A set of rules allowing teams of players and umpires to recreate the battle of Jutland, 1916. The actual movement and combat rules are very simple - the core of the game consists in the use of umpires who provide the players with realistically limited and inaccurate information on which to base their decisions. The rules were published in issue 80 of...
Developed for convention games, this is a set of rules for naval battles 1906-18 that can be played either with miniatures (1:6000 scale is recommended) or counters. Only battleships, battlecruisers, and the most heavily gunned armoured cruisers are directly represented; the impact of smaller vessels - which was generally minor when capital ships clashed -...
Fighting Iron is a set of wargame rules for recreating naval battles during the era of Ironclads and Pre-Dreadnought battleships covering the time period of 1860 (the launch of the first ironclad) to 1906 (the launch of the first modern big gun, steam turbine driven battleships, HMS Dreadnought) including the American Civil War. The rules can be used with...
Fighting Sail is a fairly simple naval wargame. It is played on a triangular grid, with the ships moving from intersection to intersection. The ships are represented by pieces of wood with holes drilled to hold small flags; the position of the flag in a ship represents its speed. The color of a flag represents how many operational guns the ship has....
Fighting Sail: Fleet Actions 1775–1815 is a tabletop miniatures wargame of fleet battles in the age of canvas, cannon, and timbers. Players take on the roles of fleet admirals in battles ranging from the American War of Independence to the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812. Each fleet has access to different ships, tactics, and command personalities -...
Fighting Steam! is a simulation of naval combat during the U.S. Civil War. The players control the vessels that took part in the battles on either the Union or Confederate sides. Each turn represents about 7 minutes. Each movement/range point equals about 100 yards. Each counter represents an individual ship that took part in the battles. There are 10...