Jan 25

Received my B&J yesterday with plans to play Meat Grinder for the Winter War Tourney, Rich D. was coming by for a game of ASL. But with B&J in my hands, Rich’s copy also showed up yesterday too, we decided instead of playing a boring AP scenario, lets try one of the B&J scenarios and boy, almost 90% look like ones that will be needing some tender loving care .

Some really tough choices to put on the table straight away with the like of Thrilla in Manila, Alligator Tanks, and so on, basically we were looking for something that would fit well in an evening Tourney environment. So we finally decided on BFP 51 Kwajalien Crush. This is a full seven turn scenario with the Americans attacking across board 37 into board 35 hit-ville overlay. Only half of both boards are used with the Americans needing to capture 10 buildings on board 35, all Huts are SSR’ed into wooden buildings, so no hut rules needed, thankfully.

Both sides look pretty nifty to play, the IJA have a lot of weak squads but they also have a 75AA gun and 12.7 AA gun plus they get two pillboxes which means they can have tunnels from a pillbox to a building on board 35, a great end game tactic to use for the IJA too, so the Americans will have to be wary of that one. IJA reinforcements enter on turn and thus will prove important for game end too, this group consists of two 447, 9-0, LMG, and one Ka Mi and one Ka-Chi, the Ka Chi is a BFP produced counter and mounts a 47L MA.

The Americans are attacking the IJA with some serious firepower consisting of 17 Squads, mostly 1st line, great leadership including a 9-2 and 4 AFV’s with two of them being M3A1F’s Stuarts, these guys are beasts too, they not only have their Bow mounted FT, they have a 4FPCMG, Cannister, and a regular 37LL that can fire both HE and AP. Looking at the maps, the best avenue of attack is close to the northern edge of the map and up the middle, attacking from the south is not doable just because the that part of the map is too densely packed with jungle and thus your Armor wont be able to support such an attack. Although, sending a few squads south will force the IJA to keep forces in that area to keep any small Ami force from breaking through to Hut-ville.

As for our game, it lasted around 5 hours and so I think this one would be a great evening tourney scenario for like Friday or Saturday night. The game Rich and I played was pretty tight through out the 7 turns. My attack was from both the north and the Middle with a few squads attacking south into the board 37 woods so as to force the IJA from diverting forces to my main Attack. As expected the IJA had an up front defense, and these guys held my attack up for around 4 turns. Lost one Stuart to the 75 AA gun, and a few squads, but the key moment came when one of my squads berzerked and charged into the 75AA guns hex. thus I was able to get my FT toting leader close enough to fire.

By turn 6 I had lost an M4 to street fighting, and a few more Ami squads died from CC, but the IJA was getting very thinned out themselves, those IJA conscripts are so very brittle, if they fail ELR, they become broken HS, or if they roll boxcars on an MC, they just die. fortunately for me, One of Rich’s pillboxes was set-up no where near the village, but he did have one set-up in the village proper and used it at game end to advance into CC with one of my squads. His Armor did whjat any good ASL tanker would do, and DI’ed my last Sherman, his other AFV DI’ed my FT Stuart and the stupid crew had to abandon the vehicle because the moron could not pass his TC.

I did end up taking out one of the Japanese tanks with an MA shot from the immobilized Sherman, got rate and then tried to knock down one of the few remaining IJA squads only to roll boxcars. Then on IJA turn 7, I rolled a one to repair an MA, the dice gods were with me and as I pointed out in the above post, the poor IJA squad ended up getting whacked.

All in All a great scenario, some really good luck for the IJA in the beginning but my initial bad luck turned around and with a little perseverance, I able to win this game. A few things though for a better IJA defense, try to keep the 12.7 in the village proper, that way, any where the Americans go to take a building, they will have to face down 24FP Point blank. Rich used a lot of TH heroes, 4 in all, in an attempt to knock out my armor, this drew a lot of fire, and he was hoping for a few things to happen, I would break the FT on the Stuart, it had a B# of 10, I would roll his sniper or he might get lucky and knock out my tank, fortunately, none of those things happened to his charging of course lol. Keep the pillboxes close to the village with tunnels going to one of the buildings and thus you can possibly ambush an Ami squad or take back a building.

This is one I would like to try again, but not until I have worked my way through most of this pack ha ha.

Scott Holst

BFP-51

Jan 21

Zeb Doyle

John, thanks a lot for taking the time to write up an AAR and for the kind words. Although I don’t think you missed or omitted anything, I’d like to respond with my view of the action and give my own idea of the balance. So, here’s my official BFP-67 Coke Hill AAR:

It all started with a white-knuckle drive from Austin to Houston on Friday. The plan was to spend the evening giving our own Nick Drinkwater a bon voyage before the oil industry drags him off to Angola, and then spend Saturday dicing John into oblivion. Things didn’t start so well due to a delayed start and a pouring rainstorm following me all the way to Nick’s house, but at least I arrived in one piece. The evening didn’t improve, with Nick dragging me off to see Avatar, and afterward trying to convince me that the movie is a complex allegory about the American exploitation of the West and its indigenous people (for those who don’t know, Nick is British and loves to tweak his American cousins about it). I swiftly reclaimed the moral high ground by pointing out that Avatar is clearly about the depredations of his own beloved oil industry. Forced to the defensive by my superior logic and wit, Nick quickly shifted gears to an asinine discussion of how to represent the final battle scene in the movie using ASL:

“So, the big hammer-head rhino thingies, are they more like a Panther or a Tiger?”

“Uh…I don’t really care”

“No, no, wait, I’ve got it…Sherman jumbos are perfect for them. OK, and on to the Navi…obviously heroes, but I think their inherent range is greater than four, don’t you? Oooh, and they need ROF, definitely!!! Two or three for the ROF???”

“Still not caring…”

I was never so happy when the sun came out Saturday morning and we headed out to actually play some real ASL. BFP-67 is a really good-looking scenario designed by Chas Smith and out of the just released Blood and Jungle pack. It’s set in Borneo, 1945, and the attacking Aussies are trying in seven turns to capture eight level two hill hexes on board 50 and then move 24 EVP onto or north of hexrow U. They have plenty of troops to do this, with 14 elite squads, OBA support, and three Matildas, including a very nasty flame-spouting variant (I love the name Grond for this, BTW).

This is no simple mop-up mission, however; the Japanese may be at their end of their tether, but they still have plenty of teeth. Seven squads and four crews are supported by a 10-2 leader, a .50cal HMG, 2x DC, 2x MMG, a 75mn ART gun, several pillboxes, trenches, mines, and panjis. Factor in the jungle terrain, the lavish late-war availability of THHs and possibility of A-T Set DCs, and it’s really a dream scenario for anyone that likes to construct intricate Japanese defenses. That certainly includes me, and so I was really looking forward to the game.

So, all excited, I showed up, greeted John, pulled out the required gear, and then hit the first of several speed bumps that was to doom me to defeat. Although we’d arranged to play days earlier, John wanted to be as fair as possible and roll for sides. Given that he’s a relative PTO newbie, and I love playing the Japanese, I probably should have simply claimed that side and prepared a set up. Instead, we waited until that morning, the dice spoke and gave me the defense, and I set up with the clock ticking away in the background.

This was actually a fairly minor factor in the game, but I mention it because I disagree with John’s assessment that the scenario has a somewhat pro-Australian tilt. As it turned out, I had bigger problems and even having an unlimited amount of time to prepare would only have slightly improved things for me. That’s because my last ASL game was in June, and I was super duper rusty. As an especially embarrassing example, I thought long and hard about what to do with my DCs. Using one as a AT-Set DC per G1.6121 would be cool, especially since the Aussie tanks are 7 EVP each, can almost satisfy that part of the VC by themselves, are extremely difficult for the Japanese to deal with, and there are lots of road hexes. However, after some quick thinking, I arrived at what I thought was an even more clever plan.

Looking at board 50, the gully makes it very hard, especially for armor, to get to the back hill without using the V5 bridge. I’d just use my 10-2 to quickly set the DC, drop the bridge, and then the double crest-line created by the gully and the level one hills would prevent the nasty Matildas from crossing anywhere but on the most remote flanks. I could put all kinds of weapons back there and keep them safe from the 32FP mobile flame-tank! Even if I’d been right about the rules, I then only put the .50 cal on that side of the gully. The ART gun, in particular was way too far forward, and would have done much better on the far side of the gully as well. That’s how I ended up picking a bad plan and only following half-way through on it. Did I mention I was rusty?

At any rate, I made a few other minor gaffes during set-up with my squad placements, but I’m sure you’re all getting tired of my whining, and so I’ll try to focus on the positive. I was happy with my pillboxes in level two hill hexes in X2 and X3, each one guarded by HIP units and covered by panji and mines. The overall plan was to keep the .50 cal and 10-2 in the rear, chopping up the Aussies as much as possible and the rest of my covering force just running out the clock via delay tactics. I wasn’t optimistic about taking out a tank and so I figured John would achieve the EVP target. My real hope of victory was to hide the pillboxes until late in the game. Hopefully at that point, the Aussies wouldn’t have the time to clear out both the guarding units and the pillbox units and advance inside to actually Control every last level two hex.

Since John has already done a great job of describing the action, I won’t be too detailed here. The opening phase saw the Aussies coming on and picking off two of my squads I’d left too far forwards. Some lucky CC rolls for me allowed me to trade bodies pretty equally, but I didn’t slow John down at all and he was rightfully happy to kill Japanese at a one-to-one ratio. Meanwhile, my genius idea of blowing the bridge wasn’t going so well. Needing a five or less on one die to place the DC (using a squad and the 10-2), I rolled a six and my best leader was kept away from the .50 cal post for a key turn yelling at a bunch of fumble-fingered wanna-be bridge blowers

This was especially annoying as John started to push over the Y6-Y7 hill going for my gun. The .50 cal squeezed off a shot, and would have kept ROF but with the 10-2 MIA they Cowered. That opened up my gun to far too many targets and it was overrun by a Matilda and then swarmed by a platoon of Aussie infantry. This was one of John’s two really bad moves of the game in my mind: the gun was in the open and he advanced some concealed infantry in using the cover of the tank. Had he dropped concealment, my crew would have had a non-HtH 1:2 on one squad or something equally pathetic. As it was, the concealed infantry forced an ambush roll, albeit only with a -1 drm in my favor. I didn’t get it, and my crew went down quietly as expected, but a 1:6 -2 HtH ambush attack looking for a 6 on the whole stack would have been pretty fun…

As the game wore on, a little bit of the ‘non-average’ luck occurred that John mentioned in his AAR. None of it was too material though; certainly watching him pull seven straight black cards for his OBA as he went after concealed targets was frustrating, but a series of high scatter rolls and the constricted jungle terrain meant he only ever got one mission off all game anyway. I also had a HS sitting next to an unsupported Matilda fail four straight THH rolls before watching the unscathed tank drive away. That was certainly frustrating as well, but not that unlikely, and I would have needed another good roll even had a THH appeared. Likewise, a Mild Breeze springing up allowed the Matilda sDs to generate some massive smoke screens, but by that point there were just too many Aussies for me to handle. In reality, most of the mid-game consisted of John doing a great job of taking apart my poor set-up and grinding down my Japanese.

By the end game, my brain slowly started to emerge from its self-imposed ASL hibernation and I belatedly remembered that B10.52 prohibits vehicles from crossing double-crest lines, but then goes on to mention that gullies aren’t crest-lines. Oooops! If John wanted to, the Matildas could cross the stream despite my bridge-dropping tricks. At this point I realized I’d tried to be far too clever…not going for an A-T Set DC had been a criminal omission. With my prospects dimming by the second, I watched John continue his masterful attack. The .50 cal got smoked in by a MTR, the flame belching Matilda continued to run rampant, and large amounts of Aussie infantry converged on my pillboxes.

At that point, my remaining tricks and traps went off pretty well. Advancing against difficult terrain across a panji hexside into a jungle location containing a HIP Japanese unit is a recipe for disaster. The only problem was that my screening forces hadn’t slowed and attrited John’s troops enough, and I ended up needing him to advance a huge stack into CC for me to try to get with a good roll. Sadly for the suspense level of the game, he did a great job managing his risk with the infantry and never even gave me the opportunity. In fact, aside from a gratuitous Matilda ESB check that made my eyes go very wide and was his second bad move of the game, John used his position of strength to take me almost completely out of the game. When his avenging infantry peeled back the pillbox guards and finally attacked my Japanese actually huddled in their pillboxes, and I didn’t get a miraculous CC result, it was all over on turn five of seven. Ouch!

Well, when I screw up that badly and still have a good time, it speaks very well of both the opponent and the scenario. I want to congratulate John on a convincing win. If my AAR has read like it was written by Paul Carell with a “I lost, he didn’t win” style, that’s only because I don’t want to knock the scenario. I think it was my mistakes and not any balance problems that turned John’s well-earned win into a blowout and has him thinking it might be pro-Aussie. For the numerous whiny reasons listed above, I disagree and feel that a solid Japanese set-up has a very good chance of victory.

That brings me to just a few brief scenario comments. The card portrayed a very interesting situation, with a powerful Australian force confronting a very entrenched foe. The Japanese, however, have enough tools at their disposal that it shouldn’t devolve into a bug hunt (obviously, with a decent set-up!). Having played it, I still think that’s the case. It’s a situation where both sides can throw some punches, does a nice job of showing off the respective combatants approach to battle, and offers a lot of fun without being so meaty you can’t easily play it in a day. Because of all that, I recommend it….but be sure to read up on A-T Set DCs first and then use one!

Thanks again to John for playing, and thanks to you for reading,

Zeb

John, thanks a lot for taking the time to write up an AAR and for the kind words. Although I don’t think you missed or omitted anything, I’d like to respond with my view of the action and give my own idea of the balance. So, here’s my official BFP-67 Coke Hill AAR:

It all started with a white-knuckle drive from Austin to Houston on Friday. The plan was to spend the evening giving our own Nick Drinkwater a bon voyage before the oil industry drags him off to Angola, and then spend Saturday dicing John into oblivion. Things didn’t start so well due to a delayed start and a pouring rainstorm following me all the way to Nick’s house, but at least I arrived in one piece. The evening didn’t improve, with Nick dragging me off to see Avatar, and afterward trying to convince me that the movie is a complex allegory about the American exploitation of the West and its indigenous people (for those who don’t know, Nick is British and loves to tweak his American cousins about it). I swiftly reclaimed the moral high ground by pointing out that Avatar is clearly about the depredations of his own beloved oil industry. Forced to the defensive by my superior logic and wit, Nick quickly shifted gears to an asinine discussion of how to represent the final battle scene in the movie using ASL:

“So, the big hammer-head rhino thingies, are they more like a Panther or a Tiger?”
“Uh…I don’t really care”
“No, no, wait, I’ve got it…Sherman jumbos are perfect for them. OK, and on to the Navi…obviously heroes, but I think their inherent range is greater than four, don’t you? Oooh, and they need ROF, definitely!!! Two or three for the ROF???”
“Still not caring…”

I was never so happy when the sun came out Saturday morning and we headed out to actually play some real ASL. BFP-67 is a really good-looking scenario designed by Chas Smith and out of the just released Blood and Jungle pack. It’s set in Borneo, 1945, and the attacking Aussies are trying in seven turns to capture eight level two hill hexes on board 50 and then move 24 EVP onto or north of hexrow U. They have plenty of troops to do this, with 14 elite squads, OBA support, and three Matildas, including a very nasty flame-spouting variant (I love the name Grond for this, BTW).

This is no simple mop-up mission, however; the Japanese may be at their end of their tether, but they still have plenty of teeth. Seven squads and four crews are supported by a 10-2 leader, a .50cal HMG, 2x DC, 2x MMG, a 75mn ART gun, several pillboxes, trenches, mines, and panjis. Factor in the jungle terrain, the lavish late-war availability of THHs and possibility of A-T Set DCs, and it’s really a dream scenario for anyone that likes to construct intricate Japanese defenses. That certainly includes me, and so I was really looking forward to the game.

So, all excited, I showed up, greeted John, pulled out the required gear, and then hit the first of several speed bumps that was to doom me to defeat. Although we’d arranged to play days earlier, John wanted to be as fair as possible and roll for sides. Given that he’s a relative PTO newbie, and I love playing the Japanese, I probably should have simply claimed that side and prepared a set up. Instead, we waited until that morning, the dice spoke and gave me the defense, and I set up with the clock ticking away in the background.

This was actually a fairly minor factor in the game, but I mention it because I disagree with John’s assessment that the scenario has a somewhat pro-Australian tilt. As it turned out, I had bigger problems and even having an unlimited amount of time to prepare would only have slightly improved things for me. That’s because my last ASL game was in June, and I was super duper rusty. As an especially embarrassing example, I thought long and hard about what to do with my DCs. Using one as a AT-Set DC per G1.6121 would be cool, especially since the Aussie tanks are 7 EVP each, can almost satisfy that part of the VC by themselves, are extremely difficult for the Japanese to deal with, and there are lots of road hexes. However, after some quick thinking, I arrived at what I thought was an even more clever plan.

Looking at board 50, the gully makes it very hard, especially for armor, to get to the back hill without using the V5 bridge. I’d just use my 10-2 to quickly set the DC, drop the bridge, and then the double crest-line created by the gully and the level one hills would prevent the nasty Matildas from crossing anywhere but on the most remote flanks. I could put all kinds of weapons back there and keep them safe from the 32FP mobile flame-tank! Even if I’d been right about the rules, I then only put the .50 cal on that side of the gully. The ART gun, in particular was way too far forward, and would have done much better on the far side of the gully as well. That’s how I ended up picking a bad plan and only following half-way through on it. Did I mention I was rusty?

At any rate, I made a few other minor gaffes during set-up with my squad placements, but I’m sure you’re all getting tired of my whining, and so I’ll try to focus on the positive. I was happy with my pillboxes in level two hill hexes in X2 and X3, each one guarded by HIP units and covered by panji and mines. The overall plan was to keep the .50 cal and 10-2 in the rear, chopping up the Aussies as much as possible and the rest of my covering force just running out the clock via delay tactics. I wasn’t optimistic about taking out a tank and so I figured John would achieve the EVP target. My real hope of victory was to hide the pillboxes until late in the game. Hopefully at that point, the Aussies wouldn’t have the time to clear out both the guarding units and the pillbox units and advance inside to actually Control every last level two hex.

Since John has already done a great job of describing the action, I won’t be too detailed here. The opening phase saw the Aussies coming on and picking off two of my squads I’d left too far forwards. Some lucky CC rolls for me allowed me to trade bodies pretty equally, but I didn’t slow John down at all and he was rightfully happy to kill Japanese at a one-to-one ratio. Meanwhile, my genius idea of blowing the bridge wasn’t going so well. Needing a five or less on one die to place the DC (using a squad and the 10-2), I rolled a six and my best leader was kept away from the .50 cal post for a key turn yelling at a bunch of fumble-fingered wanna-be bridge blowers

This was especially annoying as John started to push over the Y6-Y7 hill going for my gun. The .50 cal squeezed off a shot, and would have kept ROF but with the 10-2 MIA they Cowered. That opened up my gun to far too many targets and it was overrun by a Matilda and then swarmed by a platoon of Aussie infantry. This was one of John’s two really bad moves of the game in my mind: the gun was in the open and he advanced some concealed infantry in using the cover of the tank. Had he dropped concealment, my crew would have had a non-HtH 1:2 on one squad or something equally pathetic. As it was, the concealed infantry forced an ambush roll, albeit only with a -1 drm in my favor. I didn’t get it, and my crew went down quietly as expected, but a 1:6 -2 HtH ambush attack looking for a 6 on the whole stack would have been pretty fun…

As the game wore on, a little bit of the ‘non-average’ luck occurred that John mentioned in his AAR. None of it was too material though; certainly watching him pull seven straight black cards for his OBA as he went after concealed targets was frustrating, but a series of high scatter rolls and the constricted jungle terrain meant he only ever got one mission off all game anyway. I also had a HS sitting next to an unsupported Matilda fail four straight THH rolls before watching the unscathed tank drive away. That was certainly frustrating as well, but not that unlikely, and I would have needed another good roll even had a THH appeared. Likewise, a Mild Breeze springing up allowed the Matilda sDs to generate some massive smoke screens, but by that point there were just too many Aussies for me to handle. In reality, most of the mid-game consisted of John doing a great job of taking apart my poor set-up and grinding down my Japanese.

By the end game, my brain slowly started to emerge from its self-imposed ASL hibernation and I belatedly remembered that B10.52 prohibits vehicles from crossing double-crest lines, but then goes on to mention that gullies aren’t crest-lines. Oooops! If John wanted to, the Matildas could cross the stream despite my bridge-dropping tricks. At this point I realized I’d tried to be far too clever…not going for an A-T Set DC had been a criminal omission. With my prospects dimming by the second, I watched John continue his masterful attack. The .50 cal got smoked in by a MTR, the flame belching Matilda continued to run rampant, and large amounts of Aussie infantry converged on my pillboxes.

At that point, my remaining tricks and traps went off pretty well. Advancing against difficult terrain across a panji hexside into a jungle location containing a HIP Japanese unit is a recipe for disaster. The only problem was that my screening forces hadn’t slowed and attrited John’s troops enough, and I ended up needing him to advance a huge stack into CC for me to try to get with a good roll. Sadly for the suspense level of the game, he did a great job managing his risk with the infantry and never even gave me the opportunity. In fact, aside from a gratuitous Matilda ESB check that made my eyes go very wide and was his second bad move of the game, John used his position of strength to take me almost completely out of the game. When his avenging infantry peeled back the pillbox guards and finally attacked my Japanese actually huddled in their pillboxes, and I didn’t get a miraculous CC result, it was all over on turn five of seven. Ouch!

Well, when I screw up that badly and still have a good time, it speaks very well of both the opponent and the scenario. I want to congratulate John on a convincing win. If my AAR has read like it was written by Paul Carell with a “I lost, he didn’t win” style, that’s only because I don’t want to knock the scenario. I think it was my mistakes and not any balance problems that turned John’s well-earned win into a blowout and has him thinking it might be pro-Aussie. For the numerous whiny reasons listed above, I disagree and feel that a solid Japanese set-up has a very good chance of victory.

That brings me to just a few brief scenario comments. The card portrayed a very interesting situation, with a powerful Australian force confronting a very entrenched foe. The Japanese, however, have enough tools at their disposal that it shouldn’t devolve into a bug hunt (obviously, with a decent set-up!). Having played it, I still think that’s the case. It’s a situation where both sides can throw some punches, does a nice job of showing off the respective combatants approach to battle, and offers a lot of fun without being so meaty you can’t easily play it in a day. Because of all that, I recommend it….but be sure to read up on A-T Set DCs first and then use one!

Thanks again to John for playing, and thanks to you for reading,

Zeb

Jan 21

John Hyler

Australians: John Hyler

Japanese: Zeb Doyle

Last Saturday, at Jay Harms’ house on our Monthly HHS ASL meeting, I had the pleasure of playing Zeb Doyle. I had not played Zeb since Owl-Con, 2008, so I anticipated a fun match. I was not disappointed. I have wanted to get into the PTO, so we decided upon BFP-67 Coke Hill, from the new Blood and Jungle scenario pack published by Bounding Fire Productions. Upon arrival, we diced for sides with Zeb being the Japanese player. This was good since Zeb is one of our best Oracles of ASL, so I was looking forward to seeing the tricks of the Japanese trade at work.

Prior to game-day, Zeb had vowed vengeance for an Owl-con defeat and had sharpened his skinning knife. I decided that I needed my finely honed fileting knife, and since this was Coke Hill, a 100pound note to savor the fruits of victory should providence smile upon me.

Coke Hill is a small, but violent scenario played on half (R-GG) of board 50. The attacking Australians are tasked with clearing out and controlling all of the level 2 hill hexes south of the stream, and also to have at least 24 exit VP on/north of hexrow U. To accomplish this, they have an impressive force: 14 4-5-8s and 3 2-4-8s, well lead by 5 leaders ranging from 9-1 to 8-0 with an assortment of SW, 3 LMGs, 2 51MTRs, 2 PIATs and 2 DCs. Supporting this INF force are three Matilda IIs, two of the late versions, with HE for the 40L MG, and a very nasty Frog (Grond), with a 32FP flamethrower MA, along with a module of 80mm OBA

The defending Japanese have 7 4-4-7s, 4 2-2-8s and one 1-2-7, lead by three leaders ranging from a 10-2 stud to 8-0. They are well armed with a 50Cal HMG, 2 MMGs, 2 LMGs, 2 DCs and a 50MTR, with a 75* ART, 2 1+3+5 pillboxes, 4 Trenches, 5 hexsides of Panjis and 18 mine factors, along with level A booby trap capability.

After Zeb set up, I arranged my forces to on the south edge for their turn 1 entry. I deployed an additional squads to have an additional four HS for scouts. I split and placed the HSs on the flanks. The remaining squads were stacked with leaders and set up to advance through the jungle primarily on the west side of the road. The tanks set up to enter on the road.

Grond crawled on: Turn 1

In Aussie one, my infantry swarmed on, CXing to move as far as possible. The tanks entered, with one sucessfully popping smoke in BB4, adjacent to concealed Japanese units. Grond followed, belching flame into BB4, stripping concealment, but doing no further damage. There was no DF, and the squads advanced further on board.

During Japanese one, Zeb’s attempt to mine the bridge in V5 with a DC failed, prompting a brief discussion of why this should qualify for a Labor -1(-2) counter. The unit in Grond’s crosshairs beat a hasty retreat, with other Japanese units repositioning themselves out of LOS.

Grond crawled on: Turn 2

My OBA gained battery access, attempting a SR on X6, where there were concealed Japanese in the huts. It was inaccurate, ending up in DD8. This marked the first turn of overall futility for my OBA. With only a narrow LOS window from my off-board observer, I was forced to draw one additional card after the other. I managed to do this successfully six times in a row during the game before drawing the first red card. The HSs east of the road bumbled into two of Zeb’s minefields, one in Y1 and the other in Z2. Y1 survived the attack, Z2 broke. Zeb revealed one of his pillboxes in X2 during my MPh, I think perhaps breaking who they fired at. This prompted me to start one of the 40L Matildas in that direction to provide support, ESBing to stop in Y2. After initially thinking to move Grond forward to X4, I decided to wait with it in a holding pattern in AA5 while the infantry caught up. The HSs west continued to move north on the left flank, being positioned to enfilade another concealed Japanese unit. In CC, a Japanese HS revealed itself and demonstrated how deadly the Japanese are in CC by ambushing and subsequently killing the HS in HtoH combat.

In his turn, Zeb’s 75*ART that had been exposed in Y7 by advancing Aussies in Z5 pivoted and fired upon those units. A hit with no rate HOBed and rendered Berserk one squad. I think that the other occupants broke. The squad with leader successfully placed the DC on the V5 bridge, moving into U6 during the APh. Faced with Grond’s emminent arrival, the concealed unit in X6 skedaddled down into the dry stream. Zeb attempted with no luck to generate a TH hero from the HS in Y1. In the DFPh, I corrected and dropped the OBA on the ART in Y7, it was inaccurate, scattering to X6. The gun crew survived the FFE.

Grond crawled on: Turn 3

During the PFPh, I found myself on the horns of a dilema. My OBA FFE was sitting on the location that my Berserk squad needed to charge, and I would need to charge through one clear hex of FFE (16 down 2) enroute and another when entering the gun’s hex, and this was before facing any DF from the gun. After no little hemming and hawing, I decided to cancel the FFE. The Matilda in Y2 start firing AP rounds into the pillbox with no effect. In the MPh, the berserk squad charged the gun, only to meet with a grisly end, courtesy of a CH. I then moved a 40L Matilda in an overrun attack. The tank survived the DF, which maintained ROF, but the overrun was unsuccessful. Due to the gun maintaining ROF, I left the tank in motion in the hex.. A squad moved into Y4, only to get mowed down by the 50cal in T5. I opted for a more circumspect approach, easing the rest of the OB forward. Another squad, having in an earlier turn survived entry into Zeb’s third minefield in Z3, assault moved out into Y3, surviving exit and DF. Grond Moved to X4, but I do not remember if it fired or not. I advanced three concealed squads and leader into the hex with the gun, three squads into Y4, one of which had survived fire from the 50cal during a bonehead stroll through Z4 during the MPh. Two squads, each with a 50MTR and a leader into Z4, and a HS, squad and leader into AA8 where another concealed Japanese squad waited. The squad in Y3 advanced onto the pillbox in X2, only to break and leave various precious body parts dangling on the now-revealed panji they had blundered into. CC saw the gun crew killed and the Japanese squad in AA8 CRed to a half squad and the hex left in melee.

In his turn, Zeb’s PF into the stack at Y4 from both the 50cal and a MMG from a newly revealed pillbox in X3 was ineffective except to battle-harden a squad into fanatic status. In the MPh, he unleashed a HIP T-H hero on Grond in X4. It took just about every bit of firepower able to fire at the T-H hero to finally kill him. The leader and squad in U6 moved into T5. A second attempt to generate a T-H hero in Y1 failed. About this time Zeb started to mutter that he was running out of bodies to do things with. In the CCPh, the melee in AA8 ended with both sides completely dead.

Grond crawled on: Turn 4

In my PFPh, my 50MTRs fired smoke at T5 and U5 with success in T5. OBA gained battery access and tried to place a SR in T5, which was inaccurate and scattered off the board, sigh. In the PFPh, two of the three squads in Y4 fired at X3, with no effect on the Japanese in the pillbox. The tank in Y2 finally got results and reduced the crew in the X2 pillbox to a vehicular crew. In the MPh, the fanatic squad in Y4, now kitted with a RPh transferred DC, moved into Y3 and attempted to place it. Deadly accurate fire from the MMG in the pillbox ended that terminally. The three concealed squads and leader in Y7 assault moved into the hut in X6 and the Matilda in X6 moved into the dry stream in V4. Grond started the MPh with a bounding fire shot into X3. I think that it may have killed the crew in the pillbox, but I cannot be sure. It then went into motion and ended up in by-pass in W4 on the W4-X3 hexside. Elsewhere, the HSs on the left flank continued to roll up a gaggle of broken Japanese HSs to the north. There was no advance fire since everybody had shot or moved. In the APh, I eschewed moving the two squads in Y4 either into X3, figuring that I would skewer myself on more panjis, or into Y3, into the CA of the pillbox, so they stayed put. One squad with MTR advanced into Y5.

In his turn, Zeb fired the HMG out of smoke, but now directed by the 10-2 into my squads in Y4. The result was a MC that the first squad passed and the second squad rolled another snakes. The ensuing HOB DR was yet another snakes, resulting in a hero. With very little else able to fire, the turn went quickly. My AR in the DFPh scattered off the board again. In the APh, Zeb advanced a concealed unit into X3, leaving another concealed unit in W3.

Grond crawled on: Turn 5

In the PFPh, I finally drew a red card on the OBA, ending their misery, my MTRs started to home in on his kill stack in T5. In the MPh, the Matilda in Y2 started up and moved to X4 and stopped. The two squads and hero in Y4 assault moved to Y3, surviving the DF. The three squads and leader in X6 moved singly, all ending up in X4. Grond continued the bypass movement in W4, ending up in V3 with the TCA facing W3, stopped and fired again. A three on the 32 column removed the dummy stack. The last Matilda I seem to remember continued moving up the stream bed. Zeb’s DF with the 50cal again did not have any effect on the squads in X4. In the APh, the squads and hero in Y3 braved the panji, remained good order and advanced into X2. The squads and leader in X4 all advanced into X3. I was happy that there were no panjis on that side. CC eliminated the Japanese units in both pillboxes, and with that, Zeb conceded.

I liked the scenario, but it has a pro-Aussie feel to it. My moves were far from perfect, but my mistakes were made up by above average dice rolling. I cannot complain. The Matilda Frog destroyed a good third of the Japanese OB all by itself. If the Japanese player can destroy that tank, they have a much better chance of holding off the Australians. Zeb was also the victim of some bad dice. Afterwards, Zeb said that in retrospect, he should have setup some things, like the ART elsewhere. Hindsight being 20-20 that perhaps may be the case. But I had a great time versus a fun and knowledgable opponent, and I was able to see some of the neat tricks that the Japanese can do. Thanks a lot, Zeb. I will approach my next PTO scenario will much less trepidation. We are now 2-2 against each other. I look forward to our next game.

John

Dec 25

Everything has been approved and is now in production for Blood and Jungle. The counters will take the longest at this point, but as soon as they are done, they will be shipped directly to the printers, who will then collate and package each set. I expect this product to be about an inch in thickness – a 60-page magazine, 24 scenarios cards, 3 SK-style maps, 20 rules pages, and 4 counter sheets will make quite a hefty package.

I can’t wait to get these in my hands in the next two weeks and get them shipped out.

Sam

Dec 15

As of this morning, everything for Blood & Jungle has been sent to the printers. It took months of hard work by all of us, but the end result will surely be worth waiting for.

For the main printer, I transferred 2.25 GB of compressed digital goodness, and 11 MB to the counter printers.

With the hard part of this project behind us, we are looking ahead to next year and planning our next two releases. Not enough decisions finalized at this point to announce anything, but we will be in full production again in January.

Nov 26

Bounding Fire Productions is proud to announce that BFP3: Blood and Jungle is now available for pre-orders.  Head to our website, www.boundingfire.com

BFP3: Blood and Jungle is our first Battlepack based in the Pacific Theater of Operations. The unprecedented size of this product makes it unique in our industry, and follows in our tradition of high quality, exciting scenarios.

General content includes:

47 scenarios. They range from early 1930s Japanese vs. Chinese Action to 1947 KNIL (Dutch) vs. Indonesians. The scenarios range from tourny to monster, all infantry to combined arms, etc. A good chunk of the action does not necessarily have PTO Terrain in effect. Basically there is something in here for everyone scenario wise.

A large magazine with a variety of articles all with a PTO theme.

4 countersheets. Japanese Partially Armed Paratroopers, 5/8″ counters for a variety of nationalities either rare/not in the system/captured: Thai, Indonesian, Japanese, Chinese, KNIL, US, Aussie…. and maybe some surprises.

Essentially 3 mapboards. One is our ‘double wide’ concept. The boards fit together for a large urban battlefield, and are geomorphic on all of the other sides.

…..and more.

We will be providing some pics, more information, etc.

Without a doubt this is a monster product, which I like to call ‘the OtO of the PTO’. YMMV on this but I am fully confident if you like PTO you will love this product. If you are new and not necessarily interested in PTO, you will still really like this product.

Nov 16

J.R.V. vs. Jim Brackin

My opponent, Jim Brackin, wanted to play this new scenario out of Operation Cobra. The Americans bring a high-firepower force to the map edge, with 21 squads, 4 MMGs and 8 M4A1 tanks. Their mission is a tough one, though. They have to clear German MMC/AFV from on/adjacent to a north-south road net while avoiding a 56 CVP cap. The key for the Germans to overcome that much firepower was the stiffening of three Panthers.

Rules Questions

Per SBR 3, “After all setup but prior to game start, the American must place 10 shellholes counters …”. The shellholes are then moved randomly and they blow up things where they land. The problem with the SBR is that “setup” might mean setup during the pregame sequence [ASOP], in which case it is after the Germans put down their units, but before the Americans put down their first turn reinforcements [ASOP 1.11A]. The use of the word “all” sounds like the shellhole placement might have been meant to occur right after ASOP 1.11A, but the SBR also clearly states that this is “prior to game start,” which happens with the first turn Rph. We played the SBR as follows: German sets up, American places shellholes, Germans roll their SBR 4 TC (which immediately follows the shellhole placement, Americans set up first turn reinforcements. That the Americans can see the results of shellholes and the SBR 4 TC before setting up their reinforcements is an advantage for them , but because they have a turn’s distance to go before hitting the German MLR, it isn’t that much of a gain.

The shellholes SBR had another rules gap: there was no mention of what happens when the shellholes ended up in woods, where the rulebook does not allow them [B2.1]. We played such result as eliminating the unit/fortification, but not affecting the terrain.

Note that the SBR 4 TC is not a NMC. Because of this, results like HOB, ELR reduction, and Casualty MC are N/A. If the unit passes the the TC, it is unbroken. If it fails, it is broken but nothing more.

German Setup

Despite the special at-start TC, which breaks any German MMC that fails it, I set up a strong front line force. I put leaders in/near the front so that I could use their leadership DRM against the TC and so the leaders could move quickly to units that broke. Most of the broken units were recovered or with leaders by the beginning of turn 2. I set up one Panther on each flank and one covering the open area from E-J10. I was hoping to convince Jim that the best way to attack was through the bocage around E-Q8. This wasn’t too hard, as it probably is the best way to attack. My goal was to delay the attacking Amis in the center. (I was also looking for an opportunity to slide around into the American rear for the sleaze win, but that proved impossible.) I was planning to fall back slowly to a redoubt built in the 24V6 area, guarding the 24V2 road.

I expected the American turn 4 reinforcements to enter from the west because that is the shortest route to the last bit of road. AP Mines in 24U9 and wire in 24W8-24V8 covered the approaches to foxholes in 24V7-24X6. I couldn’t seal the keep completely because I wanted the Panthers to fall back into the fort. I put a fair amount of my fortifications near the 24AA column, including the roadblock. I also added mines in/near 24J7 in case Jim decided to enter that way.

The Americans did indeed slog through the bocage in the center, with a small holding force on the west edge. The American attack was meticulous. They lost only one Sherman in the first 4 turns, and but two squad equivalents. The Germans also lost very little in the first 4 turns, 1.5 squad equivalents. The Germans fell back to the main fort by American turn four, with squads and Panthers on the flanks of board 24 to cover the American reinforcement entrance. The Americans entered on the west, and the Germans fell back into the 24Q5 village area, the buildings near 24S7 and the woods near 24V6.

On German turn 4 a Panther lunged at a Sherman parked by itself in 24FF6. It missed the bounding fire attempt and went back into Motion in 24EE6, awaiting the inevitable rush of Shermans. That did not happen. Jim feels that swarming attacks are overrated. He attempted to drive his Sherman over the Bocage into 24EE6 but Bogged, then put two Shermans in 24CC5 and 24BB6 to fire on the Panther. Relieved, and having no compunction about driving through my opponent’s hex, I drove the Panther through to 24GG6, flamed the Sherman in FF6, and stopped to await developments. Jim Smoked my Panther from 24CC6, but that left him stopped there, and I killed that tank a turn later. Another Sherman was killed by mines on German turn 5 (the only one of four two factor AT mine attacks; all AT mines were at 2 factors). The Americans were starting to run out of time, and they hadn’t really pushed the Germans back out of the 24V7 woods. Some squads were attacking from the 24N8 area too, but they were stymied by a squad in 24M6 and the HMG in 24Q6.

Two more Shermans died on turn German 6, and with that we called the game. The Americans were at 52 CVP, four points shy of the cap. It was unlikely that he could clear the rest of the road without losing the remaining CVP.

For excitement, I have to rate this scenario fairly highly from the German perspective. I was continually trying to cover too much with too little, with units dashing about to fill in gaps and plug leaks. Jim feels that the scenario is unbalanced. I have a hard time commenting on that because I was too focused on the defense. On the face of it it looks like a tough job trying to clear the 24Q5 block and the 24V2 stretch of road. On the other hand the scneario is 7.5 turns, which seems long enough. The key may be in the Panthers. If the Americans can contrive to eliminate one or two (without losing too many Shermans), they have a decent chance. If they can’t, they are probably going to hit the CVP cap.

JR

Nov 16

Craig Houliston vs. Jim Taylor

Finished up this on VASL last evening as the defending Germans against Jim Taylor’s stout Americans. We agreed this was a fun scenario that, in our case, could have gone either way by a pip or two on the dice.

As a high level overview the Americans get six Shermans and 11.5 666s with only marginal leadership (for the Americans anyway 8-1, 2×8-0) Germans get two Panthers and 8 squad equivalents — all but one were 447s and two leaders, a HMG and 2xschreks. There are two VCs — attacker’s choice control all the buildings within 5 hexes of the crossroad overlay on board 6 OR exit 20 or more VP off hex Y10.

Notable setups: roadblock: h2/i2, Panthers: i2 and L8, shrecks: H3, o9

Early stages

Defense was mixed with both some upfront D and layered backwards. The troops up front were looking to cause some casualties on the American entry, but Jim wisely avoided any missed LOSs. As a result, by design, the forward guys pulled back. In the first couple turns, My sniper recalls one CE Sherman and whacks his 9-1. His troops are now on in force and perhaps my only real screw up of the game — I HIPped a 447/8-1 in hex J4….J4 open ground behind a bocage?! What the…? I saw that after we started and thought, huh? Well, they and the schreck toting guy HS I think in H3 all miss their shots and are subsequently pummeled into oblivion by the American firepower. Meanwhile, the Panther in i2 redeploys to o5.

Mid-game

Here’s where it gets bad for the Germans. My L8 Panther redeployed to N8. Jim gets a bit aggressive and moves up to swarm him with a couple Shermans. The Panther (with WA) fires and misses (5,5) the Sherman enters the Panther’s hex. I think he fires again and misses. I then reveal my HIP 237/schreck on o9. Surprise! Silence on the other end of the Skype transmission…I gain the hit. TK = 6,6. It ricochets of a box of C rations. Drat! Now another Sherman ambles up and takes the BFF shot and rolls a 4,4 (normally a miss since the Pather was hulldown), but HD was lost when the other Sherman entered the hex. Jim rolls what he needs and destroys it (crew survives). The next turn my Panther in o5 BFFs before moving on an exposed motion Sherman – misses. Freaking gyro shot from Sherman…hit…kill. At this point, I feel it is all over but for crushing the dice in the vice…

End game

The last 1 1/2 turns are wild. Jim is still assessing whether to go for the buildings or exit. I still have a HS/HMG that has not revealed. I know — why HIP a HMG? He was located in P4. My hope was to lay a nasty trap bag some significant infantry with rate in the village. However, as the game progressed this guy may have unnerved Jim just enough to forgo the exit VP which I thought might have been a lock for him as he thought it might located in z10. I had repositioned a 447 in Y10 in a foxhole there (so a potential for three PFs). As a result, I kept him HIPed as long as possible. In the end, Jim went for the buildings. It came down to P4 with the 237/HMG and P6. P6 held a broken squad, 447, 127. A K result killed the crew on the ground floor — nuts! And I believe the final shot — a 30+2 or something(?) resulted in a 2mc which he failed. Over in P4 a subsequent spray fire shot by the HMG at an adjacent 666 and concealed 666 for a 2 and 1 flat, respectively. I missed on the result and 15 FP of American infantry enter after they pin me on his AdvFire shot. I actually ambush him (pinned) and miss on my attack on one 666. He’s 15-2 and needs anything but a 10, 11 or 12 for the win. He rolls something like a seven for the win. Game over!

Post Game thoughts

Well, this was a fun scenario and we both agreed this is something we would both heartily recommend. After the second Panther went down, I was figuring this game was over. Nothing really to stop the American armor from exiting (though I knew there was just the one 447 on the exit hex). However, just enough doubt on what PF-ready Huns might be awaiting Jim at Y10 (a 447 AND 237/HMG???) made Jim switch to the building VC.

A little tough to say without more data, but the edge seems to be with the Americans. Lots of firepower and six tanks all sporting 10FP in MGs (CE) is really potent. Frankly, Jim didn’t even miss the recalled tank from turn 1 or 2. Of course, the equalizer is the cheesy 6ML. A few of us were talking and the 228 crew as German balance might help. Nevertheless, an extremely fun scenario that should play fast and be a tournament staple in the years to come. Kudos to Jim for a well-played game and for many laughs along the way. A special call out to Chas and the BFP crew for yet another fine scenario.

***One note, we played this incorrectly for a few turns. The THICK hedges on the overlay are…light bocage. We played them as regular since they were so much thicker. So, all bocage in this scenario are LIGHT BOCAGE. BTW, nice to see the use of the small village overlay to reinvent what was a pretty one-dimensional board.

Craig Houliston

Nov 16

Jeff Ital vs. Jeff Waldon

I paired up Friday night with Jeff, who came all the way in from SC. we decided on a smaller job from BFP’s ‘Beyond the Beachhead 2′, which had the Germies defending the board BFP E village against the Americans. We both bid for the Americans, and I wound up with the Germans and the balance (an extra 2-3-7). The dice were about even, overall, but I managed to pull some rolls out of my ying yang when it *really* mattered. I killed two of his three Shermans on turn 1, I think, one from a PF shot (rolled a 3) and another from a low odds shot from the PzJg III/IV (the afforementioned Hornet). Turn 4-ish, when he was really starting a heavy push into the village, I rolled a 2 on a key CC, creating a leader and smoking the squad he had sent in, and then on turn 5, that same leader and HS grabbed a PF off their back and smoked the last Shermie, at which point Jeff conceded.

This was a fantastic little tourney scenario, and I got to use some (now, at least) cool bocage rules. Jeff was a fantastic opponent, as usual, and even put up with my off-color humor.

Jeff Ital

Nov 16

For my first game in 10-12 weeks, my opponent Jim suggested this one from the new Bounding Pack.

My Americans would have to push through the bocage (both light & regular) of the new board BFP-D, and as the title suggests clear the Germans from an intersection amongst the familiar low hills of board 18.

The U.S. gets 15 squads of mixed quality to make the initial push. On turn five the cavalry arrives in the form of 2 M10s and 5 Shermans, two of which are equipped with Culin devices.

The most important pieces of the German defense are 2 HMGs and two dug-in panthers. Jim put one panther on level two hill hex 18Y7. It was covered by an HMG team in a foxhole 18X5. The other panther was in the victory area on 18Q3, looking straight up the main road. The remaining HMG team took up a position in 18O4 in a shellhole conveniently put there by the United States Air Force in a pre-game quasi-bombardment.

I pushed hard up the right with the bulk of my force, making good progress in that area, which was mostly blind to the big German weapons.

A smaller group started up the center to try to clear German troops from the road so the AFVs could get through safely. That attack got bogged down quickly as Jim shuffled 3-4 squads around in the bocage proving elusive targets. I was making no progress there for 3 turns.

I was considering abandoning the area and shifting those troops up the right, when I got a break. A squad went berzerk and survived his charge, tying up one of the key German squads. I was able to break that squad with adv. fire and Jim began to fall back.

Turn five and the tanks arrive. I sent the M10s left with one culin equipped sherman. Ther were no German units on that side. One sherman headed up the center road, another crashed through the bocage and headed for the near hill, the remaining shermans came in on the center but took a hard right to support the infantry on that side.

On the following turn, I experienced quite possibly the high point of my ASL career: On the left, I breached a hedgerow with a culin device. Let’s all take a moment to contemplate the profound significance.

……

Ok, we’re back.

The German HMG on the level two hill was broken by a lucky 10-hex shot from a MMG, and my infantry was climbing the hill to deal with them and the panther.

An M10 sailed through the breach and took up a position on a hill to fire on the panther and infantry in the rear. The near sherman got into a good spot on the hill to fire some smoke around. Things were nip and tuck. And then.

The sherman who was going to lay smoke did not get the chance, as he quickly became smoke himself on a shot from the rear panther. Not content, Jim announced an intensive fire shot, including a turret turn on my M10. Whatever. Good luck with that shot! Ha!

Snake eyes. Armor leader goes up in flames. You. Have. Got. To. Be. Freaking. Kidding. Me.

Now in the end game, 4 or so German squads that had pulled back successfully ducked down into the gully which runs through the victory area. Getting them out of good order down was going to be very difficult. I would likely have to drive vehicles down there and expose them to faust possibilities.

Fortunately, Jim saved me trouble by flaming another sherman with the panther from hell and ending the game by pushing me over the CVP cap.

It was a tense scenario. Lots of choices for both sides. If I had a chance to play it again, I would be (as Jim suggested) more aggressive early. It’s feels better to err on the side of caution with 6ML Americans, but if the Germans manage to hold you up for a while and still have four or five squads to hide in the gully and under the bridge, rooting them out seems like a pretty daunting task. Let alone doing it without hitting the CVP cap.

Always dug the Normandy bocage scenarios. Looking forward to playing more from these packs soon.

John Haughey

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