Sunday 12 November 2023

Tanks for the Memory


Available from the Wargames Vault (not sure about printed versions in the UK) and look like a ton of fun!

Way back in the days of my youth, when Airfix ruled the world and liquid poly, enamel paint and banana oil were ‘bang on trend’ I dabbled, along with a good many others gamers ‘of a certain vintage’ in WW2 games that inevitably featured tanks. Usually a lot of them. I can recall many exciting games fought using unpainted Airfix polythene Pattons and Centurions - doubling as whatever we needed them to represent, in true Hollywood style - and Charles Grant’s Battle: Practical Wargames as the rules of choice. The polythene 25pdr and Quad tractor served as whatever anti tank gun was needed and the sole SPG Airfix produced usually served as the venerable Stug in all its various guises. Of course as experience and disposable income grew then kits became obligatory - I can remember being properly thrilled when Matchbox launched their range and had great fun building Chaffees and Jagdpanthers - an unlikely combination for sure!

The games I played back then were fun and probably more hysterical than historical but nevertheless were an important part of my wargaming career, so to speak.

Fast forward to today and purely by chance I now have the wherewithal to be able to tap into the armoured carnage of yesteryear on a trial basis but with a veneer of respectability. 

Dan Mersey needs no introduction from me - his Rampant series is well known and extremely popular - and so when I discovered that he had written a couple of set of rules (actually one set but available for two theatres) specialising in armoured warfare my only question was ‘where do I sign?’

Armoured Storm is designed for battles with 15 to 30 tanks a side with infantry, artillery and aircraft etc very much in the supporting cast. At first glance it looks cheerfully gamey and so will doubtless offend the purist but hey ho - this is designed to be a tank game pure and simple.

It looks a blast and the scale is very much at the commander of an armoured formation rather than individual vehicles. Tanks have varying abilities and the game centres on using these to their best advantage - it would not be possible to do everything with everything at once so careful planning is needed. This captures the flavour of WW2 tank combat nicely - move then fire, fire then move, manoeuvre to cover etc - so the game becomes a real tactical challenge. I have more than enough materials at home to give these a spin but curiously enough the one theatre I am lacking anything for is the Western Desert. At least I was, until now…. 


Oh Yes Indeedy! Gotta a love a tank or two!

I freely admit to be a ‘desert loving Englishman’ and so the prospect of pitting Valentines, Matilda’s, Crusaders and others against an assortment of German and Italian armour has a real appeal. To me it is armoured warfare in its purest form - no inconvenient cities or industrial sites to hamper movement - just sand, slopes, wadis and sundry other natural phenomena. The two volumes you see above look at the war in the desert from the perspective of armoured warfare and how this evolved over the course of the campaign - both from the tactical and technological standpoint.

I shall look out for a copy Tank Battles in Miniature: The Western Desert and also Mr Mersey has a title on the period which, if his book on the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 is anything to go by, will be a helpful volume for sure.

One of the best accounts of the desert war in tanks  is called Brazen Chariots and it is also on my to get and read list.

22 comments:

Neil Patterson said...

Brazen Chariots is a wonderful book.
Neil

Archduke Piccolo said...

The problem with WW2 is that it is so easy to fall down the rabbit hole of so many AFV types. Other ambitions are equally beguiling. My German army comprises something like 80 AFVs - 6 tank types, 6 tank hunting assault gun types, and 3 types of SP artillery. Yet in this town I know of at least two other collections whose size beats mine into a cocked hat.

The 'ambition' side - to build a 1944 Panzer Division for Command Decision - led to my having 16 Panthers and 20-odd PzIVs. Maybe they will all take the field on the back lawn some day. It is unlikely that I will ever again enjoy an occasion like that of 20 years ago in which club members played a huge game on a boxing ring platform that had been used to entertain the crowd the night before.

One hundred Soviet tanks saw action on that field - just thirteen of them mine, my entire Soviet inventory at the time. We faced 70 German tanks - NONE of them mine. We used the 'Panzer Marsch!' rule set.

We Soviets won a signal victory. On my flank I commanded 29 tanks (T34s and KVs) against 16 Panthers and suchlike (plus infantry and such, but this was primarily a tank battle). At the end of the day I had sixteen tanks remaining; the enemy in front of me had three... One of the most fun non-solo wargames I ever had.

Cheers,
Ion

Paul O'G said...

Brazen Chariots is a must read and my copy has been read about a dozen times

See you tonight mate !!!

Martin Rapier said...

Ah, the call of the desert. Along with Brazen Chariots, one of my favourite desert books is "Tobruk" by Lord Carver. As clear an account of both Operation Crusader and the Battle of Gazala as you are likely to find, and peppered with memorable anecdotes.

I'm on a bit of a 15mm Desert project myself, and it is certainly possible to get a bit carried away with the armour. To date, my Germans, Italians and British have, ahem, 30 tanks and SPGs between them, excluding armoured cars, carriers etc and there are apparently many more in the painting pile.

But I like painting tanks, like Ion, I have complete battalions of Pz IVs and Panthers for Command Decision, and I think the largest number of Panthers I've ever fielded was six! I did get all the Pz IVs out when I did Periers Ridge though.

Steve-the-Wargamer said...

Excellent list - would also very much recommend "Iron Hulls, Iron Hearts" about the Italian armoured divisions in the desert.. very good.. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Iron-Hulls-Hearts-Mussolinis-Divisions/dp/1861268394

Steve J. said...

I've not heard of these rules by Dan Mersey, but they do sound interesting. Those two books look good as well and I have some other books by the same author, all of which are excellent. Something to add to the list methinks!

Rob Young said...

Must admit I used to like converting things back in the 60s - pretty much had to convert any tank or vehicle that was covered by an Airfix Magazine article. Some were more successful than others :(

Aly Morrison said...

Armoured Storm certainly looks interesting….

I am definitely with you on the attraction of the desert war.

All the best. Aly

David Crook said...

Hi Neil,

I have just scored a copy and this will be my reading material for the next couple of days! Along with yourself it has been very highly recommended by others. Looking forward to it!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hi Ion,

I remember fighting a ‘Cold War turned hot’ micro armour game that took a weekend to set up and featured best part of Soviet Tank Corps against NATO. It was track to track T72s, T64s and BMPs. I had a US Armoured Cavalry unit with a full complement of attack helicopters. It was like playing Space Invaders - wholesale carnage with destroyed armour the entire length of the table.

Great fun, especially when the NATO armour started rolling.

It is really easy to get sucked in to tank variants as you rightly say but I shall try to avoid this if I can (he says through a pinched smile….).

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hi Paul,

Any WW2 book that opens talking about a cricket match will always get my vote! Looking forward to reading it and many thanks for a hugely enjoyable evening!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hi there Martin,

Thus far the only massed armour battles I have fought using models have been modern 1:300th affairs. At present I am undecided about scale although 15mm certainly looks attractive. For convenience I may go smaller though, just so that it keeps the cost and time to get to the table down.

I will look out for Tobruk as I need to reacquaint myself with the Desert war overall - I have the Lock and Load Heroes of North Africa and also No Retreat: North Africa to be getting on with though.

I will try to avoid going to overboard with this (said no wargamer ever….) and oddly enough, like yourself, I am most comfortable painting anything that is non organic!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hi Steve-the-wargamer,

Yet another title to keep an eye open for - good job it is near Christmas! Many thanks for the tip!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hi Steve J,

Go on, you know you want to! Judging by the quality of these two titles I would happily look any others by the author!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hello there Rob Young,

I can certainly remember chopping up kits and all manner of odds and ends to get to a model that I simply had to get - and (very)occasionally the end result looked fairly close to what it was intended to be!

All the best,

DC

David Crook said...

Hello Aly,

Driving around on the tabletop with units of tanks locked in combat has a certain charm all of its own - especially when there is plenty of space to do so. Most deserts usually manage that… :-)

The butterfly is still circling!

All the best,

DC

Steve-the-Wargamer said...

...w.r.t. scale - I would very much recommend the Minifigs N scale stuff.. nominally 12mm but will fit with the Pendraken 10mm stuff if you squint... small enough to allow large battles, but big enough not to occupy the "wargame unit as board game counter" territory that 1/300 is for me..

David Crook said...

Hi Steve-the-wargamer,

Funny you should mention the Minifigs range as I had been taking a look at them. At this point in time I am looking long and hard at Pendraken range as I rather like painting tanks and this scale will take a more satisfying amount of work compared to anything smaller.

Definitely one for the project list though.

All the best and thanks for the recommendation!

DC

Chris Kemp said...

Aaaah, Banana Oil and Lynx, the smell of adolescencein 1969! :-)

Regards, Chris.

David Crook said...

Hello Chris,

Add in Hai Karate, Brut, Denim, Casablanca and Old Spice and you have a veritable smorgasbord of the teenage years of many a gamer ‘of a certain vintage’!

All the best,

DC

N. E. Pete said...

In addition to the books listed, I’d suggest “Armored Odyssey”, an account of a Valentine commander in Crusader, later leading Shermans in Italy.

David Crook said...

Hello there N.E.Pete,

Many thanks for the heads up re the title! I am halfway through Brazen Chariots and it is a great read - it wil be interesting to read about the Valentine in action.

All the best,

DC