Over the Top contains a full year-by-year overview of the 1915-18 period, new Battalion-level army lists for British Empire, French and German forces, and a new army list for the American Expeditionary Force, including the Devil Dogs and US Tank Companies. It also contains detailed rules covering such actions as assaulting a trench line, or leading a...
Great War: The World War One Miniatures game 1918 saw great changes in the warfare of the Western Front. Russia pulled out of the war, freeing thousands more German troops to push the Allies back huge distances. The Allied counteroffensives, with their new tanks and evolving tactics, forced the Germans back towards their own borders and defeat. The Great...
A strategic level, area movement game based on WWI. The map covers all major European and West-Asian countries ranging from Britain and France in the west to Persia and Russia in the east. Players maneuver armies, corps, and naval squadrons while engaging in mobilization, combat, and diplomacy. There are seven historical and one hypothetical scenario, plus...
Great White Fleet - A Great War At Sea scenario book. =First Edition, 2002: Twenty operational scenarios feature the battleships and armored cruisers of the pre-dreadnought era. Most are based on actual war plans, including the Russian Admiralty's 1903 wargame that decided the Tsar on war with Japan. Also includes Karl Laskas' variant tactical rules for...
Dreadnoughts is a supplement to Avalanche Press's Great War at Sea series of naval games. It expands all prior main games in the series, requiring elements from other games to play any of the scenarios. No map is included, only expansion game pieces. Numerous articles and scenarios cover Spanish, Turkish, Russian, Greek, French, and Romanian plans in the...
THE GREAT WAR AT SEA (not associated with Avalanche Press) The first in a planned series of expansion sets to supplement the Great War at Sea game series! The South America Expansion set covers the ships available to these nations from 1895 through 1925. 191 markers from 9 navies (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and...
From the Avalanche Website During the course of the First World War, the United States continued to build huge new battleships despite a pressing need for destroyers and merchant ships. In Britain, Royal Navy planners wondered just what their American allies were up to, because such a fleet could only have one potential adversary. Britain also made plans...
For a brief period, Ferdinand Graf Zeppelin's giant gas-filled airships ruled the world's skies. Though conceived as passenger craft, during the First World War rigid and semi-rigid airships performed long-range scouting and bombing missions. Great War at Sea: Zeppelins includes die-cut-and-mounted playing pieces, but these are special, oversized ones:...
From the Avalanche Press website: During the late 1800s, two emerging industrial powers began to build large modern fleets: the United States and Germany. Perhaps inevitably, tensions rose between them. Each entered the imperialist race very late and had to content itself with the leftovers which the British and French had passed by. When the United States...
In June 1919, 11 battleships, five battle cruisers, eight light cruisers and 50 destroyers of the German High Seas Fleet attempted to scuttle themselves in the British anchorage at Scapa Flow. Most of the crews succeeded, and the enraged Allied Powers soon stripped Germany of her remaining modern warships as well. The mass sinking at Scapa Flow did clear...
This is the second of the Avalanche Press Golden Journal supplements. It contains 20 additional counters for ships in various Great War at Sea and Second World War at Sea —user summary Japanese Repair Ship Akashi. On a “long” counter. Dutch fast battleships. Dutch naval constructors admired the Italian Littorio, when allowed to tour her, and tried hard to...