Ads
related to: battlefront miniatures vietnam battle pack
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Flames of War allows players to wargame company-level battles from the European, Pacific, and North African Theatres of World War II, using 1/100 scale miniatures (15 mm figure scale) and miniature armor. In the 1st Edition rulebook, basic army lists were provided for the mid-war period (1942–1943), while Battlefront published early (1939 ...
GF9 was started as a game accessory manufacturer in 1998 by John Kovaleski, [1] producing tokens and templates for companies like Privateer Press. In 2007, another game company, Battlefront, purchased GF9, and the company subsequently expanded its production lines to include Battlefield in a Box, a line of fully painted terrain for miniature wargames, as well as licensed miniatures and ...
The miniatures used represent troops or vehicles (such as tanks, chariots, aircraft, ships, etc.). The games may reflect historical situations and armies, or may be futuristic or fantasy-based. This list compiles published miniature wargames categorized by their subject matter, genre, or time period covered in their rules.
Battlefront Miniatures Ltd. – publisher of Flames of War (FoW), a World War II wargame. Battlefront.com - publisher of Combat Mission series of games; Battleline Publications – founded in 1973 and bought by Heritage Models around 1980. They were the original publisher of several Avalon Hill games, such as Wooden Ships and Iron Men, and ...
A game simulating the campaign to break the siege of Khe Sanh during the Vietnam War in 1968. Defiance: The Battle of Xuan Loc: 1980: Swedish Game Production: A simulation of The Battle of Xuan Loc (11 April 1975). No Trumpets No Drums: 1982: World Wide Wargames: Operational level game simulating the whole of the United States' ground combat ...
Micro armour is usually differentiated from tabletop games based on human shaped heroic scale / infantry skirmish game scale figures (even if the high and low ends of each respective category overlap) because the scales used by most micro armour games are smaller (armour skirmish game scale) and the represented playing field larger - though it is not nearly as large as in naval wargaming.