03-25-2019, 01:39 PM,
(This post was last modified: 03-26-2019, 12:57 AM by ex-PFC Slayden.)
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RE: Artwork on the gameboxes?
Kursk: Burning Tigers features "Valeria Gnarovskaya's feat" painted by Marat Samsonov, which hangs in the Military Medical Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
On 23 September 1943, only 20 years old and a medic in a Soviet rifle company, her unit came under attack from two Tiger tanks. “Valeria ran forward [with a bundle of grenades] and threw herself right under the tracks of the leading Tiger. There was a big explosion and the tank ground to a halt. The second tank tried to turn back but it was too late. Valeria’s comrades dashed up and put it out of action. Thanks to her self-sacrifice, the breach was quickly patched up, the assault beaten off and the regiment put on the offensive.”
On 3 June 1944 Gnarovskoy was posthumously awarded the title ‘Hero of the Soviet Union.’
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04-29-2019, 12:33 PM,
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plloyd1010
First Sergeant
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Posts: 3,489
Threads: 357
Joined: Jun 2012
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RE: Artwork on the gameboxes?
I don't know of any stories any paintings or photographs used for the games as dramatic as the one depicting Valeria Gnarovskaya. Most images for current eastern front games can be found at All World Wars.
A couple odd things I found along the way. Invasion 1944 image is from a U.S. Propaganda poster called " In The Face Of Obstacles - Courage".
The photo of Soviet armor for the first cover of Road to Berlin was actually taken in Prague.
The photo used to make the art of La Campagne de Tunisie was taken in Sicily and is of a Royal Artillery unit.
... More and more, people around the world are coming to realize that the world is flat!
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