Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Brigade Models 2mm buildings

 Regular readers may recall that I picked up a couple of 2mm buildings from Brigade Models at Hammerhead earlier this year. I finally got around to painting them.


A Roman Temple and 'Fort St Antonio', which I assume is a real place but Google cant find it anywhere. 


The fort is rather more substantial than my 2mm Irregular 'Eighteenth Century Fort' with four well defined bastions, courtyard and buildings. Interestingly it only has gun embrasures on three sides, so I assume it was part of a larger fortified system.


On the rear side are just ramparts and the entrance. The Brigade buildings are printed with quite a rough texture, which is great for repeated layers of drybrushing. I did this in various sandy shades with the walkway and courtyard in khaki and brick tiled roofs. The whole thing was finished off with a very light drybrush of pale sand.


The Roman temple is different to my Langton Greek Temple as it has an enclosed area at one end (shown by the low depth of the recesses between the pillars).


I did this in desert ochre with various extra layers of drybrushing. The recesses between the pillars I just emphasised with black paint. Like the fort this was also cast with a fairly rough surface finish so the texture got picked out nicely.


You can see the contrast with my Langton greek temple, which is hilariously small in comparison (and is done in white marble, which the Greeks favoured).


So while it is still quite small, I can probably get away with using this as a side terrain piece with my 20mm Ancients, something I certainly cant with the Greek one.


The fort will work fine with both my 2mm and 6mm stuff, although normally I'd have it tucked away in a table corner for Almeida or something like that. Here it is with some 6mm H&R frenchmen.

I'm pleased with both of those and impressed with the quality of the Brigade stuff. They make some lovely buildings and I can see I'm going to be buying more of them.


Monday, 1 June 2026

Unconditional Surrender France 1940

 Right, on to the third training scenario for Unconditional Surrender, France 1940 this time. This uses everything in the rules and the opening turn features in a blow-by-blow account in the players handbook which was very helpful. I'm fairly happy with the air and ground combat systems, but all the extra stuff like production and replacement, naval operations and even the operation of multi-country alliances needed a fair bit of reading up. Unusually this game also lasts several turns, so I had to read up on the turn end sequence, which is quite nuanced. 


The basic setup. There is a lot going on in this one, despite using Army sized counters. The standard scenario lasts from May to September 1940 and there are many scenario specific rules (eg the Germans cant mount an amphibious invasion or airdrop on Britain. Thankfully the British and German National (NW) Will and production is ignored, but it isn't for everyone else. The Germans need to conquer the Netherlands, Belgium and France by September 1940 or they lose. Conquering is done by reducing NW to zero by capturing cities and destroying field armies. the French start with 20 NW, so will be very tough to defeat. The Belgians and Dutch start with 2 NW, so won't be quite so hard....


The game control sheet has a ton of stuff on it, tracks for Will and Production and for the various events as well as weather and turns. The Allied events include strategic movement and two generic ground support events, while the French get 'tanks' and the British get both surprise attack and naval evacuation as well as 'tanks' of their own. The tank events temporarily add an armoured bonus to one combat.

The Germans get strategic movement, surprise attack and airdrop. Oddly these aren't available until August 1940, despite some of the most famous airborne operations of the war and the Ardennes surprise attack happening in May 1940. Perhaps it is for play balance? As usual there are various scenario options offered.

In May there is a 50:50 chance of Fair weather, and the Germans duly roll fair weather. That will greatly aid their initial attack.


The setup is much as you'd expect, the German Army massed to strike west with no less than three Air Fleets in support. The Allies have two air units (the RAF and French) but the RAF are restricted to base within three hexes of Britain. An extra French unit arrives at the end of May, but carrying 4 'sorties' aka hits with it. One of the German units starts with 2 sorties, presumably from the invasion of Denmark and Norway in April. The balance of airpower is nothing like that in Third Reich or AHGCs 'France 1940' where the Allies are outnumbered 3:1, although in this game the Germans do have a quality advantage.


The offensive opens in the fair weather in May, with waves of airstrikes on the French air force to write it down. The Germans rapidly exhaust the French in these initial attacks, leaving the air to the Germans apart from the RAF. 9th Army rolls over the Netherlands quite easily - the Dutch army is reduced strength to start with, and with air support the Germans knock it out straight away then roll into Amsterdam. The Dutch and Belgians aren't eligible for French or British air support.

The attack into Belgium is slower, the Belgian Army is stronger and the terrain worse (marshland behind a river). There isn't any Eban Emael fortress, so I assume its reduction by Fallschirmjager assault engineers was factored into the scenario. The Belgians are just pushed back to Brussels.


The Germans just keep coming in the Low Countries, the Belgians are pushed out of Brussels and with the loss of their capital, immediately surrender. Well, that is the diversionary attacks done!


The Germans smash French 2nd Army at Sedan with their Panzer groups and push 9th Army back over the Marne, then exploit west, taking Paris en route and surrounding French 1st Army southwest of Antwerp. Mon Dieu! The BEF and 7th Army are pushed back to Calais.


Finally the remaining German infantry armies stretch their line westwards to keep the Maginot Line in ZOC but also to protect the southern flank of the Panzers. With so many infantry in the north, they re looking rather thin! The German infantry in the north attack 1st Army, but even though it is isolated, it survives and retreats into Antwerp (ZOC don't extend into enemy controlled cities, and although Belgium has surrendered the Germans didn't have enough MP to take Antwerp).

The units in the Maginot fortresses don't have any ZOC, so the Germans can slip along the frontier.

That looks like a pretty successful offensive to me, particularly capturing Paris, although the BEF and 7th Army can draw supply from  Calais. The Germans burned all their air support getting this far.


Of course with all the German air used up, the situation is ripe for a counterattack. One of the armies comes out of the Maginot line and joins 9th Army supported by French tanks in a counterattack using 'assault' mode which allows units to combine. That pushes the Germans back and cuts the rail line west to Paris.


In the north 1st Army evacuates by sea from Antwerp to Le Havre (what a rotten trick!), 7th Army falls back to Calais  but the BEF, supported by the RAF and British tanks counterattacks Paris! The Germans are surrounded, unable to retreat and after two assaults are first reduced and then eliminated. 2nd Panzer Group has been destroyed! The BEF retake Paris and the French get four Will Points (WP) back.

Well, that is what happens when the 'sickle cut' offensive doesn't quite make it to the sea. What a disaster.


Naturally in June the weather turned bad, restricting the effectiveness of all units but particularly air and armour, while restricting all combat to assaults only. The Germans occupied the reduced Maginot Line hex SE of Sedan but Metz and Strasbourg were still solidly defended. They then assaulted Paris and pushed the BEF back out again.


In the north they assaulted Calais, but the French held them off.


In the Allied turn the BEF assaulted Paris, supported by all the adjacent French armies and the RAF (as the Allies had air parity now) and although they didn't destroy 1st Panzer Group, they reduced it a step. With 2nd Panzer Group still rebuilding in Germany, I called it at that point as I'd managed to wreck both the entire Panzer arm as well as the Luftwaffe in a reckless assault. A well deserved Allied victory, but at least I'd got more idea how things hung together in a longer game. I was too used the very short Poland and Norway games.

Armed with better knowledge and aware of the various bits of the rules I'd got wrong, time for a better go.


This time I rolled up bad weather for May, but in some ways it was a blessing as it forced a more measured approach. Once again I wrote down the French airforce, but launched a series of limited attacks to take Belgium and Holland. The French had availed themselves of the strategic move option to rail a unit into Antwerp, which was annoying. 

Restricted to just one attack per unit, it was slow going but the Germans got there in the end, although I was forced to commit one of the Panzer groups to take Brussels. I tried to keep as much air back as possible for future use (you can recover a maximum of two steps per unit in the production/mobilisation phase) but I took the opportunity to capture Sedan with infantry.


The Allies were content to deploy into a strong defensive line. Leg infantry in the front, with the mobile BEF and 1st Army in the second line as well as a garrison in Paris to provide extra ZOC and a counterattack force while the RAF staged to Calais. The French air reinforcements appeared in Paris - Calais and Paris being at  extreme range for German counter air missions.

The Allies went into June quietly confident that the Germans now faced a WW1 style slogging match.


Sadly they had reckoned without the power of the Blitzkrieg in clear weather. June rolled up clear weather, and the panzers and Luftwaffe swung into action. The Luftwaffe smashed the French airforce, then both Panzer groups pushed forward and set up a series of encirclements which allowed the following infantry armies to annihilate most of the French front line.

They didnt attack Paris this time as it was so exposed, and ignored the BEF entirely to avoid a battle with the RAF, instead they tore a huge hole in the French line along the Marne and poured south through the gap, taking Dijon and Vichy, and isolating the Maginot Line!

The western end of the Maginot Line held out however, so the German forces south of the Marne outran their supplies (2nd Panzer Group is under that low supply marker SE of Paris) as the rail line remained closed.


There wasn't a great deal the Allies could do about this catastrophe with several field armies now in the 'eliminated' box and waiting to be rebuilt (a two turn process). One of the French armies sallied from the Maginot Line to threaten Dijon, otherwise the rest just tried to form a line along the west to avoid losing more cities. I've put the air sortie markers on top of the air units so you can see the state of the air forces - I think you are supposed to do that anyway.

The Germans didn't have enough MP to take Lyons last turn so there is an Allied marker on it. Next turn the French will be able to put a replacement unit in there.


July to September is guaranteed Fair Weather, so in July the Germans took Paris while launching an assault on the western Maginot Line to open the rail line south led by Panzer Group 2. The attack managed to reduce the garrison but not eliminate it - forts are tough.  


They also managed to reduce the fort at Strasbourg but not take it - the writing was on the wall for the Maginot Line now. The fall of Paris also allowed the Germans to isolate the BEF east of Calais. If only they had retreated into the town when they had the chance. Instead they were surrounded, isolated and destroyed by a series of concentric attacks. Finally the starving Germans in Vichy stumbled southeast and captured Lyons - coupled with the fall of Paris and Calais, that was enough to reduce the French Will to zero and France surrendered.

Given the game length (May to September) I suspect France is always going to lose this one in the long run barring an early German disaster. The France 1941 scenario is more balanced, but this is excellent as a training scenario as it exercises all the mechanisms - I'm just sorry I never got to player the British 'naval evacuation' event. I actually felt like I was playing the game in that second run rather than just being buffeted by events and scratching my head, so I'm getting there I think. The Italy and France 1944 scenarios are both pretty big, so I need some more practice before then. The invasion of the Balkans beckons.




Friday, 29 May 2026

Room at the Inn

 Time for another trip to our on/off early 1980s WW3 series. This time we are joining the plucky socialist heroes of the Czech 15th Motor Rifle Division on their trip through Austria, previously seen here from our last game a couple of years ago: https://tgamesweplay.blogspot.com/2024/04/phaffing-around.html

I really must dig out my central front stuff again, I've not put on a game for almost ten years now, but Tim was running this one with his 6mm toys and NATO Brigade Commander. And yes, he does have all right Czech kit, including wheeled artillery, wheeled 57mm AA guns etc. 


The field of battle, north is left. The River Inn runs down the centre of the screen and the outskirts of Brunau (sp? ) are visible at the top. The entire city is large, so the Czechs are going around it. The Inn also marks the border between Germany and Austria.


We had a pretty good turnout for this one. Pete did the overall plan for the Czechs, I was the division commisar to ensure everyone followed the plan in the correct spirit (and I also ran the divisional assets). Russell commanded a regiment of fearless Czech paratroops, Jim the 68th Motor Rifle Regiment and Terry the (Divisional) 20th Tank Regiment.

The Capitalist Running Dogs were Ian running the Bundeswehr, Micheal the Austrians and John A in overall command.

Our general scheme was to drop the paras at the far end of the bridge, and race to the rescue with the MR Regiment and Tank Regiment, clearing out any annoying pockets of resistance on the way.


As a couple of units I was assigned included traffic control units, I broke out my ancient copy of 'Armies of the Warsaw Pact'. Cheery Soviet traffic regulation troops can be seen on the left, while traffic regulation diagrams and unit march orders are on the right.


As we had no intel on the defences at all, and as we had been thoughtfully supplied with a bridging train, I thought it best to prepare a plan B just in case the paradrop wasn't fully successful....

Diagrams for assault river crossings, there were a couple of suitable sites west of the autobahn bridge with decent deployment areas for the bridging train. The manual did mention preparation of the opposing bank with tactical nuclear weapon fires. I'm sure that will be just fine and dandy.


Tim ran the game with his usual roving eye camera view, which certainly introduces an element of fog of war. Dimly visible in the distance is the head of  Jims MRR while in the foreground, the paras have had quite a decent drop without too much scatter and only discovered one company of German jaegers in the town beside the autobahn.

The explosions are from the Czech preparatory barrage, which was noisy and spectacular but ineffective.

Slightly alarming was what looked like an entire Austrian mechanised battalion in the outskirts of Brunau. An armoured combat team was on a rise overlooking the bridge and an infantry heavy combat team was in the city itself. You can just see Austrian M60s on the ridge above the bridge, accompanied by an AA platoon of Dusters.


Also noisy and spectacular was the unwelcome arrival of an Austrian Saab Draken. Fortunately it got distarcted chasing away the paras Antonovs.


The Czech barrage lands beside the bridge! (luckily not on it), and the Jaegers shoot up one of the para companies. It is hard to see but I've put a PT76 recce company into the village just above the bridge and a company of OT65s onto the river bank at the far end to scout out crossing sites.


More Germans rock up, another Jaeger company and a company of Jagdpanzer Kanone. The M60s and Duster shoot up the paras from across the river.

To everyone amazement, the para AT missile platoon manages to hit and knock out some of the M60s. Two more companies of paras assault the Jaegers in the town and destroy them, only to run into their own artillery barrage. The para commander clearly didn't read the fire plan. The paras took losses and hit the dirt.


The lead battalion of the MRR reached the southern end of the bridge as Austrian refugees fled in terror. The Regimental T55 battalion peeled off to engage the M60s, covered by an airstrike from venerable Mig 21s. Eagle eyed readers will spot the PT76s lurking around the pump control station on the dam. They have spotters for the divisional artillery attached and I want to get them in position to spot the Austrians. The dam is passable by foot troops, so another potential crossing site.


The leading APCs crunch across the bridge and link up with the paras, who have now taken losses from the German jaegers and are looking distinctly shaky. A Frogfoot strike misses the M60s, but they are finished off by the para AT missile platoon while the T55s knock out the Dusters.


Back at the river, the Czech OT65s start swimming across the river! Very carefully...


Back the bridgehead, the shattered paras fall back to regroup under German artillery fire and the Motor Rifle troops take up the fight. Czech Frogfoots target the Germans and inflict some losses.


A bit of a problem further back down the column! The Austrian mechanised infantry venture forth from the city and attack the MRRs (towed) artillery battalion. This of course blocks the autobahn and stops the bridging column moving on. Terrys Tank Regiment is marching on in column to cross the river, but someone is going to have to deal with the Austrian infantry.

Well, we will leave that conundrum until tomorrow night as we broke for the evening at that point.

The action resumed the following day. Given the 'flying camera' viewpoint, expect a certain degree of chaos as to what gets photographed for here on in, as things were happening all over the place.


Back down on the Autobahn, the Czech artillerymen tried to break off from the vicious Austrian infantry assault. They retreated in a disorganised fashion under the guns of the Tank Regiment. Unfortunately the Austrians were made of stern stuff and pursued them! 


Some Hinds turned up and set themselves up in range of the rampaging Austrians. The MRR HQ pulled off the road to allow the leading units of 20th Tank Regiment to approach the bridge, but unfortunately the trailing two tank battalions had become embroiled in the battle down on the Autobahn.


The Austrians meanwhile covered themselves with glory. They dispersed the Czech gunners, then routed one of the T72 battalions which tried to overrun them! Sadly they had taken heavy losses from close range tank guns by this point.


Hearing alarming radio chatter about incoming artillery strikes, they engaged the T55s more closely.


I had meanwhile called down the entire Divisional artillery (152mm guns and MLRS) on the impudent Austrians, and despite the proximity to the our own troops, just let fly. More Hinds appeared and both wings poured rockets into the melee too. 

A certain degree of friendly fire took place, but more importantly, the last of the Austrians had enough and disappeared, so we had (finally) cleared the southern bank of the river.


North of the river, the MRR finally managed to deploy two battalions and the Regimental mortar and AT companies while the paras dug in. With more force to bear, they soon saw off the Jaegers and consolidated the bridgehead as the Tank Regiment thundered past.


And what of the swimming OT65s? Well, they finally made it across the Inn despite some strong currents, and scouted out a bridge site. A German panzergrenadier battalion briefy made an appearance, took one look at the massed Soviet armour across the river and thought better of it and went away again. So, several hours later, a pontoon bridge went across the river upstream from the dam as an alternate crossing point. Bravo!

That was excellent fun and purely by chance we managed a strategic victory by seizing the Autobahn bridge intact. The paras had very fortunately managed to forestall the demolition team, and some of us had misunderstood the victory conditions and completely ignored the Austrians in Brunau, not realising we were supposed to clear them out until we'd already bypassed them. Ahem. It worked out OK in the end, even if it did cost us an artillery and tank battalion to do it

The game rattled along very well as ever, and reminded me that I really, really must dust off the central front again..






Wednesday, 27 May 2026

More Leaders pt3 - French

 As I noted in my post on substitute figures, I don't actually have any dedicated WW2 French figures although I have boxfuls of WW1 French. I tend to use Adrian helmeted SCW figures instead as they look much the same and many of them were originally French figures anyway. Well, after the now numerous appearances of my General de Gaulle figure, I realised I 'needed' some French officer figures in Kepis for an upcoming game as they are so distinctive.


Another bunch of Skytrex figures, this time from the French command pack, which contained no less than 11 figures, which I think must have been an error. Slightly disappointingly, only three of them were in kepis, although it did have the inevitable pigeon team, like the Airfix WW1 set. Most of them were NCOS in greatcoats with helmets and rifles. Never mind, a cunning plan presented itself.


I just based up six of the figures as an extra pair of infantry stands. Five of these are Skytrex NCOs and the tall guy in the middle of the second base is Essex I think. He came out of my bag of spare gunners in Adrian helmets.

These will be useful supplements for my other SCW figures in Adrians, although they are very obviously wearing French style greatcoats too. My regular group seem to enjoy 1940 games, so it will be nice to have a few more proper French troops.


The three actual figures in kepis are these. Two of them with pistols and one with binoculars, they are all wearing greatcoats. I did the guy with binos in a kepi with a khaki cover (the most common configuration), a second in an uncovered kepi, so dark blue with a red top and finally one in an FFL kepi blanc. Yes I know only ORs were supposed to wear white kepi covers, but it is such an iconic piece of headgear.

Like the British and Russians, these were basecoated in Vallejo English Uniform, and then various details and highlights picked out with a pinwash around the equipment, inkwash on the flesh and a light drybrush.


Painting these finally finished my pot of Vallejo English Uniform! I've had this for years and it has painted hundreds of figures and provided mud on scores of vehicles. It was one of the first Vallejo paints I bought once my last pot of Humbrol Khaki ran out. I still absolutely hate dropper bottles as I prefer to dip my brush in the paint and not waste it on a palette, but this was great paint with lovely coverage and consistent colour right to the end. I could probably unscrew the top with a pair of pliers to get the last out, but I already had a replacement in stock as it is such a useful colour.

As a postscript, I've subsequently discovered that if I store the bottle upside down, there is still tons of usable paint in it. So a few more months life in it. Maybe you are supposed to store them upside down? Search me.