Oct 12, 2020

Serbians versus Austro-Hungarians - Round I


Played a brief game with my 6mm figures yesterday between the Serbians (Top) and the Austro-Hungarians (Bottom).  Really a test-run than an actual game, but I was pretty happy with how it turned out.  Force distribution was two infantry battalions and one (albeit bloated) cavalry squadron per side.  The Serbians fielded more men (2,800), but the Austro-Hungarians (with a force of 2,500) were slightly better prepared for a battle of attrition.


Turn one, the cavalry squadrons move to contact.  (The Serbians had some pretty bad command roles early on).


The Austrian Dragoons charge into the mass of Serbian cavalry.


Turn two, the cavalry pass through each other's ranks! The Serbians make for the Austro-Hungarian (they're really Czech in this engagement) line, and the Dragoons try to outflank the Serbian infantry.  


Turn three, and the Serbians finally make a good command roll.  The 1st-line battalion moves to fire on the dragoons, and the larger second line battalion moves to the aid of the cavalry squadron, the latter receiving heavy fire from the Czechs.


The Dragoons are cut to ribbons by the Serbian rifle fire, and forced to retire!


Turn 4 and the Serbians go all in.  The (remaining) cavalry and the 2nd-line battalion charge headfirst into the Austro-Hungarian left, soon to be followed by the 1st-line battalion.


It's a tough fight, but the Czech infantry hold, taking the remaining cavalry prisoner, and enveloping the shattered Serbian infantry.  For good measure, the Dragoons return to the field to harass the remaining battalion.  Low on morale, the Serbians concede.

Serbian Losses: 1,003 (including 66 prisoners)
Austro-Hungarian Losses: 515











May 10, 2020

World in Flames: Fascist Tide Turns 1 and 2



            With the coronavirus upending just about every facet of everyday life as we know it, I've been marooned home in Maryland with more time on my hands than I know what to do with.  So, I figured with all the extra time, I might as well work on AARCentral.  I've acquired a number of games over the past two years, and I haven't really given much time to them in between college and working, but I figured I'd give World In Flames: the Final Edition a go.  It's been about a month now, but I've managed to work my way through the rules, punch out the counters, and set up a game.  Due to space restrictions, I can only set up two of the 4 major maps, so I settled on the Sep/Oct 1939 - 1945 Fascist Tide scenario as my "trial by fire" game.  Boy was I in for a surprise because holy Moses, it takes a long time to get through each turn! But I suppose this is the bed that I made for myself, so now I must sleep in it.

            Now for a few general notes.  First, I am solo playing this a little every night when I have the chance.  I am slighting favoring the Axis, I think, because I keep asking "what if they'd done this?" but I am simultaneously trying to be unbiased and leave things to chance and the system.  As such, almost every chance I get, I leave things to chance and the die roll.  Does Germany move here or here?; die roll of 1-5 is option 1, 6-10 option 2.  Will France build a naval, land, or air unit?  Okay, it'll build a naval unit.  Will it repair a ship, build from the construction pool, or lay down the hull for a new ship?  Every decision I can make random, I do.  Such is how certain minor countries find themselves at war.  Second, I am VERY new to this game, so I make a bunch of mistakes, especially in the first turn.  None, I think, are game breaking, but where practical I have tried to remedy those mistakes.  Beyond that, I don't think there's anything else too pressing to note.  Now, on to the AAR! 

Sep/Oct 1939

Axis Impulse I

            Germany launches an operation against Poland with a good portion of its land forces.   Progress is hampered by rain across Europe.  Air units to the north soften up Polish ground units near Danzig which crumple to a pincer movement by armor near the border and units from East Prussia.  A central thrust also flings the Polish back, and a major thrust out of Czechoslovakia smashes the units near Krakow.  The only unit to offer resistance is the Modlin Corps (Infantry), which destroys two German Corps: 40th Mechanized and the 62nd Infantry.


    Italy moves its naval forces to interdict Allied trade in the Mediterranean.  1 BB, 5 CA/CLs, and 1 sub move to the Eastern Mediterranean.  The Second Fleet (1 BB and 8 CAs) moves to patrol the Italian Coast.

Allied Impulse I

            Britain and France declare war on Germany, and start dispersing their forces to make their stand in France.  Only major realignment is that English bombers arrive in France and the French begin moving their navy into the Mediterranean.  

Axis Impulse II

            The Germans in Poland smash through the northern defenses, booting the HQ and aircraft in Warsaw, occupying the capital.  To the south, the last of von Bock’s mixed force ousts the cavalry in the south.  The Modlin and Poznan Corps, already out of supply, threaten to be surrounded. 


            A German naval bomber moves to the North sea to dispose of Allied submarines, but an American-built Buffalo intercepts the unsuspecting bomber and downs it.
            The Germans move naval forces into the Baltic to begin transporting Scandinavian resources, and AA guns are moved to protect the vital port of Kiel.
            Italy declares war on France and the UK.   The Alpine Corps is relocated to the French border, but no hostilities ensue.  The Italian regulars (10th Infantry) in Ethiopia make for the coast in Eritrea.
            Italian naval transports arrive in Tripoli to embark Balbao’s HQ, and an AT division.  The Italian fleet off Egypt tries to engage the Allied subs in the E. Mediterranean, but fails to locate them.

Allied Impulse II

            The UK moves two task forces into the Atlantic trickling transports on the way to transfer Venezuela’s oil.
            Air command launches a bombing run on Düsseldorf with 2 bombers escorted by FTR.  The Germans manage two fighters in response.  In the first round of combat, a German BF110 downs the Allied fighter, but is forced to return to base.  The HE-51, opposing the two bombers, aborts the first, a Hampden, but is also forced to the ground.  The American-made A-22 clears through.  No damage.
            The French move the bulk of their naval forces into the Mediterranean in anticipation of transporting oil from Iraq.  The Italians in the Western Med. Try to intercept both French fleets (1 stacked for combat, the other protecting the transports), but fail both times.  To their credit, the French try to initiate combat but fail too.  For now, 22 French and Italian ships wander aimlessly through the Mediterranean, looking for a fight.
            The Soviets for once decide to act, and per their agreement in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, invade East Poland.  No Allied units were East of the partition line, so none are interned (and later available to the Commonwealth).

Axis Impulse III

            German naval forces in the Baltic begin to relocate to Kiel.  The battleship Scharnhorst and 4 heavy cruisers dock in Kiel, held by an infantry corps and heavy AA.  The dreadnought-era battleships relocate to Danzig.  One sub heads to the Baltic, from its base in Kiel, and the other heads to the Atlantic.  The latter sub initiates combat in the Bay of Biscay were 10 unescorted CW CPs are sitting, but due to the consistent rain, fails to locate the convoy.
            In retaliation for the raid on Düsseldorf, the Germans launch a strategic bombing raid on Metz.  1 Do17z and an escorting Messerschmitt fly to the target hex.  They are intercepted by a French MS 406.  In the first round of combat, the Dornier is cleared through to the target and the MS 406 is aborted by the German FTR.  The Dornier, with halved strategic factors due to rain, still manages to score a hit on the factories in Metz, eliminating 1 production point for the turn.
            The Italians move their Second Fleet from the Italian coast to the Eastern Mediterranean.  Upon entering the sea area, the French Fleet (Deuxième) intercepts the Italians.  The Italians opt to fight it out, and they are joined by the heavy cruiser Garibaldi.  


    1st Round of Combat: lacking any aircraft, the Italians are descended on by 1 French naval bomber and two CVP dive bombers from the French CV Joffre.  Targeting the Garibaldi, the three bombers clear through the AA combat at the cost of 1 air-to-sea factor.  In a single strike, the Garibaldi suffers two successive hits and sinks to the bottom.  No further contact is met, leading to the first conclusive victory for the war at sea!  Cheers ring loudly from the Joffre.
            Simultaneously, the Italian transports from Tripoli slip past the French, debarking their cargo at Tobruk.
            Over France, the Italians launch an air attack on Lyon with a Sparviero Bomber.  They are met by American-built Hawks over the city.  In the ensuing combat, both the Italian bomber and the French FTR are sent to the ground.  This leaves southern France without any interceptors, but at the cost of Italy’s only long-ranged bomber.
            Overall a productive impulse for the Germans, but less than satisfactory for the Italians.

Allied Impulse III

            The French and British reconsolidate their fleets in the Mediterranean, but no combat ensues.  With the move of France’s troop transports and its last cruiser to shuttle troops from North Africa, all of its capital ships are now deployed to the Mediterranean.  
            The French relocate their only bomber north, from the Italian border, near Paris, leaving south France completely without air support. 
            Two British cruisers from the North Sea, the Devonshire and Effingham, relocate to the Bay of Biscay to ward off the German sub there.  Not only do they find the German sub, they surprise it entirely and secure two hits in the first round of naval combat, sinking the unit outright!  Another early victory for the Allies at sea.  In the Med., Malta’s port empties entirely, and the three cruisers there link up with the British ships off Sardinia: the BBs Hood and Warspite and the cruisers Ajax and Southampton.
            To make up for the deficit in aircraft in France, the British fly over 2 FTRs and 1 bomber.

Axis Impulse IV/V/VI

            The Italians, in a reversal of their previous impulses, begin to move their naval forces out of the Eastern Mediterranean.  The Second Fleet relocates back to the Italian coast.
            In the Val D’Aosta – in the north-west corner of Italy – the Italians launch a well-coordinated strike on the 13th French Infantry Corps.  In the midst of heavy rain, 1 Ba65 and 1 Saetta fighter bomber strike the French Corps, flipping it.  
            Then, with the support of a division of heavy artillery, the Celere Motorized Corps destroys the French unit where it stands, opening the way north to Lyon and Vichy.  The Libia Mechanized Corps is then transported north by Rail to Turin to exploit the breakthrough.  


            In Libya, Italian territorials move from Benghazi towards Tobruk, to link up with the units there under Balbao.


Allied Impulse IV/V/VI

            In response to the disaster, the French converged on the SE quadrant of the country.  The 18th Cavalry Corps from Marseilles moved north, a division of AA moved to garrison the southern end of the border, deterring movement by the Alpine Corps, Georges’s HQ moved SE from Paris, and the 24th Motorized Corps moved close to Lyon. 
            After a further impulse, British aircraft close in on SE France, and the above French units bridge the gap created by the loss of the French 13th Infantry.

End of Turn

            US gains 1 entry chit: +2
            War in Italy: + 1/-5
            Germany deploys war on Poland: +3
            In the return to base segment, the Italian BB Giulio Cesare, 5 cruisers, and 1 sub slip out of the Eastern Mediterranean and rebase in Italy.

Build Points and left over Resources

            Germany: 20 BP (x.75)
            USSR: 25 BP (x.25) REMAINING BUILD POINTS: 1.25
            CW: 14 BP (x.5)
            France: 7 BP (x.75) REMAINING BUILD POINTS: .25
            US: 40 BP (x.25)
            Italy: 9 BP (x.5) REMAINING BUILD POINTS: 1.5

Gearing Limits

            Germany: 2 Air, 4 Land, 1 Naval
            USSR: 1 Land
            CW: 1 Air, 1 Land, 3 Naval
            France: 1 Land, 1 Naval
            US: 1 Land
            Italy: 1 Air, 2 Land, 1 Naval

Construction Phase

            The Germans begin production of more Ju-52 transport planes, lay down the BB Frederick the Great – a formidable ship! – and begin training of the 23rd (Motorized) and 47th (Armored) Corps.
            The Russians begin training the 3rd Mechanized Army.
            The Commonwealth lays down the hull of the BB Lion – also a formidable ship! – and training of the 3rd Cavalry Division.
            The Italians begin training the Cavalry Corps.
            The French begin training the 2nd Motorized Division and they lay down the hull of the age-old BB Paris.
            The Americans begin training the 26th Corps (Mechanized).

Diplomacy, Peace, etc.

            Poland is for the time conquered.  The Polish destroyer flotilla is spiked and scuttled to keep it from the Germans, and all of her remaining forces surrender.

Nov/Dec 1939

Axis Impulse I

            The Swedish, now deployed and under German direction, rebase the 6th Swedish Corps (Garrison) to Kiel, freeing up the 45th Corps (Infantry) to move towards the border with the Netherlands.
            With Rundstendt’s and von Bock’s forces freed up in Poland, all German reserves begin moving to the Western border.  Heavy Artillery from Nuremburg moves towards the Maginot Line.  The 11th Corps (Motorized), at Katowice, moves by rail to Düsseldorf.
            All available aircraft rebase west to protect the Ruhr.  This includes all German aircraft in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and East Prussia.  Transports from Czechoslovakia fly to the location of the 2nd Corps (Mountain) in the Carpathian Mountains.
            In the Adriatic Sea, the Italian midget subs docked at Tirana sortie and strike the British fleet docked at Malta before they can raise their anchors.  In the attack, the subs approach unnoticed and effect a heavy price.  The cruiser Ajax is heavily damaged, removed to the repair pool, and the BB Warspite and the cruiser Southampton are rendered hors-de-combat ­for the turn!
            From the Val D’Aosta, the Libia Mechanized Corps advances into France to block the advance of the French forces coming to bolster the Franco-Italian border.  The Roma Motorized Corps moves north along the Tuscan coast, and Graziani’s HQ is transported via railway to Turin to provide support for the slowly developing offensive.

Allied Impulse I

            (Belgium and the Netherlands have their forces deployed, but are neither at war yet nor aligned with any major power.)
            The French relocate the 17th Corps (Infantry) from Algiers to Marseilles. 
            In the French Alps, the Allies launch a combined air strike on  the Italian forces.  2 British bombers (1 Mk. I Blenheim and 1 Hampton) and 1 French fighter (MS 406) are engaged by a CR 42 Falco and a Macchi C 200 Saetta.  In the first round of combat, the MS 406 clears through one of the bombers and sends the CR 42 down in flames (pilot surviving).  Then in the second round, the Saetta aborts the MS 406, but is itself forced to the ground early, and the second bomber is cleared to the target hex.  Despite inclement weather, the British bombers strike the Italian Mechanized Corps Libia, and force it to flip!
            An opportunistic land offensive follows, and with success!  The 18th (Cavalry) and 24th (Motorized) Corps, supported by Georges’s HQ, launch an attack which, despite the rain and terrain, forces the Libia Mechanized Corps to retreat.  Streaming SE into Turin, the Corps continues east and halts to reorganize outside of Milan.  The French suffer no permanent casualties, and the 18th moves into the abandoned Italian positions, closing the gap first opened by the Celere Motorized Corps.


Axis Impulse II

            With a rare moment of immaculately fine weather, the Germans – and Swedish plus Italians – declare war on the Netherlands and launch a prompt, but limited offensive.
            Without the need for fighter escort, 2 HS-123 Bombers accompanied by 1 Ju-87 pummel the 1st Dutch Corps and force it to flip.


            The ground strike is followed by the rapid advance of 2 Infantry Corps (the 45th and 63rd) in the north and 2 Motorized Corps (the 11th and 38th) to the south.  Von Leeb’s HQ moves to the border to lend logistical support. 
            In a blitzkrieg strike, the infantry and motorized forces annihilate the Dutch and achieve a breakthrough without loss to their own forces.  The 38th and 45th Corps occupy the ground held by the Dutch, and prepare to move on Amsterdam and Rotterdam.  


            The Italian Second Fleet in the Adriatic detaches its slowest cruiser, the San Giorgio, is joined by two others on patrol, and enters the Eastern Mediterranean unnoticed by the French fleet there.  The two transports from Tobruk, fully loaded with Italian regulars, slip past the French, link up with the Second Fleet, and return to Italian waters, docking in Rome.

Allied Impulse II

            In the diplomacy phase, the Netherlands is taken over by the Commonwealth player, and Russia decides to implement border rectification measures as it advances into Poland.  Already claiming Poland east of Brest-Litovsk without the price of a single battle, and having occupied the Baltic States (with aircraft stationed in Lithuania), the Russians demand Bessarabia from the Rumanians.  (The option was between Finland to the north, thinly defended by garrison units, and Rumania to the south where major formations were already in motion; the Russians bank on the latter).  Yet in a sudden twist of defiance, the Rumanians deny the claim, and deploy their forces for immediate combat.  


            With the support of the Royal Navy, the government in Amsterdam and the Dutch Navy at Rotterdam, with the Germans at their doorstep and the 1st Corps shattered and overrun, are shuttled safely to the UK.  In the Mediterranean, the undamaged ships at Malta sortie into the East Mediterranean.
            The Rumanians deploy well enough to discourage an immediate Russian advance, but their air-forces are still surprised, and Russian bombers (an IL-4 and an I-153) immobilize the 2nd Rumanian Corps (Infantry).
            The Russians move their southern forces to the Rumanian border: the 40th Army (Garrison) is joined by a division of light guns, the 2nd Corps (Cavalry), and the 8th Army (Infantry) detrains from Lvov.  In Odessa, thinly defended against Rumanian cavalry, the 3rd Infantry Division is joined by a division of heavy guns to deter any assault. 

Axis Impulse III

            A piss-poor week to conduct operations.  After the brief hiatus from clouds and rain, snow blankets all of Europe and the weather brings rain to the Mediterranean and South Temperate region of the world.  Needless to say, fine weather for fighting in Romania …
            With Rumania and Russia in the middle of a war, and seemingly without any possibility of it ending soon as snow settles on the ground, the Germans and Hungarians reach a diplomatic agreement, aligning the latter to the former.  Hungary is thus the newest member to join the Axis powers, and its army deploys to its border.
            With the Netherlands unoccupied, the German forces their complete its capture, moving into Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and the border with Belgium.  In Poland, German armor moves to the border with Russia despite the heavy snow.

Allied Impulse III

            Little activity in the rest of Europe as the snow prohibits most reasonable combat, but the Russians at least move to press the Rumanian flank.  The 8th and 40th Armies, supported by medium guns and the 3rd Infantry division – from Odessa – move to press the 1st Rumanian Corps.  The 2nd Corps (Cavalry) holds its position, protecting the Russian flank.

Axis Impulse IV

            The weather worsens, halting all possible operations in Europe.  A Blizzard grips the Artic (including part of Rumania), Snow blankets the rest of Europe, including the Mediterranean, and a mix of rain and storms hit south of the equator.
            With a heavy blizzard north of the border with Russia, the Rumanians launch a ground strike on the heavy guns at Odessa without fear of interception.  Two IAR-37 bombers strike the heavy guns in the middle of a heavy snow, and despite the inclement weather, manage to immobilize them for the turn.
            The Germans continue moving their forces East, their Western border being rather secure. 

Allied Impulse IV

            The British and the French spend this impulse transporting badly needed reserves to France.  The British ship over the 8th Corps (Mechanized) with a division of heavy guns to Hauts-de-France, and the French transport the Morocco Mountain Corps to Marseilles. 
            With the Russians hampered by a blizzard, the armies opposing the Rumanians neglect to launch an attack, but the medium artillery supporting the 40th Army (Garrison) launches a preliminary bombardment to soften up the 1st Rumanian Corps and the Rumanian Cavalry Corps.
            To support the offensive in Rumania, Timoshenko’s HQ transfers from the Brest-Litovsk region to the border between Rumania and Russia.

Axis Impulse V

            The blizzard and snow in Europe continues for another week, but the snow in the Mediterranean warms and intensifies, leading to almost consistent storms.
            The Germans, now in complete control of the Netherlands, resume their limited war on the British and French in France.  With fighter protection too far back, 2 German bombers (Do-17s and Ju-88s) strike the factory at Metz and inflict the loss of 1 production point.
            The Italians reshuffle some naval forces and the Romanians pass, preferring to hold the line in the midst of heavy snow.

Allied Impulse V

            Rather uneventful.  The French pass and the British and the Russians reshuffle some of their forces.

Axis Impulse VI

            The weather turns horrid.  Blizzards rage from the artic all through the Mediterranean.  


            Due to the weather, the Germans refuse to launch any attacks, but continue moving major reinforcements east.  This includes the Hungarians who join Rundstedt’s Army Group South.  (von Bock commands Army Group North).

Allied Impulse VI

            With British reinforcements in France, the British and the French, led by Billotte, prepare a major offensive into south-west Germany.


            With continually poor weather, the Russians under Timoshenko are still prohibited from launching their offensive.

End of the Turn Segment

            The Germans begin justifying war against the USSR despite their neutrality pact.
            US gains 1 entry chit: +1
            US Entry Option 4: The French CV Béarn is interned by the Americans, and is added to their construction pool: +1 to the US Tension Pool.s
            USSR declares war on Rumania: -1
            (IT WAS AT THIS POINT, that I realized no units could be within 3 hexes of the Brest-Litovsk line, so I moved everyone back 3 spaces).

Build Points and left over Resources

            Germany: 19 BP
            USSR: 9 BP REMAINING BUILD POINTS: 1
            CW: 6 BP
            France: 3.25 BP REMAINING BUILD POINTS: 1.25
            US: 10 BP
            Italy: 4 BP

Gearing Limits (+1)

            Germany: 3 Air, 7 Land, 3 Naval
            USSR: 1 Air, 2 Land, 1 Naval
            CW: 1 Air, 2 Land, 4 Naval
            France: 2 Land, 1 Naval
            US: 2 Land, 1 Naval
            Italy: 1 Air, 3 Land, 2 Naval

Construction Phase

            The Germans begin producing more Do-17s, lay down the Prinz Eugen, the cruiser Schlesien (a dreadnought-era design), and begin training a division of Panzer-Jaeger Is, the Munich Corps (MIL), and the 48th Corps (Armored).
            The Russians begin producing 45mm AT guns, SB-2RK bombers, and they lay down naval transport ships.
            The British begin training the 7th Indian Corps (Garrison) and they start to outfit the CV Formidable.
            The French begin training the Metz Corps (MIL).
            The US lays down a new unit of submarines and they start training the 29th Corps (Mountain) and the 32nd Corps (Motorized).
            The Italians begin training the Napoli Corps (MIL) and lay down naval transport ships.

Peace Phase

            With the fighting stalled in Rumania, the Germans force a truce between the Russians and the Rumanians.  In exchange for diplomatic leniency, the Rumanians relinquish control of Bessarabia. 
            Peace is made! Rumania returns to a state of neutrality at the cost of Bessarabia.  Is this a worthwhile cost for Stalin? Only time will tell …