Monday 28 December 2020

What a Tanker, Italy

 Another holiday lockdown game with my sons. This time What a Tanker. My sons' Shermans faced off against my Panther. A nice opportunity to try out my new gaming mat from Geek Villain and some mediterranean scenery I made/purchased. 

The scenario roll resulted in scenario 3: angles. Since the table was 6x3 feet, this put the tanks quite close to each other right from the start. 

Somewhere in Italy 2 Shermans suddenly see a Panther emerging from (off table) woods. A German Wespe is burning on the side of the road, providing a screen of thick smoke.






Son #1 opened fire on my Panther, while son #2 decided to move out of my line of fire and circle around my left flank.
I moved backwards to get the smoke from the Wespe between my Panther and the Sherman of son #1.
Once behind the smoke a duel with son #2 ensued, causing temporary damage on both sides and permanent damage to the running gear of the Sherman.


I put the burning Wespe between me and son #1.


Son #1 then moved to get behind me while son #2 and I were still exchanging fire.


Making use of the Panther's "Fast" attribute, it raced between the two Shermans, escaping the pincer.


And after an 180 turn, firing at son #2's Sherman resumed.



His successive hits on my Panther permanently damaged it's optics and forced it to move back several times (hits equal saves). I started to worry about being knocked off table!

Meanwhile son #1 moved his Sherman into a firing position behind the stone wall.


And delivered the killing shot.


Four hits, no saves....



Wednesday 23 December 2020

Whiteout first game and review of sorts

 A while ago I bought Whiteout - The Arctic Survival Miniatures game (solo/cooperative play) by Sally4th.




I built some extra terrain and acquired a few miniatures to fill the gaps in my collection. The game uses cards to randomise encountered terrain, events and equipment. These can be downloaded form the Sally4th website. The book also explains how to use regular playing cards instead of the downloadable cards. I thought it would be fun to design my own cards (via artscow.com). Especially after reading through the rulebook, when I got the idea to play the game in alternative settings like a Jungle or a Desert.

The game is about the exploits of a small party on a mission in the arctic. Due to whiteout conditions they can only see their immediate surroundings (12" x 12" square they are in) and have to explore adjacent squares. Once a character reaches the edge of a square, a terrain card is turned and the type of adjacent terrain is revealed. An encounter card is placed on the square which is revealed when the character enters the revealed terrain. The book describes the use of pre-made terrain tiles. I opted for separate terrain elements. Tiles would take up a lot of space I don't have (Although there is no such thing as too much terrain, there is such a thing as limited storage space). Also, separate terrain items provide more flexibility and opportunities for use in other games.

Lockdown and holidays provided the perfect opportunity for my 2 sons and I to play the game. The book describes how to build your own characters, but for ease of play we opted for the pre-defined soldier characters and added a pre-defined explorer character. Our mission (from the rulebook): to locate the arctic base, where scientists were involved in some classified government business, find out what happened to them after radio contact was lost and evacuate them to an airfield for extraction.

Starting on a square of flat ice in one corner of the table

Supplies were selected from the equipment card deck and carried on man drawn sledges (rules impose  limits to the amount you can carry). 

Son #1 moved to one edge of the square together with the explorer. Son #2 and I moved to the other edge (movement is in order of sanity. Stressed characters move later than relaxed ones).

Movement to one side turned out to be blocked by an imposing ice pressure ridge. Son #1 moved around it and discovered an icebound ship!

Snow effect by: <a href="https://www.freepnglogos.com/images/snow-32888.html">snow transparent snowfall png effect decorative elements png from freepnglogos.com</a>

We decided not to explore the ship but move on ahead to the next square since our explorer found out that movement elsewhere was blocked by a crevasse field (I still have to come up with terrain for that. I'm thinking transparent blue plastic cut in jagged shapes). It is possible to traverse both the crevasse field and the ice pressure ridge, but at risk of losing sanity and/or endurance.

Son #2 pressed on and discovered the arctic base. Unfortunately a pack of very large wolves were prowling between the buildings. 


Wolves can be ignored but then have a negative effect later in the game, so he "chased them away" with a salvo from his assault rifle.

Before trying to enter the main building we moved to the edges to explore the adjacent squares and found a snowcat and an area of thin ice. Back at the base door, it turned out to be locked.


We called the explorer and asked him to pick the lock, using his higher thinking skill. Most actions in the game are resolved by rolling a number of fortune dice against a number of fate dice. Only 5's and 6's count. More fortune than fate is success. Skill status determines the number of fortune dice. Of course skill status goes down when things go awry.

After an unsuccessfull attempt to pick the lock, my son and I tried to bust the door open with our higher work skill. But the door proved sturdy enough to withstand the forces unleashed upon it.


Finally the explorer succeeded in picking the lock and entered the hallway. Inside structures you have to roll 2 dice on the Close Encounter table: the explorer found some supplies. Son #2 now made his way to the messroom. There he found the scientists tied up and guarded by a Bad Guy sentry. Instead of trying to overwhelm the sentry and risk raising the alarm, son #2 decided to sneak towards the scientists and cut them loose. This plan worked (we figured the sentry must have been listening to very loud music on his headphones with his back turned to the scientists, since he didn't hear the assault rifle fire outside and the attempts to break down the door).

While we escorted the scientists outside, son #1 discovered a hill to be used as a vantage point.


On top of the hill son #1 encountered the Overnight Camp card. This triggers a "bookkeeping" moment where endurance and sanity of all characters is gained or lost depending on events that occurred and rations consumed. Having no shelter is also a bad thing. Since our party only brought one man tents, the scientists had to hide in the building they just escaped from....

The night passed and son #1 again climbed the hill only to find a pack of big wolves at the top. 


After dealing with them (having wolves in the area when camping has a negative effect), he could see the surrounding terrain and revealed another ice pressure ridge, an ice field and an isolated hut. Meanwhile the scientists helped start the snowcat and the party moved to the ice field. Son #2 moved towards the isolated hut and encountered another Overnight Camp card.

Breaking camp in the morning

After encountering a Para Drop with extra supplies we moved towards the unrevealed squares, attempting to find the airfield. But first we found another ice pressure ridge with an angry polar bear blocking our path. 


Using his rifle as a club the explorer managed to overcome the polar bear.

We now walked to the next square and found: the airfield! Quickly moving to the centre, son #1 found himself surrounded by a patrol of Bad Guys, led by a boss with a SMG. Son #2 and I rushed to his aid.


The explorer also brought his rifle to bear. Son #2 took out 2 Bad Guys with hand grenades and we succeeded in wiping out the patrol before son #1 succumbed to the hail of fire from the Bad Guys.


We used our radio to call in the extraction helicopter. Everone boarded the helicopter and flew towards safety.




Mission accomplished!

My kids and I really enjoyed the game. Son #2 has already asked when we can play again 😀. The game mechanics to put obstacles and opposition to overcome in your way is well balanced: challenging, but not extremely difficult in our game at least. I also like the randomness of terrain, encounters and equipment provided by the cards. You need only a few miniatures, but a sizeable amount of terrain is required. Arctic terrain can be quite simple to make with some styrofoam and papercraft buildings. Only items like the icebound ship, submarine conning tower, crashed airplane and igloo require more effort and skill. Although I made a passable igloo by covering plastic half dome packaging with sand and spraying it with white paint.

In game terms you need the structures as shelter for overnight camping and as a source of supplies and opportunity for close encounters.

Gameplay is more cinematic than (historically) accurate. The designer did however include real world effects like this sobering rule: killing humans negatively effects a character's state of mind. 

Recommended!


Update 29-07-2022: It seems that Whiteout is no langer available on the Sally4th website.



 

Ski troops

 I wanted to expand my Warlord Finnish ski troops with some other miniatures and came across the arctic skiers from Tiger miniatures.

Both are supposed to be 28mm.

However...

Left: Warlord.  Right: Tiger miniatures


Now the Tiger sculpts are quite large (and sometimes have a very thick base, increasing their size even more), but the Warlord ski troops are more 25mm than 28mm. I've noticed the same thing with some of their other miniatures. The 88mm FLAK crew is noticable smaller than the plastic Warlord German grenadiers for instance.


As a fan of TLAR, I'm not really bothered by the difference. But there are not a lot of different ski troops available to my knowledge. So if you are scale sensitive and looking for ski troops, you my want to take this into account.

Monday 21 December 2020

Ambush at the asteroid field

 A while ago I bought the X-wing CR90 Corvette Big Ship. Today it made its first appearance in a game. I played the rebels with a no frills CR90, a red squadron X-wing and Biggs Darklighter (remember that name!) in his X-wing.

My son played the Empire squadron consisting of:

  • Tie Fighter - Academy pilot
  • Tie Fighter - Obsidian squadron pilot (2x)
  • Tie Fighter - Black squadron pilot
  • Tie Fighter - Night Beast
  • Tie Bomber - Gamma squadron pilot (+ proton torpedoes)
  • Tie Bomber - Scimitar squadron pilot (+ proton torpedoes)
  • And... Darth Vader himself in his TIE Advanced.


The Corvette with its X-wing escort was just clearing the asteroid field when its sensors picked up a formation of Imperial fighters and bombers.

Battlestations!



The X-wings rushed forward to engage the enemy while the Imperials where attempting to envelop the corvette.

Darth Vader and a Tie Bomber swept around the Red squadron X-wing and attacked the port side of the Corvette. Despite taking damage, the Corvette blasted Darth Vaders Tie Advanced. A critical hit damaged Vaders weapon systems, destroying his fighter when he pressed the fire button during his next attack!

Explosion engulfs Vaders fighter



Vader limps away from the action to fight another day

Successive blows to the Corvette crippled the front side.


Aided by the crippled Corvette, Biggs succeded in destroying the second best pilot in the Imperial squadron: strike one Night Beast.



One TIE Bomber found out a crippled Corvette can still be lethal when you crash into it. Another imperial clipped a TIE Fighter which destroyed it (due to a previous critical hit). The rebels lost the red squadron pilot, but Biggs managed to evade or shake off all hits. The imperials now focused all their efforts to bring down Biggs!


Keeping his cool, Biggs destroyed the remaining TIE Bomber at point blank range, flying through the resulting explosion in true Hollywood fashion.


With only the Imperial academy pilot unscathed and Biggs still going strong without his shields and only 1 damage point, the Imperials were low on fuel and had to break off the engagement.


 
The Force is strong in this one!



Sunday 22 November 2020

Arrival at Kotelnikovo

The second scenario of the Chain of Command Winter Storm campaign requires a lot of wooden buildings representing the town of Kotelnikovo. At first I thought this would be a problem because my wooden building collection is limited, but then I noticed that while the scenario text states that the scenario should be played on a 4x4 table, the accompanying map shows a rectangular table. So by reducing the map to a square, leaving out some buildings, adding a few fences and assembling some extra papercraft buildings the result was a reasonably good match to the scenario map. I also put snow on the roofs of the buildings cut from wallpaper to match the snow covered ground.





On to the game:

After narrowingly surving the partisan attack on the convoy in the first scenario, Gummi Ente and his fellow truckers pull into the Kotelnikovo rest halt area while Soviet dismounted cavalry is infiltrating the town.

Favourable command dice rolls allow the Germans and Soviets to deploy most of their force and move them forward to occupy the buildings.




But then the Soviet MMG on overwatch fires at a squad of Germans moving towards the main rest halt area building. The German squad leader is wounded!


Both sides take up positions in the buildings, exchanging fire. A German squad surprises a Soviet squad between two buildings, killing the Soviet squad leader.


My buildings don't have lift off roofs so men inside are positioned in front of the windows/doors they are firing from.

In the ensuing static fire fight more leaders are wounded, bringing down force morale on both sides. The Soviet force morale however descreased more rapidly than the Germans'.

German platoon leader wounded

Soviet platoon leader and squad leader wounded

The hail of fire from the two MG34 per German squad is too much for the Soviets. More Soviet squads are pinned.


Concentrated Soviet fire on their objective (the main rest halt area building) finally overwhelms the German defenders. The German squad breaks and retreats from the building.

Increasing amount of shock inflicted on the Germans

Squad breaks and falls back towards the trucks

The Soviets weren't able to take advantage of the German squad vacating the building because their force moral got reduced to zero when another German squad wiped out the Soviet squad in one of the buildings.


Although the Soviets have two senior leaders in this scenario, we found it is a tough game for them because of the sheer volume of firepower of the 8 German MG34's (64 fire dice) vs 4 drum fed LMG's and 1 MMG (34 fire dice) of the Soviets.

 Of course the number of dice rolled is no guarantee that you hit something.

The possibly worst sniper of the Soviet Union did not manage to hit anything in the four shots he fired during the game.

Vladimir Boggerov, worst sniper of the Soviet Union.