06-08-2012, 12:55 PM,
|
|
RE: Your first cardboard wargame?
started playing board and miniatures in the mid 90's when i started primary school (which makes me significantly younger than the rest of you...) started off with the jedko classics, divisional and corps level African Campaign, Russian Campaign and Fortress Europa. first one i ever bought though was panzer leader (used) at a church market when i was 8.
|
|
06-10-2012, 12:12 AM,
|
|
McKinley
First Lieutenant
|
Posts: 14
Threads: 2
Joined: Jun 2012
|
|
RE: Your first cardboard wargame?
My first one was AH's 1914, I was 12 at the time. Later that year my parents bought me Blizkreg and Jutland. Soon followed by more AH games and S&T starting with issue 23. Good days, no bills only home work and games.
|
|
06-10-2012, 07:49 AM,
(This post was last modified: 06-10-2012, 07:50 AM by broadsword.)
|
|
broadsword
Recruit
|
Posts: 43
Threads: 10
Joined: Jun 2012
|
|
RE: Your first cardboard wargame?
A noble Jim Dunnigan effort that was an unplayable and dull monster.
Best thing about it that I remember was the thick and glossy historical supplement book, full of great material and images.
The fact that you've never seen a copy underscores my point -- the really great wargames from the AH and SPI eras are still being played today!
|
|
06-10-2012, 07:55 AM,
|
|
broadsword
Recruit
|
Posts: 43
Threads: 10
Joined: Jun 2012
|
|
RE: Your first cardboard wargame?
(06-10-2012, 07:49 AM)Shad Wrote: For you old-timers whose parents bought you copies of these very, very early wargames... I am extremely curious what was going through their heads? "Jutland... lil Tim will love this!"
It just seems so... non-mainstream? :-)
Until you remember that those games came in boxes in the same format as Clue, Monopoly, Parcheesi, etc. So they just looked like any other board game the kids might enjoy, until you really looked inside. And the fact that they dealt with historical subjects probably seemed educational and vaguely uplifting compared to Candyland -- sort of like buying your kids "Classics Illustrated" comic books instead of Batman. Remember that parents weren't as reflexively anti-military as they became after the 1960s -- we had entire arsenals of cap shooting assault weapons and hand grenades, too! good times...
|
|
06-10-2012, 08:49 AM,
|
|
vince hughes
Second Lieutenant
|
Posts: 1,310
Threads: 61
Joined: May 2012
|
|
RE: Your first cardboard wargame?
(06-10-2012, 07:49 AM)Shad Wrote: For you old-timers whose parents bought you copies of these very, very early wargames... I am extremely curious what was going through their heads? "Jutland... lil Tim will love this!"
It just seems so... non-mainstream? :-)
I was 4 and 5 years old 68/69, but even through the 70's, most boys had things that were either cars, building type things (Lego, Meccano etc) or War things including Cowboys and Indians in that group. There wasn't the anti-war/weapon ethos then. Which is quite strange as the generation that missed them seem to suffering more violent crime and gun crime ???
Even Action Man (in the US it was GI Joe) had a superb collection of uniforms. There were German Storm trooper, Soviet Infantry, French resistance, Colditz Guard, British Infantry etc etc. And these WERE educational on a historical level. I remember, whilst collecting Timpo soldiers (Interchangeable colour models 1/32nd scale) I had a huge US cavalry/Indian collection. My nan bought me the Timpo Fort, complete with massive stockade, wagons and housing. ACross the living room were set the wig-wams and tepees of the Indian attackers ... cool toys
Now, Action Man is a big pansy, as the kits for him inlude Skateboarder and BMX bike and no WW2 type stuff at all .... geez
look up all my referals under google images
|
|
|