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Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World War II. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 September 2025

What wargame rules have influenced my World War II wargaming?

Whilst I was waiting for my wargaming mojo to return, I spent some time looking at the World War II wargame books on my shelves and thinking about how much they have influenced my World War II wargaming.

The first was Donald Featherstone's WAR GAMES ... and it was both his basic rules and Lionel Tarr's rules that I started using first.

My much battered copy of Donald Featherstone's WAR GAME. I do have a copy in much better condition and a copy of John Curry's reprint, but this volume has very fond memories for me.

In particular, the images of Lionel Tarr's Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War battle around Stalingrad ingrained themselves in my wargaming psyche and I still hanker to fight similar battles in my dotage!

The next was Charles Grant's BATTLE: PRACTICAL WARGAMING.

Once again, the battered cover of this book shows just how much usage it got in the years after I bought it.

The main text of this book had originally appeared as a series of articles in the long-defunct MECCANO MAGAZINE, and its influence on me was mainly the way in which Charles Grant organised his troops into units and sub-units and in his use of ROCO Minitanks. It is thanks to him that I have loads of T-34/85s and sWs half-tracks in my collection although most of them remain unpainted!

When it comes to showing how it was possible to model a whole variety of different military vehicles from the limited resources available at the time, John Sandar's AN INTRODUCTION TO WARGAMING stands head and shoulders above his contemporaries ... and his rules were bl**dy good as well!

Thanks to his influence, I have - over the years - converted all sorts of ROCO and Airfix military vehicles into something that I could not buy off-the-shelf ... as the recent photographs of my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collections show.

Some examples of John Sandar's vehicles, as featured in a book edited by Peter Young and entitled THE WAR GAME. The book was illustrated with photographs taken by Philip O Stearns.

I know that my old friend Chris Kemp (the designer of NQM or NOT QUITE MECHANISED) was also inspired by John Sandar's book, and his rules had a profound influence on my World War II wargaming. The original draft of the rules (which were originally titled PANZERBLITZ OR NOT QUITE MECHANISED) were quite literally drawn many years ago and I have followed their evolution and development ever since.

The cover of the very first edition of NQM. My copy was the first of only twenty!
The cover of the recently published edition of NQM.

NQM led indirectly to the development of Tim Gow's MEGABLITZ!, a set of rules that I had a small part in helping to develop.

I took part in many wargames using these excellent rules, and putting together armies for them led directly to the creation of my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection.

A Megablitz battle that I staged at a wargame club in Norwich.

Finally, Frank Chadwick's COMMAND DECISION ...

... (and particularly his bathtub campaign book BARBAROSSA 25) ...

...made me realise that I could stage a large-scale Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War campaign if I felt so inclined.


Other books that deserve an honourable mentions include LIONEL TARR'S MODERN WARGAMING RULES 1939-1945 (as recently published by John Curry as part of his 'History of Wargaming' Project ...

... and Gavin Lyall's OPERATION WARBOARD.


WAR GAMES was written by Donald Featherstone and published in 1962 by Stanley Paul (ISBN 0 09 064901 X). It was republished in a revised edition in 2014 by the History of Wargaming Project (ISBN 978 1 2918 5142 7).

BATTLE: PRACTICAL WARGAMING was written by Charles Grant and published in 1970 by Model & Allied Publications Ltd/Argus Press Ltd.

AN INTRODUCTION TO WARGAMING was written by John Sandars and published in 1975 by Pelham Books Ltd. (ISBN 0 7207 0681 3).

NOT QUITE MECHANISED was written by Chris Kemp and published in 2024 by Lulu Inc. (ISBN 978 1 4452 7312 9).

MEGABLITZ! was written by Tim Gow and published in 2002 by Stratagem Publications.

COMMAND DECISION and BARBAROSSA 25 were written by Frank Chadwick and published in 1986 and 1988 respectively by Game Designers Workshop.

LIONEL TARR'S MODERN WARGAMING RULES 1939-1945 was compiled by John Curry and published in 2017 by The History of Wargaming Project (ISBN 978 1 3269 1498 1).

OPERATION WARBOARD was written by Gavin Lyall and published in 1976 by A&C Black (ISBN 0 7138 1646 6). It was republished in 2013 by the History of Wargaming Project (ISBN 978 1 2913 2352 8)

Friday, 5 September 2025

It’s back … but it’s not as bad as it was … and it’s helped me set some wargame-related priorities

That pesky virus/bug is back again, but its effects are somewhat reduced!

I half expected that this would happen as several other people have mentioned this boomerang effect in blog posts and comments … and in several cases, it lasted on and off for several weeks.

As part of my strategy to cope with the debilitating effects of the virus/bug, I have decided to set myself three wargame-related priorities, one short-term, one medium-term, and one long-term. There are, respectively :

  1. Complete the next Portable Wargame Compendium by the beginning of November so that it can be published in time for Christmas.
  2. Write a set of World War II rules for the Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War that I can use with my vehicle and figure collection.
  3. Complete renovating my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection.

This means that I don’t expect to do very much with my Belle Époque collection for the next few months … although that might well change if my interest in my medium- and long-term priorities flags at some point.

Wednesday, 3 September 2025

My Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection: Part 6: The unfinished figures are finished … and my mojo is returning!

As I mentioned in an earlier blog post, I discovered a number of figures that I had not finished renovating … but now they are! (It’s worth noting that I also found a small number of German figures that were also unfinished, and these are also shown below.)

The newly-completed figures include:

4 x German Officers (including a metal copy of an original figure from the first Airfix German Infantry box!)

6 x Russian Officers (3 of whom are Naval officers)

4 x Cavalry

13 x Naval Infantry (I have since discovered two more of these figures that need to be completed.)

5 x Infantry in greatcoats and fur hats (Ushanka)

4 x Infantry in tunics and fur hats (Ushanka)

12 x Infantry in tunics and side caps (Pilotka)

17 x Infantry in tunics and helmets

Completing these figures and reading Charles D Winchester’s books has certainly gone a long way to reviving my wargaming mojo … and I am already contemplating adding some more stuff to this collection and fighting some wargames with them.

Sunday, 31 August 2025

My Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection: Part 5: German Allies

The second REALLY USEFUL BOX also contained the figures and armoured vehicles of two German allies in my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection.

Its contents comprised:

1 x Hungarian Officer

5 x Hungarian Gun crew

12 x Hungarian Infantry

2 x Toldi Light Tanks (1:76th-scale resin)

1 x Spanish Officer

8 x Spanish Infantry

Saturday, 30 August 2025

A box of delights

On Thursday, a large box from my old friend David Crook (the man behind A WARGAMING ODYSSEY blog) was delivered by courier. I was feeling just about well enough to open it and to peer inside ... and what I found confirmed that this was a true 'box of delights'!

I have now had time to carefully unpack the contents which included:

6 x Medium guns (2 different scratch built types [4 and 2] made by Eric Knowles)

2 x Russian 152mm Gun M1935 (Br-2)

2 x Howitzers (Scratch built by Eric Knowles)

1 x Russian 76.2mm Gun

German Fallschirmjäger (including a mountain gun, a 28mm schwere Panzerbüchse 41 (sPzB 41) Anti-tank Gun, an 81mm Mortar, a Heavy Machine Gun, and two motorcycles with sidecars)

German coastal defence troops (including 2 x 75mm sIG 18 Infantry Guns, 2 x 50mm Pak 38 Anti-tank Guns, 2 x 47mm PaK(t) Anti-tank Guns, 2 x 20mm Anti-aircraft Guns, 2 x 81mm Mortars, and 2 x Heavy Machine Guns).


A bonus was the inclusion of six of David Crook's models, 5 ironclads [4 Turkish and 1 British] and a coastal defence fort.

These will fit in very nicely with my Belle Époque collection and might well encourage me to build some more ships of my own in future.

Friday, 29 August 2025

My Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection: Part 4: German figures

The second REALLY USEFUL BOX contained the German figures in my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection.

Its contents comprised:

7 x Officers

32 x Gun crew

16 x Repurposed World War I Infantry

56 x Infantry (i.e. 1:76th-scale)

30 x Infantry (i.e. 1:72nd-scale)

1 x Officer (who was missed from the first photograph included in this blog post)

1 x Feldgendarmerie

2 x Pack mules

Wednesday, 27 August 2025

Recent reading material

During my 'break' from wargaming, I have been doing some reading. I have already mentioned that I intended to read 1864: THE FORGOTTEN WAR THAT SHAPED MODERN EUROPE by Tom Buk-Swienty.

Well, I have now read it ... and thoroughly enjoyed it, just as I did when I read it back in 2015. I might not yet be ready to refight the Battles of Dybbøl or Als ... but I hope to do so in the not too distant future.

I have also been reading two books about the Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War. Both were written by Charles D Winchester, who is a military historian and wargamer with whom I am very well acquainted. 

The first is OSTFRONT: HITLER'S WAR ON RUSSIA 1941-45 ...

... and the second is HITLER's WAR IN RUSSIA.

The second book is actually a very heavily revised edition of the first book and does not include the extensive illustrations and maps in OSTFRONT: HITLER'S WAR IN RUSSIA 1941-45. In fact, it is almost a complete rewrite, and I did not notice that the text of both books were at all similar.

I read these last two books because I have been sorting out and cataloguing my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection and it seemed rather appropriate. In fact, they gave me lots to think about whilst I was doing this 'sorting the button box' exercise, and I am already developing plans in my mind to add some more vehicles, artillery, and figures to the collection. Perhaps my wargaming mojo is beginning to return ... which is no bad thing!


1864: THE FORGOTTEN WAR THAT SHAPED MODERN EUROPE was written by Tom Buk-Swienty, translated into English by Annette Buk-Swienty, and published in English by Profile Books in April 2015 (ISBN 978 1 781 25276 5). (It was originally published in Denmark in 2008 by Gyldendal, entitled 1864: SLAGTEBÆNK DYBBØL [which can be translated as ‘The Dybbøl Slaughterhouse’].)

OSTFRONT: HITLER'S WAR ON RUSSIA 1941-45 was written by Charles D Winchester and published by Osprey Publishing in 1998 (ISBN 978 1 8553 2711 5).

HITLER'S WAR IN RUSSIA was written by Charles D Winchester and published by Osprey Publishing in 2007 (ISBN 978 1 8460 3195 3).

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

My Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection: Part 3: German armour, artillery, and transport

The first of the REALLY USEFUL BOXES that I opened also contained the German armour, artillery, and transport bases that I renovated, varnished, and rebased during the COVID pandemic.

Its contents comprised:

2 x PzKpfw IV Tanks (1:87th-scale ROCO with additional parts from the Airfix PzKpfw IV model)

2 x PzKpfw III Tanks (1:87th-scale ROCO)

1 x Sd.Kfz 231 (6-Rad) Armoured Car (1:76th-scale Matchbox)

1 x Sd.Kfz 221 Armoured Car (1:76th-scale Airfix)

1 x 150mm sIG 33 auf Fahrgestell Panzerkampfwagen II (Sf) Self-propelled Gun (1:76th-scale scratch built using a ROCO PzKpfw III chassis, Airfix StuG III road wheels, and Plasticard bodywork)

1 x Sturm-Infanteriegeschütz 33B with 150mm sIG 33 Self-propelled Gun (1:87th-scale scratch built using a ROCO PzKpfw III chassis, ROCO PzKpfw VI JagdTiger casemate, and Plasticard)

2 x Panzerjäger I Self-propelled 47mm Anti-tank Gun (1:76th-scale)

3 x 105mmm leFH 18 Field Howitzer (1:76th-scale Skytrex)

1 x 150mm sIG 33 Infantry Howitzer (1:76th-scale Skytrex)

3 x 75mm sIG 18 Infantry Gun (1:76th-scale Skytrex [2] and Irregular Miniatures [1])

1 x 75mm Škoda Gebirgskanone M.15 Mountain Gun (1:100th-scale Peter Laing Miniatures 150mm sFH 13)

3 x 75mm FK 16 nA Field Guns (1:76th-scale scratch built for various spare parts [2] and Irregular Miniatures [1])

4 x 50mm Pak 38 Anti-tank Guns (1:76th-scale Skytrex)

2 x 37mm Pak 36 Anti-tank Guns (1:76th-scale Skytrex [1] and Irregular Miniatures [1])

1 x Sd.Kfz. 251 Armoured Half-track (1:76th-scale Matchbox)

1 x Sd.Kfz. 11 Light Half-track (1:76th-scale Matchbox)

3 x Sd.Kfz. 6 Half-track (1:87-scale ROCO Sd.Kfz 7 [2] and 1:76th-scale modified Airfix Sd.Kfz. 7 [1])

3 x Opel Blitz Trucks (1:87-scale ROCO)

2 x Krupp Protze Kfz. 70 Light Trucks (1:76th-scale Matchbox)

1 x Light Truck (1:100-scale Mercedes-Benz L3000 Indian Jones 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' Diecast)

5 x Volkswagen Type 82 Kubelwagens (1:76th-scale Airfix [3] and 1:87th-scale ROCO [2])

1 x Mercedes-Benz Staff Car (1:87th-scale Viking)

1 x Medium Car (1:87th-scale ROCO Dodge WC-56 Command Car)

2 x Hoch Kfz. 15 Medium Cars (1:76th-scale metal [1] and resin [1])

Saturday, 23 August 2025

My Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection: Part 2: Russian figures

The second REALLY USEFUL BOX contained the Russian figures in my Eastern Front/Great Patriotic War collection.

Its contents comprised:

17 x Officers

34 x Gun crew

35 x Infantry in greatcoats

37x  Infantry in tunics

13x  Factory Militia

4 x Assorted Infantry

I then discovered a number of figures that had not been competed (i.e. the bases needed finishing).

6 x Officers (3 are Naval Infantry Officers)

4 x Cavalry

1 x Maxim Machine Gun and 1 crewman

15 x Naval Infantry

37 x Infantry in greatcoats and tunics

The latter figures will make a great 'sorting the button box' exercise for me and completing them will hopefully go some way to reinvigorating my wargaming mojo.