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#1
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T2K and GDW's Third World War series.
Did anyone extensively play GDW's Third World War series, in effect playing out T2k at the Macro level? (Mods feel free to move if this does not fit)
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#2
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Over a dozen years ago now, a group of us in the DC area (roughly) planned to wargame out the entire war using TWW and then write it up. We polished up the rules, made maps of Manchuria and Korea and drew up orders of battle but never got the chance to play it out.
In a way, my daily writeups are the low budget, slimmed down version of what we were hoping to be able to produce, based on a reasonable simulation rather than me trying to shoehorn bits of canon, various other works and my imagination together into what you are getting now! Maybe after I retire...
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I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end... |
#3
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If anyone ever wants to make new counters for the game, I did all the prep work when Chico mentioned the need way back when; new TO&E font, color scheme for 300+ countries/factions , new aircraft silhouettes, etc.
Just dug up the program. It is not live at the moment, but I could dust it off in a day or so if there is a need. |
#4
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I played the stuffing out of that game in the past, and come back to it sometimes. I'll be running 24 hours of it at Origins next month.
I don't think of it as T2k at macro, the game is set up to cover too short a time period, and a Soviet attack, rather than a NATO one. The new printing from Compass does have more of a Poland map, though. The logistics rules would need a lot of rewriting to cover 1996-2000 operations, IMO.
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My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
#5
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I have not thought about Origins in years-was unaware it was still being held. FTR our small gaming group looked briefly at GDW's Third World War but never took the plunge. We did play GDW and later GRD's Europa series though.... |
#6
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FWIW, the reprint of the TWW series by Compass Games is very good. The rules are unchanged, there a lot more charts for tracking things that had to go on paper before, and there's now a map covering most of Poland. More detail has been added to the counters, too, like stacking points.
That said, the only change to the rules (other than cleaning up errata) was to the F-19 stealth fighter. It's still in there, but there is also a counter for the RL F-117 Nighthawk, to use at your option instead. Europa also remains a major love of mine. Origins hasn't gone away, it just settled down in Columbus.
__________________
My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
#7
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I did do situation reports, mostly analyzing Pact strategies and ways that NATO could neutralize a front by picking on shaken/demoralized-capable Pact nations Key takeaways: * Neutralizing Pact Allies is only effective in Southern Front, Pact can "make do" with crippled allies just fine in all other fronts, and the amount of forces you have to divert is isn't worth it). * Either side diverting anything more than a smidge of airpower away from the Northern Front won't make a hill of beans difference elsewhere, and dramatically weakens their own position. * The Pact can't win the WF air war past turn 1, no amount of cratering will dig a hole NATO can't crawl out of, and stripping adjacent theaters of air power only prolongs the struggle. The Pact WF can protect 2-3 missions per turn, and the rest is just a sacrifice. * If the Pact sends your older jets to other theaters, that leaves your good jets vulnerable to NATO cratering...but you can send them ALL away, wreak holy havoc down south, and try to knock out Greece/Turkey/Yugo/Austria, then spend late game pushing on Italy...that gets fun. * The smartest tactic for NATO is to keep an airmobile ZOC line across Germany, never ever stacking units with airmobile ZOC, and hope that the Pact keeps bashing into that line until they're ineffective. Never counterattack with American divisions, just keep cycling them and removing distruptions. It's effective, but sweet jesus is it dull. |
#8
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There's also a slick trick the Pact can try in the combined game: by massing desant divisions and air transport points, they can jump on the US POMCUS sites, and cripple the US Army.
Using the massed desant can also be used to KO Norway or take Istanbul, I think. NATO moving just a few airmobile units into Norway early can really delay the Soviet coastal and overland thrusts.
__________________
My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
#9
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