813, with ‘Soldiers of Napoleon’

This was a play-test game, not really for the rules, these all seem to be working well, but to again try a 3 brigade game (sort of the standard) on a 6 x 4 table, to see how it felt for space and whether it was too many miniatures for the tabletop to allow any manoeuvring at all.

The battle saw my Austrians, using the 1813 army list, taking on the French at the fictional village of Graukirchen, somewhere in Saxony. For this game I decided to be bold and attack, using the All Out Assault tactical order (this is what higher command have asked you to do today) and a strong light cavalry brigade for its speed. I would attack on both the left and right, either side of the village, which was occupied by a single landwehr battalion and foot battery of 6 pdr guns. The French were more cautious, with two infantry brigades lined up, on his right the Italians, mostly poor troops (except the Italian Grenadiers) with a 8 pdr battery. On his right, the French, a large brigade with many recruits, again with a single small veteran battalion to stiffen them and a 8 pdr battery. His reserve brigade was cavalry – dragoons, lots of them! I hoped to do the required damage before they arrived, in a rapid attack. Here is the Austrian force’s 3 brigades.

Commander
General-Markgraf Ritter von Battenberg - Commander of Note: ‘Old Go Forwards’

Infantry Brigade - Zedlitz’ Brigade
Fusilier Battalion    6 stands + Jaeger detachment
Fusilier Battalion    6 stands    
Fusilier Battalion    6 stands
Fusilier Battalion    6 stands
Landwehr Battalion    4 stands
Foot Battery     2 6 pdrs + full caissons

Light Cavalry Brigade - von Schonberg’s Brigade
Chevau-Leger Regiment    5 stands    
Uhlan Regiment                 6 stands
Hussars Regiment              5 stands + fine horses
Horse Battery    2 3 pdrs

Heavy Cavalry Brigade (Reserve, on the right, on turn 3) - Martinic’s Brigade
Cuirassier Regiment        5 stands + ruthless commander


and a sketch map of the 6 x 4 tabletop, from the game's random terrain generator

Austrians from the top, French at the bottom.

It started well, all my battalions and regiments moving up in columns (they are bit faster) and the French gunners for once missing their mark. It’s easy when the enemy aren’t fighting back yet. He deployed his skirmishers, I sent out mine, but that would be an inconclusive stalemate, no advantage to either side for once. My horse battery deployed on the high ground and the uhlan pushed up on the extreme right, forcing his end battalion here to form square or face pointy-death. The 3 pdr battery was in range behind though and in the next turns its fire mangled the square and later broke the battalion. Perfect!

Seeing my weak centre, the Italians came forwards, a light infantry battalion in skirmish line supported by the grenadier’s column, and that forces me to divert a battalion to face them or be outflanked on my right. My main infantry attack was down to 3 battalions not 4, as the flank cover formed line and opened up a volley fire, supported by the 6 pdr foot battery. The Italian ‘leger' battalion returned volley fire and my Austrians fell back, bloodied and in disorder from the losses. The pressure was on here at the weak point in my lines.

On my left, my infantry advanced in columns and the Italian muskets started to cause losses and disorder. I wanted to co-ordinate the two brigade here, try to get them all charging at once, which would 1. Win me victory points for conducting the all out assault I had been ordered to, and 2. Give him a problem of too many troops taking damage to rally quickly, and thus break battalions, especially those raw recruits and poor Italians. This is not so easy, because demand on cards is always far greater than the orders they give you, and you'll need to rally off damage too, so just rushing forwards takes hard work. Card choices make for tough decisions throughout the game. Plus, I had in mind to wait for the Cuirassiers and hit him with them too, or at least force most of his French brigade into squares. The Cuirassiers would f*** this right up by failing to arrive on time, and then failing to arrive again! So I delayed a few turns… for nothing, and just took more damage instead. My hussars suffered from French gunnery again and retired to regroup… then my flanking fusiliers in line broke and fled, so I had to replace them with another battalion to avoid being overrun in the centre. The bold all out attack had stalled. Still I was giving some back too, his Italian grenadiers broke under canister fire from my foot battery. They’ve had 2 bad games now…

On turn 5, the attritional game ended, when his dragoons arrived… and in a splurge of useful cards they came ‘at the gallop’ streaking in columns of march through the centre, then straight after, using ‘well-drilled’, to marched up again and deftly swing into lines. Oh no! Suddenly, two strong dragoon regiments were on me, sabres out and ready to charge! I had no time to respond before the first dragoons charged my foot battery and easily overran it, sending the gunners fleeing into the village and taking the guns. His next regiment targeted my chevau-leger, who counter-charged to meet them in an uneven fight of heavier cavalry vs lights. The chevau-leger sacrifice at least held-up the French charge! My Cuirassier at last showed up… but were not going to make it into the centre to meet those dragoons before they shredded my lighter units… too late boys, too late… it was all going wrong!

On victory points earned so far it was very close. The French had claimed 1 battlefield objective, ‘Hold the Line’ - no enemy units in his deployment zone when the reserves arrived. The Austrians had claimed 1 too, ‘Guns on High Ground’, the 3 pdr horse battery had moved and deployed on the hillock my right to claim those VPs. I still had the ‘Grand Assault’ objective in hand to complete…and just 1 turn left to do it or take the VP hit for failing to complete the assigned mission in time. I'm trying alright!

Desperate measures were required in turn 6, which would be the last. My lancers charged.. at last, and smashed into a reservist battalion, sending them reeling back. My chevau-leger had to try again so, wheeling about, charged at the Dragoons again to resume that fight. The hussars were ordered in too, but refused… useless! My best light cavalry unit had done nothing but be French artillery target practice all game. On the left, I threw my last 2 infantry battalions forwards too, and they staggered through the Italian fire to get to bayonet range, and both won the melees… but not by much.  It was chaotic and a real brawl of cavalry and men on the right and, in the end, return fire from the French line broke the uhlan and my chevau-leger were forced into retreat again. But I had at least completed the ‘Grand Assault’ objective by the efforts, costly though they be. On Victory Points gained, when it all was added up, the Austrians had 24, the French 23… too close to call, a draw really, maybe marginally to the Austrians… but both sides had to pull back, but a cracking fight.

Another close tussle, the French were really saved by the arrival and amazing speed of their Dragoons (useful special events cards can sometimes, luckily, stack-up for such drastic effects). Another turn without them and I think the French would have broken, but their cavalry counter-attack made for real drama and excitement… cavalry save the day… as they should. Those damn Dragoons are the bane of my Austrians…

Happily, all worked well on a 6x4, busy, but not too crowded and some manoeuvre space, enough to avoid a simple, and dull, head long clash anyway. In all, 3 hours 20 minutes gaming, we timed it. So the target of roughly 1 hour per brigade in game length is working OK too.

Pics of the day's action at Graukirchen. 

Graukirchen village and church, beyond the windmill and miller's cottage, the French/Italian lines.


The French left, reservist lines with supporting columns behind, to counter-attack and send out their own skirmishers as well.

Facing von Schonberg's light cavalry brigade, about to appear over the low knoll, 3 pdr battery on limber following, to deploy on the hillock. It's fire mauled a French square.


Old General von Battenberg is joined by his Corps' commander (a special event), checking see how the attack is coming along and lend some advice (or interfere). Each staff dragoon model is a 'command re-roll point', removed when the point is used in the game, it just looks better than a dice.

The uhlan and chevau-leger threaten the French lines, but where are the hussars? Driven back by cannon fire, they failed to show-up at all when things got hot. So much for elan! All fancy trousers, no action...

The fight gets hot around the miller's cottage in the centre, Austrian 6 pdrs' would break the Italian Grenadiers, only to be overrun by speeding dragoon's that came out of nowhere.

Here come those dragoon's, sweeping into action in front of the village, across the road, all before the Austrians could react. Massacre those gunners...

On my left, the second dragoon regiment is in line and closing in on the chevau-leger, who are already under Voltiguer fire and must wheel and counter-charge. 

Things about to blow-up on the right.

Martinic's Cuirassiers arrive past the church, too late to intervene though... some terrible dice rolls to get my reserves here.

The end, a swirling cavalry melee sees the chevau-leger driven back and uhlan then broken by French fire. The French recruits only stood because of the arrival of their brigade commander to lead and rally them. The uhlan were left to attack the main line on their own... so no surprise they got hammered. It was supposed to 3-4 cavalry regiments at once!




Monday, 31 January 2022

SOLDIERS OF NAPOLEON, DEMO-GAME

This was a ‘Corps’-sized game, that is 4 brigades per side, with 3 deployed on the tabletop and 1 in reserve. It was played on a 6x4, which is perfectly do-able, although we usually go 7x 5 for this.

The French force’s 4 brigades were: a French Infantry brigade of 3 battalions and an 8 pdr gun battery. This was regular and 1 veteran battalion. An Italian infantry brigade of 4 battalions, all poor infantry except the 1 grenadier battalion (these counted as regulars) again with a 8 pdr battery. And finally, a light cavalry brigade of 2 chasseurs regiments (both smallish) and a good Hussar regiment, with their own 6 pdr horse battery. The French reserve was a single Dragoon regiment, but again with a horse battery attached.

The Austrians matched this with an infantry brigade of 4 fusilier battalions and 2 landwehr infantry battalions with a 6 pdr battery in support. The ‘advanced guard’ brigade, a unique mixed brigade type (you can have 1) of a grenz battalion, a feldjaeger battalion and an uhlan regiment, with a horse battery of 6 pdrs in support. The third brigade to deploy was a cavalry brigade of 1 dragoon regiment and 1 chevau-leger regiment, no horse battery here though. In reserve, because they have to start there, was my grenadier brigade of 2 grenadier infantry battalions, marching up to my aid.

The French deployed with the Italians holding the farm on their right. The centre was the French infantry and the left his light cavalry. The reserve dragoons were pre-arranged to arrive in the centre (so can go wherever they are needed fastest), from turn 3 onwards.

The Austrians deployed with the infantry brigade on the left and centre, the cavalry on the right and centre and the advanced guard out front, screening, in front of the infantry and facing the farm (they have to deploy furthest forwards as a restriction on using them). My plan was to attack and take that farm from the Italians. The light infantry would lead, with infantry moving through and finally, when they arrived on my left, the grenadiers would be the coup-de-grace force to assault and take the farm once the Italians had been well-mauled. The centre would be a feint attack, with 2 fusilier battalions and landwehr, go forwards, engage those French and keep them busy, try not to die too quickly. The problem was the left, with the cavalry facing off, he had a 3-2 advantage in regiments and a horse battery to help and I feared a swift move here would see him defeat my cavalry and turn that flank. My Dragoons would have to work hard to stop that, aided by the weak chevau-leger, but it would only be delaying action to buy time for the assault on the farm to break his Italians.

Two sample forces.

French
Italian Infantry Brigade

Infantry battalion (militia)
Infantry battalion (militia)
Infantry battalion (militia)
Grenadier Battalion (regulars)
8 pdr foot battery

French Infantry Brigade
Veteran Infantry battalion (veterans)
Infantry battalion (regulars)
Infantry battalion (regulars)
8 pdr foot battery

Light Cavalry Brigade

Hussar Regiment
Chasseur Regiment
Chasseur Regiment
6 pdr horse battery

Dragoon Brigade - Reserve
Dragoon Regiment
6 pdr horse battery

Austrians
Advance Guard Brigade

Grenz Battalion + Jaeger detachment (militia)
Feldjaeger Battalion (veterans)
Uhlan Regiment
6 pdr horse battery

Infantry Brigade
Fusilier Battalion (regulars)
Fusilier Battalion (regulars)
Fusilier Battalion (regulars)
Fusilier Battalion (regulars)
Landwehr Battalion (militia)
Landwehr Battalion (militia)
6 pdr foot battery

Cavalry Brigade

Dragoon Regiment
Chevau-leger Regiment

Grenadier Brigade  - Reserve
Grenadier Battalion (veterans)
Grenadier Battalion (veterans)


On to the action…

Well it started well enough, the light infantry deployed in extended lines (skirmishing) and sent out their own skirmishers, and the jaegers and grenzer were soon hurting the Italians with accurate fire. They, in return, deployed their own light companies to fight back, but the Austrian uhlan, as light cavalry, send a harrying squadron to drive those enemy skirmishers back in (something light cavalry can do is chase-off enemy skirmishers). The Austrian's ace skirmishers, rifle-armed, were making life hard around the farm. In the centre my ‘feint’ pushed up and the French moved up as well – careful, not too far. The landwehr battalion formed line and started to get some volley’s in, lucky that, for once, the French gunners were rolling poorly and missing them. Landwehr militia are not easy to rally once the damage builds up. On my right, French left, his cavalry raced up in march columns (so very fast) and then deployed into lines, his battery with them deploying and opening fire. My dragoons wheeled right to face his hussars. If they came, they were ready to counter-charge (something all cavalry can do, even if they are not the target of charge, they can try and intervene, it's worth keep reserve cavalry back for this, although I didn't). My chevau-leger went forwards to round the small wood and draw-off his chasseurs, but heavy Voltigeur fire and many cannon balls sent them falling back in disorder and needing rallying, which they did. But yeah, too much fire that way. Best hang back.

Initial moves over, I made my first mistake and pushed my uhlan, on my extreme left, up to charge his Italian gun battery, only for them to not charge far enough and catch horrid canister fire from the battery. As men and horses died, the uhlan broke and fled… drat! I had been too eager and got them destroyed for nothing. Still, their threat had forced the Italian grenadiers into a square and that is bad news if enemy guns or skirmishers are targeting you, and my grenzer were. Units in square cannot skirmish back to defend themselves and are easier targets for gunners.

Time for the Austrian infantry to push on, and they moved up and through the light infantry skirmish lines and engaged the farm, were one wavering Italian battalion broke and ran. In the centre, my volley firing fusiliers and landwehr were holding their own and then drove the French back, to rally and regroup in some disorder. Hurrah! Keen (again), I followed up and sent one fusilier column charging in, only to lose the melee and be repulsed. I must stop being so aggressive and play a longer game… tbf, I thought I win that fight and break his battalion and rolled poorly (just blame the dice!).

On the right, his hussars moved up so my dragoons spurred in and attacked them, to fight a very inconclusive melee and we both fell-back, regrouped, formed lines again, and got ready to try again. The dragoons and hussars would fight it out 3-4 times here, with neither getting a decisive advantage until the last turn of the game. It was even, his hussars were better trained and led by a heroic commander. My dragoons were heavier cavalry though with shock impact…

The French reserve had arrived, his dragoons galloped to the right to aid at the under pressure farm, where I had no cavalry to match them (I needed those uhlan now). The French horse battery deployed and started adding its fire to the Italian battery which was doing heroically, under heavy jaeger rifle fire but still blasting away, before 1 gun crew broke under the fire (the full caissons had long been emptied and retired). The arrival of the French dragoons gave my fusilier's attack columns pause and they started to take morale tests for the cavalry ahead, threatening to charge them. Heavier cavalry (or lancers) can just intimidate the enemy by hanging about.

In the centre, the French had recovered a bit and their skirmishers were now shooting up my columns, the brave landwehr had to fallback, leaving many dead behind. The centre as crumbling, it was time to go at the farm, now or never. Meanwhile, my reserve grenadier brigade had arrived. Fearing his cavalry outflanking me, I had sent back orders to divert the grenadiers in to the centre and then formed a new blocking line, stopping them from joining my attack, but securing the right flank with two good infantry battalions that his light cavalry would be unlikely to break. It felt safe there now.

At the farm, my fusiliers finally closed in and charged home, driving one, then a second Italian battalion back at bayonet point, out of the farm buildings, hurrah! But the losses where mounting for me too, mostly from artillery. I had lost my own horse battery now, it limbered up and fled when his cavalry showed up. Still, the Italians were still only in the fight because of the many Rally cards he’d spent to keep them there. It had been costly and stopped his attack in the centre or with his cavalry on the left. In Victory Points gained, it was very close, the Austrians just ahead and both sides close to breaking off and retiring for the day. In the next turn, somebody would break.

As it happened, both broke. My dragoons used a ‘fierce cavalry charge’ special event to rush in and defeat his Hussar once and for all and they fled, breaking the French army. But, in the centre, my ragged fusilier and landwehr battalions also suffered more musketry damage and the landwehr broke, along with the hard-fighting feldjaegers, would had been engaged since the start and were probably just out of ammo and bit peckish by now. That was enough for both sides to gain enough VPs to break the opposition. A draw then… maybe marginally to the French on damage inflicted to my infantry… but too close to call really.

An excellent fight, no quarter asked or given… a bloody day for the Italians, their brigade shredded. I feel I wasted my grenadiers a bit, but he only didn’t press his cavalry attack because they were there. If I’d have sent them quick-marching on the farm as planned, he’d have no doubt pushed harder here and maybe turned the flank, broken my cavalry brigade and won the day. Still, proud of my Austrians, for once not a good kicking of the French.

Soldiers of Napoleon is now a done deal, finished writing the rules, awaiting production to turn it into a nice book and set of action cards. Sometime in ’22, with a following wind…

A few quick snaps of the action. Not many, too busy playing for that. That was such fun, we’re going to do it again in our next game. 

The crux of the battle, the Austrian assault on the Italian farm. Jagers and Grenz are skirmishing, before the fusiliers in attack columns move through into the assault.

 

Italians, grenadiers, battery and infantry deploy to the hold the farm area. Behind the 8 pdr battery has 'full caissons' upgrade, so is well stocked with ammo. They'll need it.

French Voltiguers, in force screen their centre. A stalemate here, but it was only a feint attack anyway, to hold the best French infantry in place.

The far right of the Austrian line, hussars approach in line as the dragoons wheel to face them. His horse battery is in support. This cavalry fight would flare-up and subside through the battle, eventually the white dragoons could claim the win...






Wednesday, 19 January 2022

ATTACK ON LA DUPINERIE, Play-test skirmish game with 'Frontline'


US attacking in platoon-sized action, ‘All Out Assault’ intensity, ‘Secure the Assembly Area’ scenario.
 

Blue (German) 1. Minefield. 2. Squad + MG team. 3. Squad + MG team. 4. Sniper + MG team. 5. Platoon HQ and runner. 6. StuG III G. Red (US) 1. 1st squad. 2. 2nd squad. 3. 3 squad, FOO and sniper. 4. 3rd squad BAR team and Sherman.

An early of trial for a WW2 skirmish game, working title ‘Front Line’ set at platoon level (with support). Play-testing of the first draft is on-going, but their is a lot to do, as I want it to be really good and offer a very gritty and ‘tough’ game play… high verisimilitude. Anyway, many ideas to try out, some heavily borrowed from work on Nam’68.

This game was a ‘Battle’ scenario in ‘All Out Assault’ intensity (i.e the highest, so heavy fighting, lots of support for both sides), with the US attacking to clear the Germans out from La Dupinerie. Their platoon was a new one, all new recruits, the advantage here being in numbers (so, at full strength with all their gear). The defending Germans were not a full platoon, but more experienced and dug-in under the hedges and with a mixed minefield blocking the road.

Before starting, the US used their preliminary bombardment of 105s on the buildings, but to little good effect, then began to move on to the tabletop along and either side of the lane. 1st squad would hook left through the trees and hedges to try to outflank the position, whilst 3rd squad engaged with suppressing fire up the road, aided by the Sherman, sniper and then the off-table mortars. 2nd squad was the reserve, ready to replace 1st or 3rd squad's job if they got badly hit.

The Germans held their positions and waited, until an MG-34 from the US right opened fire, resulting in return HE fire from the Sherman tank that pinned the MG crew in their foxhole under the hedges, but not before 2 GIs had dropped, hit by the fire. Another was then hit by the German sniper in the building as they moved up the lane. 3 men quickly down.

The US platoon had all deployed and 1st squad was making its way cautious forwards, unmolested. 3rd squad was pinned down and then hit by German artillery as it slammed down into the cornfield and lane, resulting in a few more casualties and more pinning, including the mortar FOO who had scurried forwards from his Jeep (left back in the lane) and was now hiding in the ditch. The US quickly needed their support fire against those hedgerows and buildings. A second MG-34 had opened fire and lane was now a very unhealthy place to be, cross-fire!. The US stretcher bearer team came forward to try and aid, but was also sent cowering into the hedgerow by MG and sniper fire. It was hot on the right.

Now out of supporting IDF, the German platoon HQ dispatched a runner. These can carry a message to company HQ to ask for more fire, it takes an extra D6 turns once the runner leaves the table edge to reach the HQ. He rolls a 6, so a long way to run to ask for more mortar fire. Meanwhile, the Sherman tank had unpinned (from the arty stonk) and was hosing down the hedge ahead with MG fire. On the German table edge, their first reserves arrived, a StuG. It rumbled up to the hedgerow and took aim at the Sherman, which in return failed to spot it… oh-no! (advantages of StuG's low profile!). The Sherman crew were obviously too focussed on blasting the hedges. The StuG fired and and scored solid hit on the Sherman turret. Before the Sherman could react, the StuG had reloaded and fired again, with a second shell hit on the hull this time. We rolled and both shells defeated the armour, so 2 penetrating hits. The first wrecked the Sherman’s main gun and wounded the gunner. The second was catastrophic, ammo detonation. 3 crew managed to bail-out as the fireball ripped through the tank, but the driver the radio-op were trapped inside, and killed.

Meanwhile, overhead a P-47 raced in and strafed the hedges and crossroads with its many machine guns. This resulted in pinning a German squad, but not the StuG.

Despite the air support, the fiery loss of the Sherman was enough for the US attack today. The platoon pulled back, the lane to La Dupinerie was just too hot. The platoon had lost 9 men (not including 2 tank crew), almost all from 3rd squad. The Germans had lost, err… nobody… not 1 casualty. Hmmm??


Well, I really like that the losses seem something closer to realistic, but the Germans, in good cover in defence were very tough, too tough maybe. That needs re-balancing, the defender needs to feel under pressure as well, and here they didn’t. They could just sit tight, blast away with MGs, the sniper and then the StuG and the US advance just stalled. To counter that, the US never got their mortars in the action and were unlucky to lose the Sherman so quickly, in a flurry of good dice rolling by the StuG (it needed 6s to hit and did it twice!). 

La Dupinerie was still very much in German hands… pullback, shell it, and try again tomorrow! 

 

US FORCES                points        MV    Notes
Platoon
Recruit Infantry Platoon        161        19    see Quirks
Bazooka Team            10        3    3 men
Sniper                    5        0    1 man
(Stoic Recuits)

Platoon is: PHQ - 5 men, 3 Rifle squads - 6 men, 3 BAR squads - 5 men, 1 Bazooka team - 2 men, 1 Sniper - 1 man

Platoon Quirks
Flaw: Fatigued, -2 to MV
Advantage: Extra Supplies. All have ‘extra ammo’ for ammo tests. +5 points

Support (5 max)
Stretcher Bearer Team        8        3    2 men, Medic
57mm anti-tank gun+ tow        47        3    6 crew, in Reserve
M4 Sherman                52        4
Mortar FOO + Jeep            19        5    2 men

Off-Table Fire Support (4 max)
105mm Preliminary Bombardment    54        0    4 tubes
Interdiction Artillery Bombardment    20        0    3 dice
On-call 81mm mortar battery        38        0    2 tubes

419 points, 37 MV

 

GERMAN FORCE
Platoon
Hardened Grenadier Platoon        177        29    see Quirks    
(Stoic-Veterans)
Platoon is: PHQ - 4 men, 2 rifle squads - 5 men with 1 Pzfaust, 3 MG-42 teams - 3 men.

Platoon Quirks
Flaw: Under Interdiction Fire, -1 off-table fire support choice
Advantage: Venerable Sergeant. His squad is Fervent +5 points

Support (5 max)
Sniper+Observer                13        4    2 men
Stretcher Bearer Team            8        3    2 men, Medic, in Reserve
StuG III G                    58        3    in Reserve

Off-Table Fire Support (3 max)
Pre-planned 105mm
artillery bombardment            72        0    4 tubes
Pre-planned 81mm
mortar bombardment            15        0    2 tubes
Artillery Interdiction Bombardment    20        0    3 dice

Defences
Small, high density, mixed minefield    20        0    10x10, 4+
Foxholes for 11 men            22        0    3+ cover

410 points, 39 MV

La Dupinerie battlefield, Germans this end, US far end.

German riflemen lurk in the hedges and wait the arrival of the US troops, after the brief 105 shelling had ended.


GI arrive in the field, leading the Sherman and quickly draw machine gun from the hedge ahead. Time for all hell to break loose.

German artillery impacts on the lane, and makes more of a mess of 3rd squad.


The FOO team runs for cover and gets a special counter, Good Cover, so his new ditch is obviously deep. Good position if he could get unpinned and get those mortars firing.


Two teams of 1st squad work their way left, but never got to attack the end of the German position. Too much carnage back on the lane.

German platoon HQ's runner is off, to request more mortar support... and he rolled a 6, so a long run.


StuG sneaks into a firing position as the German MG team is unpinned and opens fire again.


Sherman 'Indian 2-1' brews up... StuG got the drop on him... 


Jabos! A P-47 stafing run isn't enough to break the Germans. They still hold La Dupinerie.




Tuesday, 4 January 2022

ADMIN BOX PERIMETER - Game 2 with BG Pacific

Game 2 of our narrative skirmish campaign in 28mm. The Japanese are attacking in a High Ground scenario, with my Brit’s dug-in, defending either side of a stream and nullah (ravine). My defensive system was simple, infantry sections dug-in in foxholes on either side of the ravine, each supported by either the Bren section or the Vickers MG team (with loaders) for firepower. Out front, 16” ahead of the man line, a PRTP that the Japanese would have to advance through. A battery of 4.5” guns off-table to hit one, a battery of 3” mortars off-table to hit the other, as a curtain of defensive fire in front, using harassing barrages unless the Japanese bunched up near the PRTP. In reserve, a spare rifle section to support an M3 Grant tank, a sniper team, the Tiger scout team and a mobile Bofors gun for AA cover. The problem was that with the Defences, the off-table guns and the PRTPs, all bringing 0 BR, the force’s BR total was mere 23… compared to the Japanese’s at 38.

The Japanese attack came on the left and right, not along the central nullah (it was well covered by Brens and the Vickers on ambush fire anyway), and thus through the PRTPs. They would pay for that as the guns rained down fire and caused repeated pinning and hits, making their attacks slow and uncoordinated. But the guns alone couldn’t stop them. The Japanese also had a PRTP, on the hill top and their off-table 90mm mortars hammered at it, until they ran out of ammo on turn 5 due to a special counter pulled. That left them just their 70mm battalion gun. They also used 2 timed 75mm artillery strikes on turn 1 to soften me up, with some pinning. But the bombardments had done some damage and on the right, left just 3 men in the rifle section to fight off the coming infantry attack.

On the left (Japanese right), the attack was led by a recce tankette, which was quickly KO’d by artillery fire, and the infantry held back rather than move up through the 4.5” shelling, instead waiting their reserves to join them, one in tracked armoured truck!

It had been a cagey first few turns with lots of IDF traded… and low orders rolls. The reserves arrived and moved up through the jungle. With the main pressure on my right, the M3 and following  rifle section went this way, to save the hill top objective, whilst the sniper, Bofors and Tiger scouts lurked behind on the left, a reserve of last resort.  

Trading fire into the dense jungle, my few infantry hung-on and saw-off one suicidal assault team, but the Japanese numbers were mounting. The M3 and infantry support arrived just in time and hammered 75mm HE into the undergrowth and rifle fire adding to the pinning. Japanese LMG fire and then their light mortars got me pinned down and I had to repeatedly unpin, costly in BR counters, but his anti-tank team was creeping up, unseen and now in close assault range of the M3, which went onto ambush fire, but was low on 75m ammo now, and it only has 1 MG! 2 man teams not firing are hard to spot.

On the left, the Japanese attack suddenly got going, when Orders allowed, and rushed up, taking ambush fire, but in a rude surprise, one squad were assault pioneers and had a flamethrower team attached. My ambush fire dropped a couple of his men (dense jungle is all 4+ cover) and the flamethrower let fly, frying my rifle section and forcing 2 more counters to be taken. His pioneers rushed in and tried to finish my Vickers team, but it was cut down, leaving just 1 man pinned (but still a threat for the Japanese). My left had collapsed, and the sniper team and Tiger patrol (just 5 men) tried to hold it. The sniper got his flamethrower (now empty though), but more enemy infantry were coming up and through my front line. My BR total was now at 23…

And then it was all over. His anti-tank team launched themselves in a close assault at the M3, ‘Banzai!’, which critically failed to spot their approach. Charging with the lunge mine the anti-tank grenade assault roll was a 6… a hit, and the M3 went up in flames and smoke (as did the lunge mine guy). That BR counter, the loss of the tank, broke the British. Time to fall-back.

So, after 2 games, it’s a win a piece. I actual caused more BR loss, 28 in all to the Japanese, but their fierce will to fight carried the day. Problem was with defending with too much off-table fire (self-inflicted). Nice to have the guns, but risky. More BR required next time.

The next game, with the Japanese still on the attack, will be their first assault up ‘Artillery Hill’, south of the Admin Box. If they can take it, they’ll gain bonus OPs and PRTPs and guns, etc, as they will have clear views over the box area below. It will be another attack/defence game, and another ‘high ground’ scenario, but this time with 1 big jungle hill (the biggest we can make). No vehicles are allowed, the hill is too steep, so an infantry-only fight.

Hills and jungle either side of a stream, running up the centre of the board.
Bren section, on ambush fire, dug-in, covering the nullah. 

Vickers and loader team dug-in on the edge of the nullah.
First enemy arrive and move up.

With some harassing fire from their little 70mm gun, on the PRTP, very useful in jungle conditions.

Reserves arriving, Bofors on ambush for the JAAF... a cheeky timed air strike is favoured enemy ploy. Oil drums are an objective marker.


Other flank, M3 and its infantry guard help to hold the hill top objective.
Tiger scouts hack their way up to reinforce the front line.
Here they come...

Last man standing, the pioneer commander is all that is left of the rush at the Vickers' position.


Japanese pioneers transport... we allowed 1 of these rare beasts for the campaign, it was blown up by a mortar hit...
Banzai, the lunge mine team gets through and scores a hit... 25th Dragoon lost a tank and crew.