Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Western Desert - The Shawaddywaddy Wadi

I haven't posted anything here for a long time. Since my last post I've played one game of O Group but that was an intro game where I introduced the game to a friend using the Attack on Christo scenario from the rule book. A few other games have been cancelled for various reasons but last week I managed to get a game happening.

The battlefield was pretty bare. The Commonwealth forces were deployed amongst the ridge on the east and the DAK were attacking from the Shawaddywaddy Wadi to the west. In between was a small village. I played the British and, my opponent Michael, played the Germans.
The village was divided into three Build Up Areas (BUA). Each BUA could hold one platoon. The dice on the roof of the larger building determined when the sun would rise. The first two turns were in the pre-dawn. Maximum visibility was 18" and all targets were considered obscured. At the end of turn 2 the dice would be rolled. The sun would rise on a 6 for turn 2, a 5 for turn 3, etc... Until the sun rose.
The German start line was the Shawaddywaddy Wadi. 
Still in darkness the German lead elements along with reconnaissance and scouts moved from their starting positions and advanced towards the village.
From the east my own scouts were attempting to get into the village in order to deploy troops. Unfortunately I lost that race. 
While the pre-dawn darkness remained the lead DAK forces managed to get a toe hold in the village as British scouts managed to infiltrate the eastern parts. 
The sun rose early (a 6 was rolled at the end of turn 2 - we decided that or the German attack must have been late getting off their mark). With fighting in the streets of the village both sides brought up armoured support. The German recon had the opportunity to either retreat or fight it out with the British armour. Foolishly they decided to try and shoot it out.
A mortar stonk now fell on the DAK troops in the western section of the village whilst my brave lads now took the 3rd BUA and poured fire onto a platoon of The Bosch approaching from the other side. The Crusader troop took aim at the German armoured cars and blew the entire platoon to pieces in the centre of the town. They should have chosen the retreat option. 
The second Bosch platoon now tried an unsuccessful assault on the 3rd BUA and were repulsed. An attempt to rally them saw them fall back even further. The German assault was getting bogged down.
Hearing reports of DAK armour approaching the village from the west the men of 7th Armoured Div were directed to move out an take them on! The German armour, a troop of panzer III's opened fire on the Crusaders but to no effect as their shots went wide of their targets.
A German platoon advanced on low ridge in the centre of the table edge opposite the village. To counter them I deployed a platoon of infantry with a supporting Vickers machinegun section.
With supporting mortar fire, a fresh DAK platoon moved in and once again assaulted the 3rd BUA - This time with much greater success.
My brave chaps were thrown out of their positions with heavy losses (only one section remaining). 
An artillery stonk came down on the Crusaders. The tanks were not damaged but were forced back to the road.
The Infantry in the town were also caught in the barrage, They were hit hard and they too were forced to retreat away from the barrage.
It was time for a counter attack. A troop of little Honey light tanks, supported by a platoon of infantry, advanced onto the field. They attempted to shoot up the panzer III's in the flank but were unsuccessful. 
At the same time the Crusaders once again advanced and shelled the village. The platoon that was forced to retreat managed to rally and came in to support the tanks. A platoon and a second Vickers section also poured fire into the village.
Unfortunately, a second platoon of of Pz III's drove up and took up hull down positions on the lip of the wadi. They exchange fire with the Honey's with the result being one section destroyed and the other badly damaged. At the same time a second German artillery strike fell on the Crusader troop and their infantry support forcing them back again; this time with some damage.
With all the British armour now retreating or suppressed the German armour moved out of the cover of the wadi. Meanwhile the other Pz III troop sat back and poured HE into the troops on the ridge behind the village.
Mortars hit the British line forcing one of the crusader troops to abandon their vehicle (this isn't specified in the rules but they took damage and were destroyed. Mortars can't really destroy tanks so we thought they must have had enough shelling and decided to abandon their vehicles).
I had a couple of units waiting in ambush and they now came into play and took on the panzer III's coming out of the wadi. A pair of 2pdr anti-tank guns (one a portee and the other a static gun). Both guns scored direct hits on their targets but the superior German armour just shrugged off both hits. 

At this time I forgot to keep taking photos. What happened?

The village was squarely in German hands. Michael consolidate his 3rd company in the village and set up an assault on the ridge behind. The troops there had been pounded by HE for a couple of turns and were in a bad way. The British C company came in as support and got hit with heavy casualties from the HE shelling.

The German armour in the centre continued to advance and my 2pdr guns shot them repeatedly and never once hit them again. My A company was almost completely wiped out and my B company did barely anything other than hold their positions. 

By the time we finished I was almost up to 3 FUBAR's and Michael was on 1 FUBAR. My troops were in a bad way and the only option left for the British was to retreat.

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It was a good game after such a long time. I didn't get the win but it was good to lay out the table and put models on it again. This is the first time I've put my desert forces on the table since I rebased them for O Group. I think the overall set up looked good.


P.S: In case you're wondering... Here's a link to how I made my desert table mat: Desert Mat


Sunday, June 27, 2021

Back to the Front

Once again there was action on the Russian Front this weekend in Melbourne. We suffering folk in Victoria were were again locked down for the 4th time several weeks back. Our Five Day lockdown lasted for 30 odd days which put the kibosh on our bourgeoning O Group shenanigans. But the club was opened again this week and once again the Red Army attempted to throw the Wehrmacht back from the Motherland! 

This time around Michael played the Soviets and I the Germans. We tried a similar game on a Friday evening the week prior but it was a bit of an aborted effort due to a late start and time limitations. 

Somewhere on the Russian front 1943:
The Germans were deployed around the village of Smirnoff guarding a vital intersection. There was a pine forest to the German rear where their battalion headquarters and reserves were deployed . My forward deployment line was from the small hill in the foreground of the picture below, through the forward Built Up Area (BUA) & fields and on to the wooded hill in the background.

The Russian start line was just behind the banks of the stream. The stream was considered Rough Ground. Vehicles crossing, except by the culvert would become bogged if any double was rolled whilst attempting to cross.
Apparently Dr Who was in the vicinity to observe the proceedings and, no doubt, cause trouble where he was least wanted! (One of our club members, James, has several TARDIS's in different scales which often appear on various tables at random times.
The Second Company commander waits for the first sign of the Soviet advance.
The Russian attack got underway as they swiftly advanced over the river with German Sniper fire causing some consternation and making some solders seek the cover of the ground (Snipers caused 2pts of Shock on one unit).  
With the infantry came a troop of Lend Lease Stuart tanks in a reconnaissance role. Although light, these proved to be more durable than the BA10 armoured cars used previously by the Soviets.
However, as swift as the Soviet advance may have been, the Wehrmacht response was also swift as the Red infantry became the target of the German gunners. The artillery proved to be quite ineffective even though the first dice roll was promising with a roll of double 6's! Meaning : A re-roll for Divisional Artillery! (which then transpired into an ineffective medium battery stonk).
But no sooner had the dust settled from the German guns than Soviet mortars crashed in on a German platoon that had taken positions in the foremost BUA. The Krauts weathered the storm with some Shock but their Combat Patrol was sent packing.
I was intending to deploy a panzerschreck on that Combat Patrol to deal with the Stuart's heading up the road but that wouldn't be happening now. Instead the platoon in the houses tried to target them with their panzerfaust but they were out of range. 
German mortars struck again, this time targeting the tanks but had very little effect. The Soviets retaliated again with their own mortars in a tit-for-tat fight but they also brought forward a 47mm infantry gun (we subbed a 47mm AT gun) and the HE of the Stuarts to bare on the BUA. The German platoon didn't fare well and became Suppressed.
The Russians soon came under fire from a German strongpoint set up in a bombed out, but still sturdy administration building. The most solid structure on the table. A platoon with attached MMG opened up on the infantry in the wheat field causing minor shock.
Soviet mortars, infantry gun and the tanks struck again and this time the platoon in the BUA lost two sections. The third section held their ground but before the mortar smoke had even cleared Soviet infantry charged in and wiped out the platoon before the survivors could make their escape (they failed their Withdrawal dice roll).
As the fight at the farm raged  I revealed one of my ambush units: A quad 20mm AA gun. It opened up on the Russian infantry in the wheat field with little to no effect. It then targeted the Stuart platoon and peppered one section full of holes destroying it. That was far more effective!
The infantry gun was giving me grief so another of my ambush units was deployed - A StuG IV. It advanced out of its hidden position in the pine forest and laid down some HE.
The sight of the German tank prompted a Soviet retaliation with the deployment of a platoon of T34/76 tanks. They advanced up to the river bank and a long range armoured duel began. The T34's had some initial success gaining a hit on the StuG and causing some shock. 
However, the superior gun and the excellent training of my panzertruppen paid off and half of the Soviet tank platoon was soon blazing away. 
But this tank on tank battle wasn't slowing the Soviet infantry. They had taken their first objective and now consolidated to bring on the HQ of their 3rd Company.
Securing the Second Coy flank was a, infantry platoon with the quad AA gun on a wooded hill. These troops now attracted the Soviet mortar fire which, at first was not very effective.
The Stuart tanks had stalled with the quad AA gun damaging the second section but not destroying it, so the little US tanks were still a threat in the center. The Ivan infantry in the wheat field took a pounding. They were under fire from the MMG in the strong point straight ahead of them & the quad AA on their flank. But nothing would dislodge them. I was convinced that the wheat was planted over the top of previously dug trenches and the Russians were hiding in them. They were eventually suppressed after much shooting and only a failed Rally Order saw them fall back, although still in good order.
A second mortar stonk on the Second Coy forward position in the wood was more effective in destroying the quad AA and supressing the infantry platoon.
I also had a panzerschreck anti-tank section on the table that had also been firing (and missing) on the Stuart's but I pulled them back in favor of the quad AA. Now, that the gun out of the commission it was time to get these brave fellows back into action.
A Soviet infantry platoon now made a bold move by rushing forward to try and out flank the next position held by the Germans. But they came on unsupported and the rapid deployment of my reserve company up to the roadside caught them unawares. By using a Company Command Order, I was able to open fire and drive the platoon back with the help of HE from the near by StuG.   
And speaking of StuG's, I deployed my final Ambush Unit, which was another StuG, when a second platoon of T34's appeared on the road. Like the other one, this StuG was hiding in the bushes and moved forward to target the Soviet tanks. Another long range tank duel ensued over several turns and the StuG managed to cause some damage and shock. Unfortunately the Soviets got the better of this firefight and the German tank took too much damage forcing the crews to bail out and flee.
On the other side the first StuG kept up a good rate of fire and totally stalled the Soviet armour on that flank. Also, beyond the tank, one of my reserve infantry platoons charged across an open field and took on the remaining troops of the advanced platoon of Ivan's and drove them off.
    Casualties: In previous games we just put aside our dead 'uns and counted them. Michael said it would be a good idea to make a first aid post. I said I had one! So this time around I set it up and used it as an area to place my KIA units. (This is photo is from earlier in the game and by this stage, even if the commentary sounds one sided, I was on my way to my 2nd FUBAR!)
The Soviets, on the other hand didn't have the luxury of decent medical facilities, so instead Michael used my little pig sty model to house his wounded, in true, compassionate, Soviet style!
The panzerschreck team advanced again and got within range but, once again, the missed their target before pulling back to relative safety.
In the advanced Second Coy position, a Soviet infantry platoon advanced rapidly with the support of a second infantry gun. After their initial advance the platoon stalled at the foot of the rise when their company became Hesitant. My infantry in the woods above them managed to rally and caused them some trouble with some desultory shooting but didn't manage to KIA any of sections. 

The Soviets then got their act together and rallied. With supporting HE fire from the infantry gun, which again supressed the Krauts the soviet commander used a Company Command Order and charged in with a close quarters assault.
The Germans were hurled back with heavy casualties (2 KIA sections). A follow up second assault caught the surviving Germans flat footed and wiped them out (they withdrew but only managed to run 2" on 2d6). The loss of this platoon caused a second FUBAR on the German battalion command and the Soviets now had an empty flank facing them.
German mortars pounded the forward BUA time and time again with little to no result. With the only infantry to oppose them, the T34's in the center could have advanced but chose to sit still and pound the central German strong point with HE.
And soon Ivan's mortars joined in. The platoon help up well but the combination of mortars and HE suppressed the defenders and soon KIA'd one of the sections. 
With one flank gone and my position now outflanked, it was only a matter of slowly grinding the Germans down. We were out of time but I was also on my way to a 3rd FUBAR. So I would call this a Soviet victory though, not a decisive one.

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This game was a bit different. We played on a slightly larger area (6'x5') which opened things up considerably. There wasn't a lot of cover for the advancing Russians but Michael made the best of it. Long ranges on the 6' long-axis also kept some targets in the open out of range. It was definitely a slow grinding attack which wore down my troops. I had a couple of Hesitant company rolls which were not really taken advantage of. But I was also unable to take maximum advantage of a couple of Soviet Hesitant Company results.

That loss of dice from a FUBAR really makes a difference. In the second to last turn I ended up with a Hesitant Company and only 3 Orders (I rolled four 1's out of seven dice). Not a lot I could do and not many troops to do anything with. All up I think we played 16 turns which was pretty good going. Maybe a turn limit could help speed things up a bit as well as some more scenario based victory conditions other than: "3 FUBARS."

One aspect that did work very well in my favour was using a Reserve Deployment Order to bring on my reserve company quickly. With this order I brought on two infantry platoons and they moved in fast 12" for one and 14" for the other. This enabled them to counter the bold move of that Russian platoon that move up quickly in the center.

All in all: Another great game. I really like these rules and the broad sweep of a decent sized battle that they depict.