Monday, 6 April 2026

Vietnam: Squad Leader Style?


That really is the box art - taking minimalism to the extreme methinks - and yes, that is a M18 Claymore command detonated mine. 

During this minor bout of  ‘L'angoisse de la page blanche’ - writer’s block or ‘the anxiety of the blank page’ sounds far more impressive in French - I have been poking and prodding the project pile of shame from various directions and, it has to be said, with varying levels of enthusiasm. It has given me much to think about going forwards though and has served to reinforce ideas about what I will be doing when I can get to do it!

Anyways, as part of my meanderings I made a point of tidying up my board game collection and was pleasantly reminded of a recent acquisition that has been, unsurprisingly, languishing on the shelf of shame.

Front Toward Enemy is a tactical level game of combat during the Vietnam War published by MMP Games. Units are fire teams or specialists - commanders, snipers, medics and such like - with support weapons ‘crewed’ within the counter. There are a of course, helicopters a-plenty - Medevac, Hogs, Slicks, Observation and Cobra attack types. The NV gain the arms and the inevitable black pyjama types along with civilians and plenty of dummy counters. It has two map sheets printed with a suitable Vietnamese landscape complete with rice paddies and jungle which are very nice but printed on paper so their longevity will not be great methinks - off to be laminated I suspect at some point. I have yet to play Front Toward Enemy due to it only being partially punched. This however, will not be a problem as I have discovered a new type of board game therapy - the gentle art of clipping, more of which later.

I had a hankering to tackle Vietnam using a Memoir ‘44 based system and 20mm plastic figures some years ago. Then came a brief flirtation with the game Nam ‘65 which very good but it never really did it for me. I had often thought that the period would work with a Squad Leader style approach which is why I think that this latest acquisition may tick that particular box for me. Time will tell.


The counter clippers I own. More expensive versions include the facility to be able to control the size of the cut. These do not but as they did not cost me anything I can hardly complain!

I mentioned ‘clipping’ earlier and for the uninitiated this is rounding off the corners of cardboard counters to make them more aesthetically pleasing as well as making them less likely to ‘lift’ with excessive use. Essentially you use a tool something like a large pair of nail clippers and carefully trim each corner. It is mind numbingly simple to do and soothingly therapeutic. Of course if you had to tackle such a game as ‘Drach Nach Osten or even Flat Top it may get a little tedious. I have clipped around two thirds of the counters from Front Toward Enemy and I have to say that the effort is certainly worth it. It saves all that careful cutting with a scalpel, thereby reducing the risk to one’s fingers.  


Before and after (actually that should after and before but you know what I mean!). Counters that have a lot of information on them run the risk of having some of the detail removed but luckily in this case all was well. They definitely look tidier in my opinion.

Will I clip the counters from all my boardgames? To be honest probably not, simply because a typical half inch square counter may lose too much when clipped - those above are 5/8th of an inch - but I shall worry about that when I need to. There are some games I own that I would certainly clip the corners of but again, it will be when I need to. Or if I need to do something that will take my mind off things for an hour or so!





2 comments:

Jonathan Freitag said...

I am definitely a counter clipper. Like you, I have this game but have yet to punch and play.

David Crook said...

Hi Jonathan,

It certainly improve the look of the counters no end! I am around two thirds of the way through clipping them all and then I hope to get it to the table. Funny thing is though, I have a hankering to Memoir ‘44 it - using the boards with the Pacific expansion and using the factors on the counters in some way. Just and idea at present but something to explore further.

All the best,

DC