Sensei.Tokugawa
Posts: 341
Joined: 4/6/2010 From: Wieluñ, Poland Status: offline
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Several reasons behind: Korea's already in progress, it started about two years ago when I commenced reading Halberstam's "The Coldest Winter". However my opponent's a bit slow, even in comparison to my used-to-be regular turnrate and I am only gearing up for the '51 late spring offensive to capture Pyongyang with another amphibious and airborne assault perhaps. Besides I have been playing salamon's "Iran-Iraq War 1980 - 1988" as Iraq and Naples 1943 and "From Stalingrad to Kharkov" too ( you know my penchant for the third battle of Kharkov ). Rarely any game is as flexible as TOAW III to reflect low - intensity small scale, but heated and violent conflicts in remote and obscure areas or model hypothetical situations to wargame case studies. I have been avoiding hypothetical scenarios ( and modern ones or the Cold War era due to superficial, artificial and generic handling of aerial and maritime operations )long enough as they obviously lacked the historic feeling behind, but I also often felt that the historic ones, once launched, were often deviating very dramatically from the historical truth - like "Boonie Rats" where the MACV / ARVN ware able to builn an impenetrable line along the Ho Chi Minh trail and Laotian and Cambodian border to prevent incursions and infiltrations and went on to wage the trench positional warfare in the jungle. Apparently the unit and map scale were all wrong which I hadn't seen before. Virtually no such limitations and unpleasant nasty surprises in the set I have compiled above, Falklands 1982 and the Turkish invasion of Cyprus being the only exceptions. So Herr Oberst, want to try yourself out as the Blue Force on Tukhaschevsky's battlefield?
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"-What if one doesn't make it? -Then we know he was no good for SpetsNaz. ..." V. Suvorov, "Spetsnaz;the Story behind the Soviet SAS" ...No escape from Passchendaele .../ God Dethroned, "Passiondale"
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