This post is delayed several years but as I was going through my old photos I noticed a few pictures of things that were meant to be in a blog post that never occurred.
Several years ago, I invested in a mountain of 3mm micro armor. Some were WW2 North Africa and some were post-WW2 items. For the former, the plan was to build up armies for Sam Mustafa's Rommel ruleset and refight various campaigns in North Africa. Everything has been purchased, figures, bases, etc. I had planned to make a Rommel variant for the Indo-Pakistan War of 1965, complete with customized Ops Boards...this despite never having actually played Rommel. Anyway I just never got around to the project beyond acquisition and research.
For the latter 3mm endeavor, I purchased a bunch of O8 3mm stuff to refight various battles (historical and hypothetical) for Operation Modular during the South African War in Namibia against Angola. I planned to use the ruleset Tank Wreck! and other than painting up a few bases of Angolan BTRs and infantry, this project also stalled.
This is one of the 3mm BTR stands I painted up for the Angolan Motorized Brigade I planned to put together. I was pretty pleased with the results. It's something I need to get back to doing. Some day.
The other item I meant to post on the blog was a battle report from the Russo-Ukrainian War.
In 2021 or so I picked up a bunch of GHQ micro-armor for the 2014 conflict and soon thereafter the conflict resumed (as we all are aware of). Anyway, I painted up the figures in the summer of 2022, showcased
here. The rules were Pz28's quick-play modern rules, my friend Rob and I played at Historicon 2022. .
In the scenario, a Russian force of T-80s and MTLBs with infantry and ATGMs (commander by Rob) was tasked with taking a small village in the Donbas that was situated along a tree-lined road cutting through a plain. The village was defended by Ukrainian forces (me) equipped with T-64s, BMPs, BTRs and some ATGMs.
Here is a layout of the table before the start of the game. Russians are on the left and the Ukrainians are on the right. I used "blinds" for the units as well as some dummy blinds to replicate some fog of war. They were removed if successfully spotted, if the blind fired or if they came within a certain range of an enemy unit.
From this view we have the Russian forces initially deployed on the bottom of the table. The village is about halfway up the table with some Ukrainian infantry defending and armor behind.
I don't recall all of the details but the carnage was intense. Ultimately the Russians seized the village after heavy casualties. I really liked the simplicity of the Pz28 rules and planned to add some house rules for conflict specific flavor (drones, mud, etc).
Liking your Border War stuff...ideal scale for it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jim. I vacillated on the scale. I thought about 15mm with Peter Pig but at the time there weren't many good options for some of the vehicles. 10mm offered no good options and 6mm had no good infantry. I went with 3mm and I think it's best for the scale I want to game at. Now I just need to paint them!
DeleteIndo-Pak war of 1965 is one of my unfinished projects (in 1:87 / 20mm).
ReplyDeleteFor Angola Border War, a useful little game (as campaign game generator) is:
https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/129308/border-war-angola-raiders
Neil
Thanks Neil! That Border War boardgame looks incredibly interesting, I will have to pick up a copy. I'd love to see those Indo-Pak figures, I need all of the inspiration I can get.
Deleteas always your stuff looks great. Bush wars are my pet perennial projects, so it always makes me happy seeing other people's stuff.
ReplyDelete