The Art of War

Table of Contents
Issue 25

The Long Haul

    Sam Sheikh creates a campaign expansion for Achtung Spitfire with rules, tables, and charts to help your pilots gather flying experience and accolades. Includes a discussion of Luftwaffe and RAF organization.

The Graf Spee's Greatest Battle

    A reprint from the Naval Sitrep offers a Command at Sea scenario based on the Battle of the River Plate. Historical narrative included.

Cavalry Tactics in From Valmy to Waterloo

    Mike Ruttle offers ideas on the use of Napoleonic light and heavy cavalry when playing on the tabletop with miniatures.

Twelve Point Facing for Landships

    Steve Rawlings and Perry Moore extend the WWI tank game Landships with 12-point facing and firing arcs instead of the usual 6-point game.

Etudes Militaries: Napoleon's First War Against the Tsar

Special Study Nr. 4 by Kevin Zucker
    The Habit of Victory
      Zucker continues his narrative of the 1807 campaign. This latest installment starts just after Jena-Auerstadt.
    Historical Challenge
      A letter from a history buff praises Zucker's 1807 game even as he questions its historical accuracy. Zucker responds as well as takes the opportunity to issue errata.

Astride the Killing Ground

    A sanguinary title masks the real intent of the article: provide news of upcoming releases and query readers about proposed games.

Adding Uncertainty to Clash of Armor

    Charlie Spiegel extends the WWII rules set with additional charts and thoughts on spotting and movement costs.

The Struggle for Europe

    A preview by Rob Beyma discusses a new game called War Without Mercy (WWII East Front), first in a series that will eventually provide a corp-level WWII simulation across all of Europe.

Small Wars for the Union

    David L. Buchbinder offers another 1863 scenario for COA's War for the Union. This one also takes place in Tennessee.

Back to The Art of War Annual List of Issues
© Copyright 1996 by Clash of Arms Games.
This article appears in MagWeb (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web.
Other military history articles and gaming articles are available at http://www.magweb.com