Danish Leopards in Bosnia | #1 Operation Bøllebank solitaire wargame playthrough
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- Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024
- In April 1994, Danish Leopard 1A1 main battle tanks rushed south from Tuzla to relief Swedish forces at outpost Tango-2 which was under fire by Bosnian Serbs. Hurrying through the darkness with their white painted and brightly lit UNPROFOR NORBAT tanks, the Danes ran into a night ambush and came under heavy fire themselves. The Bosnian Serbs had been pushing the limits against the UN forces before and were commited to get their will this time.
In this solitaire wargame, we take command of the armored squadron and try to relieve our comrades and protect the Muslim minority in the area from Bosnian Serb attacks.
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21:19 in the heat of the moment I give a Platoon Move order where there should have been just a single vehicle Move allowed to move upon drawing two ATGM chits.
Also be aware that I am drawing two random unit damage markers when the artillery chit has a +RU on it. This in incorrect, you only have to draw one, if the chit has +RU on it. That would have spared me some night vision damage, I guess. 😂
There it is ❤️ I'm happy to see a playthrough, this will help me getting into the rules 😊
I hope I didn't make too many mistakes. 😅
Thanks for doing this! (The game designer here)
Thanks for the great Design, Nicola! I hope I didn't butcher the gameplay too much.
Very interesting introduction to the game and thoughts on the peacekeeping missions.
@@marticabre286 Thank you!
Super, thanks for this, unique topic, unique system!
Thanks, Harro!
I'd be a bit wary with making generalisations - I've worn a blue beret and there is a world of difference between "peace keeping" and "peace enforcement" Chapter 5 vs Chapter 7.
@@whya2ndaccount Certainly true.
Sorry, but the tanks were Leopard 1A5DK´s Not 1a1DK...
@@flumpdanmark Correct, indeed.
I'm trying to understand the logic here. I'm guessing the player is just going with their own plan or is it what the Danes actually did?
I would have thought (depending on the time constraints) that at least one tank would be in over watch before the Platoon advanced up the highway.
Similarly I don't understand why the "blind" tank (no night vision at night) is in the over watch location given that its dark as it can't support the vehicles going forward?
@@whya2ndaccount It is both. As a player I can only give orders that are available via the order matrix, determined by the two enemy weapons chits randomly drawn. The more I draw to get the "right" order, the stronger the enemy attacks become. However, historically, the Danes didn't even clearly realize they were under heavy fire at first. The situation was very chaotic for a while. There is an interesting documentation (with English subtitles) on RUclips called "Danish Leopards in Bosnia". I assume the rules do not prevent tanks with night vision damage from providing overwatch as those are providing indirect fire anyway, a tactic the Danish tank crews were specialized in. They don't actually see the enemy anyway (and their fire is directed from Observation Point North). Historically, several tanks had damage night visions, target optics and radios due to the initial artillery fire.