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The Royal Society of Gamers: A podcast about boardgames
 
Our Price: £11.99
  Strategy and Tactics 271 : 2nd Kharkov 1942

Strategy and Tactics 271 : 2nd Kharkov 1942




Second Kharkov: Strike & Counterstrike, May 1942 (2K for short) is a low-complexity, two-player wargame covering the second battle for that city fought during the early period of World War II’s eastern front. The game begins with the Soviets on the all-out offensive, but its second half is dominated by a German counterattack.There’s a historical scenario covering the battle as it was fought, plus a what-if scenario that allows players to explore the possibilities inherent in the all-out effort originally proposed to Stalin by Marshal Timoshenko. In it, the Soviet player begins the game with the historical force along with a total of 26 more rifle divisions and tank brigades: everything that was then in the Soviet strategic reserve. Of course, to win that scenario the Soviet player needs to accomplish a lot more than he does in the historical one (capture all three hexes of Kharkhov).
Each hex represents five miles (eight km) from side to opposite side. Each game turn represents two days. Each unit of maneuver represents a division or brigade of roughly 2,000 to 14,000 men and 50 to 400 armored fighting vehicles.
            Special rules cover such things as: Soviet untried units, initial German unpreparedness, air interdiction, historical and alternative set ups, multi-step German units, sudden death victories, fog of war, German inter-army cooperation, close air support, Soviet armor doctrine, Soviet panic, and much more. The turn sequence is as follows.
I.      Soviet Player Turn
A.    German Air Interdiction Placement Phase
B.    Soviet Movement Phase
C.    Soviet Combat Phase
D.    German Air Interdiction Removal Phase
 II.     German Player Turn
A.    German Movement or Combat Phase
B. German Combat or  Movement Phase




Articles in this issue: 
Second Battle of Kharkov, 1942. A massive tank battle fought between the Germans and Soviets just prior to Stalingrad. 
Battle of Arsuf. English King Richard “The Lionheart’s” great victory over Saladin in the Third Crusade (1191).
Mobile Atomic Bases. In the years after WW2, the US Navy explored the idea of deploying massive floating atomic-powered bases in the oceans around the world. 
Battle of Itororo. A massive South American Battle of the mid-19th century, Brazil vs. Paraguay.



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