Gandin's Attack Edelweiss: Expanded #22 |
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(Attacker) Italy | vs | Germany (Attacker) |
Formations Involved | ||
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Germany | 910th Fortress Battalion | |
Italy | 17º Reggimento Fanteria "Acqui" |
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Overall Rating, 2 votes |
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2
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Scenario Rank: --- of 940 |
Parent Game | Edelweiss: Expanded |
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Historicity | Historical |
Date | 1943-09-21 |
Start Time | 10:00 |
Turn Count | 20 |
Visibility | Day |
Counters | 43 |
Net Morale | 0 |
Net Initiative | 1 |
Maps | 1: AK2 |
Layout Dimensions | 88 x 58 cm 35 x 23 in |
Play Bounty | 157 |
AAR Bounty | 171 |
Total Plays | 2 |
Total AARs | 1 |
Battle Types |
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Meeting Engagement |
Scenario Requirements & Playability | |
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Afrika Korps | Maps + Counters |
Edelweiss: Expanded | Base Game |
Eastern Front | Counters |
Introduction |
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Acqui had not seen combat since 1941, and many of its soldiers had been rotated back to Italy. After years of garrison duty, some of Gandin's young troops wavered in their first combat. Reinforcing them with coastal artillery and anti-aircraft guns, the division commander took personal charge of the II/17 Infantry Battalion and counterattacked the advancing Germans. |
Conclusion |
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Despite the undoubted bravery of their officers, the inexperienced Italian infantrymen could not overcome the German assault gun support. The German infantry proved little better, but heavy Stuka support and their armor repelled the Italian attack. |
AFV Rules Pertaining to this Scenario's Order of Battle |
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4 Errata Items | |
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The reduced direct fire value of the Heer HMG became 5-5 starting with Fall of France. (plloyd1010
on 2015 Jul 31)
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The morale and combat modifiers of German Sergeant #1614 should be "0", not "8". (Shad
on 2010 Dec 15)
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This unit is interchangeable with the StuH 42. Technically there never was a StuG IIIh. The StuH 42 was a StuG III with the main armament replaced with a modified 105mm howitzer. The StuG IIIh and StuH 42 counters have the same values, so there is no affect on play. (plloyd1010
on 2015 Jan 30)
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This leader should have a morale of "9" and a modifier of "0" instead of the other way around. (Shad
on 2010 Dec 15)
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Gandin's Disaster, or Another Broken Italian Scenario | ||||||||||||||
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Having a short break between work and my next meeting, my opponent and I met up for dinner. He again agreed to taking an Italian position, especially since our last one was a pretty fun scenario. This one looked advantaged to the Germans, but I had no idea it would go the way it did. In this scenario, the Italians must clear a road/path combination from end to end, or inflict eight steps on the Germans. The Germans simply must inflict ten steps on the Italians. While morale is basically even (and poor), the problem is the Italians have a small infantry force to combat a nearly equal German force, and they have a few guns (including an 88mm) and some minor OBA to face off against three German StuGs, minor OBA, and air support. Remember, they are expected to clear the road. Seriously, with what?? And how to keep it clear when the only mobile units in the game are German? The Germans set up on the east/west road between the crossroads, out of visual range of the Italian set up limits. The Italians form an arrowhead with the 88mm at the point, the 20mm on the trailing tips, and all the infantry and the 105mm in the central zone. The first few turns see the German infantry dig in, the German tanks begin to maneuver behind a hill to get on the Italian left flank, and the Italians pray the Germans come to them. On turn four German aircraft destroy the 105mm, and the assault guns are in place to begin a charge once the 88mm somehow becomes vulnerable. On turn six the aircraft destroy the 88mm and one infantry step (demoralizing the other step) and the assault guns go in. On turn eight the assault guns blow away a 20mm and an infantry step (demoralizing the other). Two Italian trucks are already dead, and the others have fled, leaving any hint of mobility behind. My opponent knows within two turns his last 20mm will no doubt be dead, 25% of his Inf are already dead or ineffective, and the German infantry will begin its charge as soon as the last Italian gun is ineffective. He concedes immediately to free up time before I have to leave for my meeting. The only effective shot the Italians ever made was disrupting one German lieutenant, who immediately recovered. There was no real hope of the Italians attacking. We liked the idea of the scenario, and felt that perhaps it was worth fixing, so we discussed it for a bit and the next day. By the time we were done, it involved changing each sides force structure, changing the victory conditions, then again changing the force structure to take into account the new victory conditions. Basically a full scenario redesign. Not worth it. While it was more interesting and enjoyable than the pitifully horrible Argostoli: Edelweiss Stained scenario, it is still broken and gets a 1 rating. Okay, that’s a strong 1 rating, but still the broken 1 rating. Kudos to my opponent for suffering through this one. |
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