Sunday, March 17, 2013

Soviet counter-attack


Having exceeded their own objectives in the first battle the German HQ paused for a few brief hours to resupply and allow their flanking units to close up. That was the chance the Soviets needed. Comrade Neilov requested the opportunity to launch a counter-attack from Lieutenant General Lopatin and was quickly granted permission (rolled 3+ on a d6).


Wall-to-wall Russians!
 The Germans had placed picket units to their front and so were not totally surprised by this bold manoeuvre. What they were not expecting was a wall of infantry coming storming towards their positions.

I didn't bring all of my soviet blinds so there are several white blinds in this picture but this is the sight that greeted the German defenders. Indeed a single advance squad of Germans has just been slaughtered in close assault by 2nd platoon (deployed to the left) in the ruined house.



1st Platoon (Conscripts) now deployed in the foreground. Company HQ leading from the front.
 The Soviets pushed on quickly all across the table. One blind in particular rolled very high for movement and popped out into the main crossroads at the table centre. Unfortunately when it was spotted the blind trned out to be the Soviet Company HQ. The German commander sent out a snatch squad from the department store building and a furious close combat ensued in which was won by the big man with him killing two of attackers and driving off the rest. However he then succumbed to wounds.


The Soviet commander fights off a German squad but is killed in the process.

 This heroic effort seemed to spur the Soviets on. Next card the centre platoon launched an assault on the department store and a vicious close-range firefight took place over two rounds. The Germans, more of the veteran 21st PanzerGrenadiers, had two squads plus a MMG team in the building and should have made short work of the attack but their 46 dice managed to kill 5 Soviets whilst the Russians' ~22 dice killed the same number of Germans and a second round of close combat was fought. This was eventually won by the defenders and the remains of the Soviet platoon retreated back into cover and would play no further part in the battle.

German survivors hold the department store after the mega-close combat (Soviet platoon pinned in building to left)


On the right flank the fourth Soviet platoon worked it's way through a ruined three story row of town houses but were stopped in it's tracks by a second German MMG and another squad of PzrGrenadiers placed to have great fields of fire into the central crossroads.

2nd German MMG in crossfire position

The Soviets were not quite done. A shout of Hurrah! and 2nd platoon attempted to storm the department store again on an Allied Human Wave card. Unfortunately the heavily rubbled terrain prevented most of the squads from reaching the combat and the Germans held on although they were almost spent as a fighting force in the centre as a result of shock and casualtied after this. At this point though the attackers were hit with more crossfire from flank MMG and an uncommon success for the German snipers present had them actually kill a Russian from 2nd squad and the Soviet player began to despair.

2nd platoon recoil back to the trenches in a flattened row of houses.


  On the right the 4th platoon inch their way through the town houses but they are repeatedly hammered by MMG fire and can make no headway.
 

4th Platoon are stopped dead.

 The last hope for the Soviets lay with the conscripts over on the left. The Germans in the department store are too few to bring much fire to bear and the MMG team in there had just retreated from their position so the way lay open. Unfortunately the conscripts, despite not taking any casualties so far, still only roll two dice for movement and the best any of their squads got in the densely-rubbled cityscape was four inches.



The game concripts cannot overcome the rubble

 With this event the time ran out on the game. The Soviets had spent all of their initial 12 resource points on the infantry and two snipers (who were rubbish again). They gained two points from occupying a row 1 building early on but that was all. They did manage to have 67 men still on the table and these (divided by 12 and rounded down) gave them 7 dice total in the post-game follow-on phase. The Germans spent 7 points on troops leaving them with 5 remaining. They earned 4.4 points for controlling streets 2 and 3 for all the game rounded down to 4. They had only 23 men remaining on the table (divided by 12 rounded down to 1!) which meant that they had 10 dice for the post-game phase.

The Soviets were three dice down. If all went badly then, even though they were the attackers in this battle, there was a chance that they would lose more campaign sectors. As it turned out the Soviets rolled well the the Germans less so. The Germans won the phase by one clear dice but this wasn't enough to allow them to advance on the campaign map. The Soviets didn't advance either and they did use up some of their strategic reserve with this assault so they will be weaker in the next two battles but what they did do, with odds and sods troops scraped together into an assault group, was kill another 18 of the Panzer Grenadiers who are now down to 50 men in their company from a starting total of 82. They are beginning to feel the strain of this urban warfare, a type of combat for which they are not thoroughly trained.

The position after battle 2









Monday, March 4, 2013


September 1942 Stalingrad - Von Paulus' powerful Sixth Army has reached Stalingrad and wishes to capture this important city in the heart of the Russian Motherland.
Doing so would cut a major supply route from the oil fields around the Caspian Sea to Moscow and the north. Secondly, and politically more significant to Hitler, the capture of the city bearing Stalin's name would, it is believed, strike a decisive blow to Soviet morale all across the continent.

Defending the city is the recently formed Soviet 62nd Rifle army headed, at this time, by Lieutenant General A. I. Lopatin.



This campaign plots the progress of the 21st Panzer Grenadier Regiment, part of the 24th Panzer Division, as it assaults the outskirts to the south of the city and tries to push on through to the Volga where, it is hoped, artillery observers can throttle the supply routes of the Soviet defenders by interdicting the ferry crossings over the river.

Opposing the Germans initially are elements of the 33rd Rifle Division although in these heightened times anything and everything will be used to keep the invaders from their goals.



 The campaign is designed to be pretty linear. The 21st Regiment has been assigned a narrow battle frontage and their 'slice' of Stalingrad is 5 segments deep. Success will be measured by whether they can reach the banks of the Volga (the 5th segment) and how long they can stay there.


I am trying out a new campaign movement system which I hope will provide the opposing commanders with plenty of challenging decisions that will affect the outcome of each tabletop encounter and subsequent progress after the battle . 

I'm using IABSM v3 and whilst I know the general disdain that Rich has for points systems I am actually trying out a type of 'resource points' system for the campaign.

Each commander has a number of resource points he can spend to purchase units before and during a battle.The Germans will usually be given more resource points the further they progress on the table top - to simulate German HQs tendencies for reinforcing success. The Soviets will gain points for how long they can hold on to effectively 'streets' on the tabletop. Providing an overarching command decision for the commanders is the fact that after the battle is finished a follow-on assault is played out. And both sides roll dice for any unused resource points. This is designed to prevent any one side piling masses of troops onto the table - sure they are going to win that battle but they will have exhausted their reserve - and the opposition will be able to utilise their unused reserve to decide how far along the campaign map the action moves.

I also wanted to model the way in which Stalingrad chewed up some of the best troops in the Wermacht and so I am limiting the number of good troops that the German commander has access to. I hope to do this by giving each side a small number of core units - an IABSM company of veteran Panzergrenadiers and  a veteran Pioneer platoon from the 21st Regiment plus a few other bits and pieces. I will take note of their casualties in each battle and their reduced numbers may begin to tell later on in the campaign. The Germans will be able to call on as many regular infantry platoons as they want but they will cost the same as the core troops, they will only have 1 lmg and they won't be veterans.

In a similar way the Soviets will have a small number of core troops that the will be able to call on - elements from the 13th Guards Division have been landing in recent days and there are other units that will make a showing.


So onto the first battle.

The Soviets started the game with 10 resource points. They chose two regular infantry platoons at three points each (they didn't have access to core troops in the first encounter) plus two snipers at 0.5 point each. They deployed in a forward defence with one platoon on the hill on their left and the other covering the outskirts of the city and the rachel (deep natural ditch) going into the centre.

The Germans had 12 resource points to start with. They selected two Panzergrenadier platoons at 3 points each plus two MMG teams. They had an initial three stonks which usefully hit the hill, the first Soviet squad in the forward position in the rachel and the building on which the snipers were placed.




Fortunately the effects of the stonks were minimal - indeed the snipers weren't affected at all.

The Germans sent two blinds up the Rachel (the two MMG teams). The MMGs spotted the leading Soviet squad in the rachel and generally gave it a bad time inflicting lots of shock although not may kills. (no pictures here)

 Two blinds  went up the centre of the table, avoiding the trenchworks on the hill. The front one was the result of a very eager 22" on 4d6 and ended up with the 1st platoon almost reaching the built up area. The blind at the rear was a dummy and Russian spotting attempts meant that the Germans got quite far forward in the centre and on their left flank with the other platoon



 The 2nd German platoon reached the edge of the city and charged the single Soviet squad there which took some casualties and shock and ran back  into the built up area.

2nd platoon routs the Russians






 The German 1st platoon is finally spotted and begins to trade fire with the Soviets on the hill and the last infantry squad in on their left flank. The two Russian snipers have a dreadful day rolling either double 1 or double two three times in five shots - their only saving grace a pin from one shot. Maybe that stonk affected their sniper sights?

1st Platoon starts to take casualties and shock.


 The next two pictures are of the penetration of the city by the German left flank. the Russian commander called up a platoon of infantry and a single infantry squad as reserves. When their cards arrived the platoon where put in the centre of the town to try and block the German 1st Platoon and the single Soviet squad fortunately arrived and was assigned to the extreme right flank (green blind) where their appearance prevented the Germans from capturing a third row building.



Germans take a second row building and claim more resource points
 
We ran out of time at that point and added up the resource points used and gained. You get back some 'dice' for the troops you have on the board who are not dead - but not as many as they cost to field. The Soviets started on 10 points, earned about an extra 4 point but spent 11 points which gave them three dice in the follow-on assault. They had 67 troops left alive which converted to another 6 dice So 9 dice in all.

The Germans started with 12 points and spent 8 and they earned two points for occupying any position in the first row (the hill or the rachel) and three points for capturing that house on their left flank so 7 dice. they had around 48 men left so another 4 dice.

The dice were rolled and the Germans ended up with a breakthrough which on the campaign map meant they reached and took section three leaving the next battle to be over section 4.


The follow-on assault is a good idea I hope but needs some work on the actually dice rolling and outcome. I may have been generous with allocating one dice for every 10 men as well. As it was both commanders have said they liked the game and are looking forward to the next instalment.

Grah