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Why WW1 might be more interesting than you might think

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This topic contains 6 replies, has 6 voices, and was last updated by  maledrakh 4 years, 11 months ago.

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  • #1468513

    blipvertus
    12359xp
    Cult of Games Member

    WW1 usually gets a pass in gaming but with the release of Blood & Valor imminent I thought it’s worth looking at why The Great War is more interesting than you might think.

    The link is to The Great War YouTube channel:

    https://youtu.be/hs857RflCZE

    #1468538

    torros
    23816xp
    Cult of Games Member

    WW1 is interesting on so many levels . To be honest my interest in low  level skirmish games like this do not give you a feel for the period as they tend to very generic . Games like like Great War Spearhead or If the lord spares us or Test if Battle with WW1 supplement gives a better feel in understanding the command and control problems of the period I feel

    #1468564

    beccas
    Participant
    1146xp

    I love the Great War.  I’ve played many WWI wargames.  Mostly Square Bashing in 15mm by Peter Pig.  Price of Glory in 28mm and of course Warhammer Historical The Great War back in the day.

    #1468573

    damon
    7525xp
    Cult of Games Member

    I prefer gaming in the first few months of WW1, when there was still some mobility to the armies and the trenches didn’t dominate the battlefield. Also moving away from the Western Front and into areas like the Middle East or East Africa can give so many other options.

    #1468621

    oriskany
    60771xp
    Cult of Games Member

    Great idea for a thread.

    In 2018 we hit World War I pretty hard, with all the Centennial Anniversaries, etc.

    We had this video where we talked about the “Top Five Tips” for gaming in the Great War, suggestions on how to keep your games a little less “stereotypical.”

    Top Five Tips for Great War Gaming

    Some of the tips have already been addressed above by @torros and @damon .

    • Know what you’re playing (most WW1 games are actually re-skinned WW2 games … not necessarily a bad thing, just watch out for these pitfalls).
    • Beginnings & Endings (consider gaming in 1914 and 1918, before and after the stagnation of the trenches).
    • Expand your horizons (look to theaters outside the “classic” Western Front).
    • Devil in the details (many things “possible” in WW2 weren’t really in place for WW1.  Consider arcs of fire for fixed MGs which were not mobile like they were in WW2, no real radios so artillery barrages had to be timed, etc).
    • All trenches are NOT equal (ideas for how to handle trench warfare without it turning into a Passchendeale, Somme, or Verdun).

    Like I said, some points were already addressed above.

    2018 Great War writing and videos

    #1468646

    blipvertus
    12359xp
    Cult of Games Member

    As someone that just generally prefers skirmish games the appeal here are the smaller patrols and trench raids between larger battles and the more esoteric settings like German East Africa and Mesopotamia. Games that address those areas, as @warzan has described as “gaming in the gaps” makes the Great War appealing.

    #1468813

    maledrakh
    Participant
    11996xp

    Here is an excellent resource for WW1 wargaming in many of the other theatres of war than the west front trenched:

    https://awayfromthewesternfront.org/

    Really sheds a light on WW1 bits we usually do not hear much about.

     

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