To kick off our Barbarossa theme month, some players requested the Battle of Brody (1941), which ran over the course of several days in late June 1941, and which might have been…
Tag: Flames of War
FOW – Filling Out Guns for My Italian Army
I went back to my Italian army for FOW for a bit, just to fill out the support weapons. I had painted and based up the crew, when I did the infantry,…
FOW – Finnish Anti Tank Support
I posted my almost completed Finnish army some time back. This included my infantry and support weapons for two companies of troops. The one missing piece for the leg mounted force was…
FOW – Battle of Schoenfliess, April 1945
We adapted a scenario published in a recent edition of Wargames, Soldiers, and Strategy to play the Battle of Schoenfliess (1945) using Flames of War rules. We also used Google Earth for…
FOW- Bagration Hungarian Unit Card Review
I’m a little late on this one, but honestly forgot that I did not write up the review, after taking the pictures. This is funny, as I was the most excited about…
FOW – Painted Finnish Army
I finally finished the basing on my Flames of War Finnish Army…. This proved to be the most difficult and boring basing project I may have ever done. Thank goodness it is…
FOW Painted Italian ETO Infantry Army
I’m still in the middle of the great basing project and next on the hit list was my Italian WWII FOW army. I had these troops painted up by Fernando in Sri…
Gajo Minis 15mm Soviet Cossacks
I recently decided that I wanted a third company of Soviet infantry to fill out my WWII 15mm Soviet army. I wanted a unit that would stand out a bit, to represent…
FOW – Action by Kampfgruppe Stachwitz, July 1944.
The second small scenario I tested was an action by Kampfgruppe Stachwitz during the Kursk offensive in 1943. The rules used were Flames of War Version 4, with the unit reference cards…
FOW – Action at Alytus Bridgehead, June 1941.
I wanted to test two small tank scenarios for possible use in an upcoming open gaming weekend. The first scenario was the action at the Alytus Bridgehead in June 1941, in which…