Watched Dunkirk the other night. Not the new one, the good one.
Duly inspired, I dug out my 1/100 armor with accompanying terrain, and set up a mini-campaign for Tanks!.
Basic premise was a pack of misfit British armor, caught up in the backwash of the Arras counterattack, tries to get to the coast. Set up random parameters for German opposition, and British crew capabilities.
Since the campaign was “based on a true story”, the rag-tags had an interesting set of crew skills and helpful equipment. These add-ons provide the abilities to shrug off misfortunes of all kinds. The Germans were faceless, robotic drones.
The tricky part was what each force could see, and if they saw something, how/could that information be communicated. Did some basic research on tank radios and found there is not that much out there. So, just had some fun with it, using yes/no, directional, and other random dice.
The British had an armored car for scouting; an A12 Cruiser, a Mk 1 Matilda and a Mk 2 Matilda. The German mix could include Pz II, III or IVs.
The unintended consequence of all of this was another trip into the world of computer graphic design. I’d designed some Tanks! cards with GIMP in the past, but had lost all of my chops. Downloaded a template over a Boardgamegeek, and floundered. Wound up using my old mock-up cards. Hopefully, I’ll continue to slog away at the new cards.
Again, it’s a real challenge to resist ginning up too many house rules. Sure, I had to make spot judgments on backing up, Matilda frontal armor and others, but resisted the need to codify them. Here’s photos of the first two scenarios. Lots of Hide N’ Seek trying to work through woods along roads/side roads.
Had to pick up this AM. I’m thinking coastal operations later in the week, or Heroes of Normandie.