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#1216613

oriskany
60771xp
Cult of Games Member

Okay, @jemmy , @rasmus , @torros , @elessar2590 , @neves1789 , @damon , @stvitusdancern , @silverfox8

(sorry to be tagging so much, but until they get these notifications sorted …)

Anyway, it’s time to see how things are getting along with the assault of Captains Lomax and Pollock (BoW @stvitusdancern and @silverfox8) in their American Army assault against trenches held by the Imperial German Army – somewhere in the Meuse-Argonne, September 1918 …

When we last left this battle, we’d completed a fiery turn one. American infantry has already cracked this band of German trenches, and how attack not only from directly in front of the trenches (to the right) but also from within the trenches from the left. At top and right we have Lomax’s company coming in, from the left we have Pollock’s company.

So after off-board artillery and mortars had plastered forward German positions (although almost half the barrages missed) , the assaults went in. While Lomax’s wing hitting the front of the German trenches at right ran into serious trouble and took heavy casualties, the main body split the weakened German position and pretty much cleared the upper left board. Pollock’s company, meanwhile, had further to travel from the left and so hadn’t actually engaged heavily yet, although took some grievous German opportunity fire despite sound tactical movement, long ranges, and even cove rin hardened buildings (just ridiculously good German rolls). On their turn the Germans fell back, consolidated their positions, launched some small counterattacks on that upper right hand board, and dropped some 7,58 cm “minenwerfer” mortar fire.

Now we begin Turn Two.

To the south, Pollock’s leading his strongest platoon directly against a rubble-filled stretch of trench that has been caved in by some long-ago artillery impact, held by the valorous Leutnant Erikssen and an understrength platoon. Lt. Ferber’s platoon is trying to catch up, picking up and consolidating stragglers along the way, while to the north, Mader’s platoon prepares to assault a German company command post held by Hauptman Paulssen.

Lomax’s company, meanwhile, is coming down from the northwest, although having wiped out most of the German positions they hit last turn, and the surviving Germans falling back in front of them, many of their squads won’t be in direct combat this turn. The exception is to the east, where Lomax’s wing is in serious trouble against German counterattacks led by Hauptmann Schoeller and Leutnant Habeck.

First we look at Pollock’s assault in the south. Note the hexes to the left and right of Erikssen’s platoon are wide open, leaving Pollock no real options to approach other than straight down that trench. Erikssen is also investing the last two German grenade counters, has the defensive bonus of that rubble, and gets a -1 difficulty point-blank opportunity fire shot as Pollock and his men come in. I won’t lie … this one is not going to be easy … or cheap. But the Americans roll a 6, which is a success.

*Math: outnumbering the Germans with a combined firepower of 1 + 4 + 2 + 2 + 4 + 1 = 14 vs. 12 (Erikssen’s “1” counts double because of his “Valor” counter), so Pollock needs a 7 or less on 2d6 … then gets a -2 bonus for leadership, then -3 for grenades, but has to add +2 for German grenades and +1 for Erikssen’s leadership, so a net bonus of -2, or a 9 or less needed on 2d6.

So Erikssen and his platoon are eliminated. However, with four units in the hex (Erikssen himself, a 2-5-2 half squad, another 2-5-2 half squad, and a 4-5-4 full squad), plus a +2 defensive bonus for that rubble (it “interrupts” the trench), means that Pollock has to pay six casualty points for this victory, in addition to what he already lost to opportunity fire.

This was a well-chosen spot for the Germans, fortified, supported with grenades, a valorous officer, and some solid dice. The Americans win this assault, but the cost is friggin’ severe.

Further north, more American assaults go in. Again the Germans are fortified in rubble, trenches, and even a building, and have a solid officer (-2 Hauptmann Paulssen) leading them. The Americans have superior numbers, and get some pretty good dice rolls. They win both these assaults, wiping out Paulssen’s command post and that mortar pit, but again, losses are heavy.

The Situation at the end of American Turn 02. In addition, the small squad at the far upper left (Lomax’s extreme left wing) has taken out another German MG 08 machine gun next, but is all but cut off by German advances of Schoeller’s kompanie and is now sadly likely to be wiped out by German assaults on their turn.

German Turn 02 begins with some ferocious counterattack. First, the remaining 7.58 cm mortar crew lands a lucky drop on Arauz’s position, basically taking him out. This opens up the way for this German platoon to assault against Mader’s platoon, badly weakened from their assault on Paulssen’s CP on the American turn. Mader’s survivors miss their opportunity fire, and the Germans roll amazingly well on their assault (note the “3”, remember low rolls are better in this system). Both Mader’s platoon and the rest of Arauz’s platoon are gone, opening a fearful gap straight through the American center and leaving a dangerous gap between Pollock’s and Lomax’s companies.

Sure enough, Lomax loses her left wing when Schoeller counter-assaults and retakes that former MG position.

The situation at the end of German Turn 02. To the north, we have four remaining stacks of Lomax’s company, to the south we have two stacks left of Pollock’s company. But the Germans are also in very bad shape, and that one platoon to the west is now terribly understrength and about to get cut off by a converging assault from the two American companies.

This was a rough turn for the Americans, but the Germans took pretty steep damage as well, and of course started off with less men to lose. This one could still go either way!

If you like the battle report, please consider heading over to the Project Log and drop some recommendations!

Valor & Victory – 1918 Edition

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