Sunday, March 31, 2013

12-y Gvardeiskoi Tankovoi Brigady

A few weeks ago I received two boxes of PSC's excellent little T-70 light tank, along with one box of four 76.2mm Zis 3 "Crash-Boom" artillery pieces.
 
 

These are very nice little kits, and I really like the tiny T-70's.  I already have two I got years ago from Skytrex, but they were really squashy little castings- these are much, much better models and better capture the shape of the actual vehicle.

Looking over the mountain of kits sitting on top of the bookshelves (and threatening to fly off in all directions come the next sizeable earth tremor), I realize now that I finally have all I need to create a Soviet 1943 Tank Brigade for Blitzkrieg Commander II, using the organizations given in Frank Chadwick's Command Decision rule set.   

BKC-II doesn't cover national formations, and if it did the book would have had to be huge!  But it does contain comprehensive stats for vehicles, artillery, and infantry for the gamer to assemble a points-based force.  

This is fine, but I've always liked basing my wargaming forces on historical orders of battleFortunatelythe BKC website has available a very useful guide on converting orders of battles for BKC-II.  So I sat down and converted the CD list for a 1943 Soviet Tank Brigade for use in BKC-II games, as you can see here.   

It is a scaled-down version to be sure, and one vehicle equals approximately five actual vehicles.  This keeps vehicle and troop numbers manageable and rationalizes some of the abstractions in the rules.  

After all, I've always done it in my horse-and-musket wargaming where painting up 36 miniatures to represent a battalion is a lot more feasible that trying to do it using 750 miniatures at a 1:1 representation! 

It does mean that players have to remind themselves during the game that this stand of figures represents a platoon, and that the tank lurking behind the dilapidated hut over there represents five actual vehicles.  The results are the outcome of combat between two bodies of troops, not individuals.  It's not a skirmish game.

I should point out that my list represents a brigade at full strength, and almost as soon as these brigades were committed to combat on the Eastern Front, the actual strength of the unit would start to diminish due to combat losses and attrition, sometimes ending up with a staggeringly few operational vehicles.  

But in gaming terms it's good for the start of a campaign, and if we are playing a points-based game it would be much more likely for a force selection to be made from an actual formation like this, rather than just to cherry-pick an ad-hoc formation from the whole range of actual vehicles and units available (German players please take note!)

My brigade will represent the 12-y Gvardeiskoi Tankovoi Brigady, or 12th Guards Tank Brigade under the command of Col. Nikolai Grigoryevich Dushak from 1943 to 1945.  This brigade was part of the 4-y Gvardeiskoi Tankovoi Korpus, the 4th Guards Tank Corps commanded by Gen-Lt. Pavel Pavlovich Poluboyarov.

Poluboyarov was one of the rising stars of the RKKA, and after the war went on to become Marshal of Armoured Forces.

Here they are in action.  Col. Dushak on the left, his boss Gen. Poluboyarov on the right, as they do their part in hurling the Fascist vipers out of the Socialist Motherland.  
At some point I will add a list for other elements of the 4th Tank Corps, including heavy tank and SPG support, a motorized rifle and motorcycle battalion, and other goodies.  

Right now I'm working on making a list for that other essential for a Soviet player, a common-and-garden infantry regiment from a Rifle Division along with it's typical support units.  Gotta love horse-drawn artillery

 

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Dusting off the Popovs

Not much activity on this blog over the last year, basically because the focus at the West Tokyo Wargamers has been on Napoleonic wargaming using Warlord Games' Black Powder rules.

However, on our gaming day in February, most of the usual grognards were unable to make it due to various commitments.  So without a quorum for Napoleonics, Giovanni and I both felt that it could be a good opportunity for a long-overdue game of Blitzkrieg Commander II

So we decided that we would leave the olive groves of the Peninsula behind us for the day, and instead dust off our Soviets and Germans for another bloody struggle among the birch forests and rolling steppes of the Eastern Front.
We decided to keep the game small- 1000 points from late 1943. The evening before the game we devised our lists using the oh-so-useful Battlegroups Online tool over at the BKC website.  

It didn't take long to discover that you don't get much for 1000 points!  But that was part of the challenge, tweaking and varying the possible choice that would get me the best "bang" for my virtual rubles.  

And when I saw what a tiny force Giovanni was able to field with only 1000 points worth of Krupp steel and lantern-jawed Lansers from the corresponding German list, maybe I would have a chance!

Giovanni's Huns.  The A/T gun is there for decoration, as Giovanni didn't have enough points to pay for one. But he was able to field two Pz-IV's, a Grille SPG, and a number of halftracks and trucks full to the brim with well-armed and ruthless warriors of the Third Reich.
Most of my points were spent on infantry- lots of it.  I went for just one tank, but selected a good one; an OT-34 flamethrower variant. Very nasty if it could get to close quarters.  My artillery consisted of two indirect fire weapons- an 82mm and a 120mm mortar.  I had enough points left over for a 76.2 gun for A/T work

I went for three command stands, one with a factor of 8, the others of 7.  In contrast, the Germans would be able to run rings round me with their two stands, which boasted a command rating of 10 and 9.  They also enjoyed a command radius of 20cm (being Soviets, mine was only a measly 15cm).  

So as far as tactics went, the K.I.S.S. principle dictated that I wouldn't be trying anything too adventurous, lest I get my bare Bolshevik butt spanked by the much-more-mobile Fascists for my pains
NKVD make sure that the Soviet infantry are dutifully maintaining the required Revolutionary Zeal- or else!

View of the village (hamlet really).
The river ran down the middle of table lengthwise, with two crossable fords.
The Soviets had built a timber bunker in the woods next to the village, covering one of the fords.  As it turned out, the Germans were able to drive across the ford with impunity due to good command rolls on their part, and shitty shooting on mine.

The Germans started with an attack on the settlement with part of their force, while Panzer Grenadiers supported by a Pz-IV commenced a flanking attack.
The bunker was actually designed for our 28mm Napoleonic games as a powder magazine for a redoubt, but it works just fine here.
The OT-34 heads off to take on the infantry, but trying to pass the necessary command roll proves elusive.
And then the PZ-IV has him in his sights...
...promptly sending my only armour asset to Socialist Valhalla.  Oh, crap.  
 
The elated Pz-IV crew went on to celebrate by blasting my now-exposed 82mm mortar team into oblivion.   

The Soviet field telephone lines were becoming red hot with panicky calls for help, only to be answered with terse instructions to just suck it all up, and to get on with the job of ridding the Motherland of the Fascist threat.  Orders that were well-seasoned with dark, dire and deadly serious threats.
 
With the Pz-IV apparently crushing the Soviets like so many ants, its following German infantry- now without the OT-34 to cower from- discover new-found courage, and decide to launch an attack in a determined effort to clear out the Soviet infantry holding the woods.  

We learned here that this is where a Soviet infantry force is at its best; in short-range fighting, in close terrain, and where numbers count.  
It was a very long time since we last played the game, and even longer since our last large-scale close combat engagement.  So were unfamiliar with the game mechanics, and had to refer in detail to the rulebook.  The rules work elegantly well for infantry fights, and turned out a lot easier to work out than we had expected (once we got it right!)

The German infantry fought fiercely, but in the face of overwhelming local odds were eventually repulsed, never to return.  For them, ze war vas over.  

Meanwhile, German infantry enter the village, but find themselves held at bay by some very accurate mortar fire. The mortar was to give sterling service throughout the game.

  
The all-destroying PZ-IV was on the prowl for fresh prey, and soon found itself engaging in a dual with my 76.2mm A/T gun, which now found itself on the verge of being outflanked.   

Fortunately it was able to turn to face the threat, but its crew were very much aware that the Germans were encased in several inches of hardened Krupp nickel-steel plating.  In contrast, the Red gunners had only the thickness of their padded cotton jackets for protection.

Not encouraging...
But luck was on the side of the doughty Popovs this time, and had run out for the Germans.  Scratch one Pz-IV.  

It didn't help that Giovanni neglected to chance another shot by taking one more try at a command roll. 

The remaining  Pz-IV, assisted by a Grille SPG, advances in support of the hard-pressed German infantry in the village.
These now face the prospect of a whole company of Soviet infantry rushing to aid the defense, all flushed with confidence from their having just recently thrashed the Hitlerite flanking force.
"Urrah!!!"
But with such a small force, the Germans have taken losses that they cannot really afford.  They have to roll to see if they break under the pressure of excessive casualties- and lo and behold, they do!

Scheisse....

The Germans decide to call off the attack, and lick their wounds as the commanders go back to the drawing board.  They would be back- but doubtless only after the Stukas get their chance to even the odds.  But that would be a story for another day.

So a rare Soviet victory!  We really enjoyed the game as it was very much touch-and-go.  

The Soviets didn't have much in the way of sexy armour and mobility, especially once the OT-34 flamethrower tank was toasted.  And don't expect too much in the way of complicated, sweeping maneuvers given their poor command factors and tactical doctrine. But give them a strong position, and a built-up area to fight in, and they are in their element.

Well worth dusting off the figures, and it rekindled my interest in WW2 gaming.  After the game, I decided to beef up my forces and ordered some of the new T-70's from PSC, along with some field guns.  I can't yet decide to assemble them as 57mm A/T guns, or as a battery of 76.2mm field guns.  

Decisions, decisions...