Armageddon's Song

The new Cold War turned hot wargame from On Target Simulations, now expanded with the Player's Edition! Choose the NATO or Soviet forces in one of many scenarios or two linked campaigns. No effort was spared to model modern warfare realistically, including armor, infantry, helicopters, air support, artillery, electronic warfare, chemical and nuclear weapons. An innovative new asynchronous turn order means that OODA loops and various effects on C3 are accurately modeled as never before.

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AndyF
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Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

After a fair bit of prodding I ran out of excuses for not having maps accompany the various battle scenes so I took some time off writing in order to create maps and symbols from scratch. Of course I have made a rod for my own back now as I will have to publish new editions of the first three books in the series that also have maps.

This is not a game, just maps. If anyone is able to suggest how they can be made into a game I am all ears.

I have posted also part of the as yet unfinished fourth book which includes invaluable help from ferg1234 who translated my very rusty British Army mortar fire control orders into US Army fire control orders. This is an excerpt of the opening battle for the Autobahns which the maps will hopefully compliment.

Autobahn 2, 16 miles east of Brunswick, Germany.

The Recce Troop, 5th Cavalry Regiment of the Ariete Armoured Brigade led the way in their four-wheel Lince multi-role vehicles, speeding ahead of the task force.
Lt Col Lorenzo Rapagnetta had been given the task of finding and destroying the missing Romanians, the T-72 and T-90 MBTs along with their accompanying BTR-70 and BMP-2 IFVs. SACEUR, Canada's Gen.Pierre Allain, had been clear and precise in the orders he had given, as he had also been with his explanation as to why the Ariete had been selected for the task. The ground they had been defending was more suited to an infantry heavy unit with howitzers for artillery support such as their northern neighbours, Britain’s ‘3 Para’ in the leg infantry role, and the 105mm light guns of 7 Parachute Regiment, Royal Horse Artillery on dedicated call. He was to leave the 11th Bersaglieri Regiment, two companies of the 5th Cavalry Regiments infantry and all but a battery of the 132nd Artillery Regiment. The remainder of the brigade, its thirteen surviving Ariete main battle tanks, an infantry company mounted in Puma AFVs, three PzH 2000 155mm SP howitzers and a recce element were to reinforce the Mississippi National Guardsmen of C Company, 2/198th Armored.
SACEUR was positive that the enemy force, possible a tank battalion, was driving towards the nearest of the critical autobahns. By seizing Autobahns’ 2 and 39 where they met east of Brunswick, the Red Army would have fast transit routes to all of the Dutch and Belgian ports.
Lorenzo knew that SACEUR was aware of his brigade’s current state, and Lorenzo was also aware of the condition of the 2/198th. Both units had been in the thick of NATOs fight with the Soviet 10th Tank Army, fighting that numerically superior monster to a standstill only to have then been struck by the fresh Third Shock Army, which then forced the Elbe.
Lt Col Lorenzo Rapagnetta’s Ariete MBTs from the 32nd and 132nd Tank Regiments together numbered only slightly more than that a soviet tank company mustered.
God help them all if the Romanian strength was an underestimation.

The order of march was the 5th Cavalry’s Recce Troop followed by the Puma equipped infantry company, the six tanks of the 32nd, the 132nd’s seven tanks. The big German built 155mm SP Howitzers and finally the ammunition train, armoured ambulance and combat engineers armoured recovery track, with his second-in-command in a Dardo infantry fighting vehicle bringing up the rear.
Lorenzo had considered commandeering the M-113 but quickly disregarded that idea. The older APCs, the boxy battle taxis, had been pensioned off gradually as their Dardo and Puma replacements were rolled off Iveco’s production lines at a pitifully slow rate. The specialist mortar, ant-tank, air defense and command versions had yet to appear owing to budgetary constraints. It frequently left the army with geriatric command and heavy weapons vehicles sat on their lonesome awaiting recovery or repair as the rest of the army disappeared into the distance. Lt Colonel Rapagnetta had elected to hop aboard the infantry company commander’s Puma instead.
Lorenzo was originally an infantryman before being posted to an armored squadron on receiving his majority, and as such held to the wisdom of the footsore, ‘Never walk when you can ride.’ He had however declined to spend the journey in the commander’s position, his perforated Gortex defied his best efforts at repair and besides, it was nice to be out of the rain. All in all it was an invigorating experience after the snow and ice of the Elbe’s defense, and the rain and mud of the Flechtinger Höhenzug of course, to now be speeding along smooth tarmac and enjoying a heater’s warmth without worrying about thermal signatures.
Lorenzo’s plan was simply to drive hell for leather along the auto routes to Autobahn 2 which he would follow at speed to most quickly reinforce the US troops at the autobahn junction. Once there they would go-firm and his recce troop would sweep back towards the scene of the breakthrough and locate the enemy armour.
The Romanians had a head start on him even though they were moving across country, so he had little choice but make this non-tactical dash.
With luck though the enemy had simply run out of fuel, as that was being reported of other Soviet units.
“Colonnello?”
The infantry’s OC was bending down in the commanders hatch.
“Si?”
“Active jamming on the 2/198ths frequency, sir.”
There are several methods of interfering with radio communication, and obviously the so called ‘silent’ jamming is preferred as there is no immediate warning that it is taking place. Active jamming is cruder and also instantly recognized for what it is.
Lt Col Rapagnetta removed his helmet and slid the vehicles radio headset into place, listened for a moment and chuckled.
Someone with a sense of humour had tied down a microphones transmit switch and placed it before a speaker blaring out a Rap song.
“Rap is to music, what firing a handgun sideways is to marksmanship.” He opined. “But it serves as a declaration of intent here.”
“How so?”
“In Mississippi good music is considered to be a mournful song about how their dog died and their car broke down, not an out of key chant about how their ‘Ho’ was unfaithful. I can’t think how they could more greatly offend a country and western fan.” Lorenzo grinned, but then it faded. The time for joking was past, and it seemed SACEUR may have been correct.
“Order the recce troop to stop, switch off and report back with anything they hear. They are only about 10k from the junction, yes?”

Five kilometres ahead of the task force the recce vehicles pulled off the autobahn and onto one of the many purely functional truck stops that serve the German road system. The Lince drivers switched off and they listening.
The rain fell unrelentingly, drumming on the thin skins so the troop commander left his vehicle to walk a short distance away.
The rumble of battle to the north was all there was and he cursed the rain before turning back to the shelter of his Lince but he froze in mid stride. Whatever had caught his attention was not repeated for several moments but when it recurred he broke into a run, cursing again but not at the rain this time.
Pulling open his vehicle door he barked at his radio operator.
“Tell ‘Six’ I can hear main tank guns firing to the west!”


TP 33, MSR ‘NUT’ (Up), Autobahn’s 2 & 39, east of Brunswick, Germany: 19 miles south-west of the Vormundberg.

For only half an hour Lieutenant Franklin Stiles, acting CO of C Company, Second Battalion, 198th Armored Regiment had been asleep on the folded down seats along one side of the first sergeant’s M113 APC. His rest was disturbed by the tinny sound issuing from a radio headset and whatever it was it was not a message, and that fact crept into his subconscious and brought him to a state of reluctant wakefulness.
“What IS that godforsaken row?” he growled.
“It’s Rap, sir.” his sergeant’s APC driver responded.
“It’s two rabid cats, high on acid, perched on a transmit switch and screwing, is what it is.”
“Weren’t you ever young sir?”
“Another remark like that one and I promise you that you’ll never get any older, soldier.”
Lt Stiles swung his feet down and as he did so Sergeant Jeffries, the first sergeant, arrived, clunking up the rear ramp and squeezing through a blackout of groundsheets.
“I think we’re being jammed sir.” He stated. “I checked everyone and no one’s fat ass is sat on a handset, or fooling around on one either.”
“Drop down to the alternative.” Stiles instructed.
“I tried that already, and battalion too, but it’s the same story.”
Franklin reached for the company’s other means, a telephone handset connected to DEL, the German emergency military phone network.
Since the construction of the Inner German Border, the ‘Iron Curtain’ of Winston Churchill’s famous speech in 1945, the nations of Western Europe had wisely undertaken the creation of an alternative telephone system for military use in time of war. It is sort of hard to keep that kind of thing from the general populace though. During the frequent exercises during the Cold War when the various units needed to tie in on the DEL, finding the hidden access points could cause headaches for newbies. The solution was always to ask a local.


“Wo ist die geheimnis telefon, where is the secret telephone?” would be the question to a passing Fräulein, farmer or Postbote.
“Where it always is, at the left side of the oak tree and dig down a half metre.”
Consequently it was not a secret from the Soviet Bloc intelligence services for very long.

The DEL handset was dead.
Whoever was jamming them needed a radio for each known channel, so there was a limit to what the enemy could achieve. The previous occupants of the location, 2RTR, had left behind a weirdly named DFC RANTS, the British version of their own communication equipment operating instructions, and he consulted it before changing his own sets channel to that of the RMP traffic post to the west of them. Rap music blared out of the earpieces.
It was not inconceivable that they were the victim of random, though deliberate, interference with their radio transmissions but Mrs. Stiles didn’t raise no fool.
“Stand the company to, and occupy the fighting positions Sergeant.”
“No evidence of anyone moving out there sir, but you are dead right, better to be safe than sorry.” Sergeant Jeffries ducked back out the way he had come to pass the word verbally.
The company had had a hard war so far despite not having arrived until several weeks after the fighting had begun. Modern armored warfare uses up machines quickly and they had found reserve equipment in both short supply and in need of several upgrades. The old Abrams had the same 80s generation technology as at the time of mothballing, in the vast tunnel complex at Husterhoeh Kaserne.
C Company 2/198th was guarding this junction because the regiment had been pulled from the line in a pretty fought-out condition, as had other units of NATO’s armies, but each and every man and woman could hold their heads high and say with conviction “If you think we look bad then you should see the other guy.” The ‘Other Guy’ was the Soviet Tenth Tank Army which had started off as a two corps, tank heavy and first rate unit with 770 MBTs and 209 AFVs. ‘10th Tank’ was now two battered divisions worth of exhausted leg infantry. The men had been passed back east, allegedly to rest and refit, but they were ordered to hand off their surviving tanks, AFVs and guns to other units instead. The command elements from battalion groups upwards had been trucked away by KGB troops for a ‘debrief ‘and were never heard of again.
Lieutenant Stiles and just one other were the only officers that the company had, and sergeants filled the other command slots.
With only three M1 Abrams, one of which suffered from an unreliable transmission, they had relieved an understrength squadron of the Royal Tank Regiment which was ‘rested’ after just forty eight hours out of the line. Its crews of comparative youngsters, each one of them with old men’s eyes, had not been that much different from themselves.
Franklin now heard the M1s, and ITV start up in their camouflage net enclosures and move toward hull-down fighting positions, of which there were plenty. The British had prepared this place for defense by a tank company, not just one in name only.

The position was unoriginal inasmuch as it was recognized as a key defence point long before the time of Christ. The ancient routes that the autobahns now followed had required defence/taxation but the ground was flat at that point. According to local historians and archeologists the Hill fort that C Company occupied had been built from scratch, hundreds of thousands of wicker baskets of spoil at a time to create its height and dimensions. Time and the elements had reduced the hill to something less than its former glory and its wooden palisade rotted away of course. The top of the fort was now flat and partially open to view, from the south in particular.
Those same historians had protested vigorously when the sappers and pioneers began laying the current new defences on top of the very, very old. They were set out in a triangular fashion, two hundred metres to a side with the corners at the south, east and west. There were no blocking positions to bar the way to an enemy motoring up to the junction, this was a hardpoint, an iron triangle, and from here they could engage targets approaching in any direction. An enemy had to deal with them all as a package, not in mutually supporting firing positions that could be quickly isolated by weight of numbers. Coils of barbed wire hindered the approach to the top by anyone on foot, and although laid with infantry in mind they had worked exceedingly well against protesters from the civilian population. Abandoned makeshift shelters, constructed of fertilizer bags and plastic sheeting for the most part, sat beside the foot of the fort where placards and protest banners decorated the steel barbs.
The ‘Uhry Hill Fort Preservation Protest Group’ camp had been abandoned before C/2/198 had arrived, however they had sent messages of good luck to the British tankers before joining the refugees fleeing west.
The junction itself was half a klick to the northwest where a section each of German Pioniertruppe, combat engineers, and Feldjäger military police were posted. There was not much interaction between the Americans and the Germans.

There was the usual shouting as camouflage nets snagged a vehicle and had to be unsnarled or the hard work of building those enclosures would be undone. That was the trouble with camouflage nets; they were nets, invented to catch stuff a very long, long, time before their adoption as tools of concealment.
The M125s merely started up, opened up the split hatch in the roof and cleared away the netting. The 81mm mortars were ready to put rounds down at any time.
Franklin tossed the CEOI to the tracks driver.
“Start trying a few channels, they can’t all be unworkable. When you get someone tell them you’ll be listening on their channel for them to pass the word to our battalion CP for an alternate frequency, and that we are stood-to as a precaution.”
He left him to it, pulled on his helmet and load bearing equipment before grabbing his weapon.
Stepping out into the rain he could see the 11 and 13 tanks were covering the west and south but the 12 tank was stopped out in the open, its driver trying to find a gear. That damn machine had been trouble since they’d drawn it from the POMCUS at Husterhoeh. The first sergeant was on the hull of the tank, kneeling beside the driver’s head, holding onto the main gun for support as he shouted advice.
The second platoon and third platoons had no serviceable tanks, and second platoon had absorbed the survivors of third platoon in the post-Elbe reorganization. Two thirds the strength of an infantry platoon and yet they were filling that role anyway, trudging wearily towards their own fighting positions, one on each side of the triangle. They were split into three squads of six men in two fire teams. Each team had their M-16s plus an M240 machine gun and a trio of FGM-148 Javelin missiles. Franklin had used the Javelin in Iraq and he hadn’t been a fan of it despite its advantages over previous weapons. An ATGW’s soft under-belly had always been its operators having to stay put while the weapons were in flight. The missiles had an obvious launch signature that identified its firing position, and of course where the guys who had launched it could be found and killed. Javelin was a fire-and-forget missile, the operator placed the reticule upon the target in the same way you would focus a modern digital camera, and the tracker acknowledged target recognition by forming a box about the targets image, again in a similar way to a camera. Once fired the missile then ‘soft launched’, thereby being some several feet from the soldier who had loosed it off before the rocket motor fired. The firer could scoot into cover immediately, which improved his chances of survival. The downside was that you couldn’t just see a target and simply engage it, because the cooling unit took a minimum of thirty seconds to do its thing before the seeker unit would work. It tracked a target thermally so on a hot day it could have trouble locating the actual target you wanted to hit. Not exactly anybody’s weapon of choice in a slug-fest but these weaknesses had been identified, and future upgrades would improve its engagement time. Teething troubles were ever the problem with weapons, and probably the only one to ever work as advertised from the moment it came out of its box was the flint knife, and that knife didn’t cost the same price as a Mercedes Benz convertible each time you used it.
He raised his face to the heavens, letting the rain wash away some of the tiredness and he was enjoying the sensation of raindrops on his face until the moment was ruined by an explosion.
Franklin crouched down instinctively, he felt the sudden wave of heat and a buffet from the blast. The first sergeant hit the wet earth in front of him, or at least part of him did. All four limbs and the head were missing.

There was a smell of high explosive caused by the detonation of a Sagger anti-tank missile. A pall of smoke hung around the 12 tank but it had not penetrated the armor. The driver was now frantically attempting to find a gear, any damn gear.
Realising that he was gormlessly staring from the limbless body in the mud, to the tank, and back again, Franklin dropped to the ground and began to crawl to the nearest cover.
Finally getting the transmission to engage the M1 jerked backwards into reverse, and travelled six feet before it was struck again. It shuddered to a stalling halt where it was hit a third and final time. Super-heated gasses jetted out of the turrets open hatches and its commander rolled screaming down the side of the turret, his overalls smoking but there was no explosion, the storage bin doors had been closed when the tank was struck. However, thick black smoke poured out, followed by a lick of flame before the Halon fire extinguishers activated.
Franklin saw the driver crawl free and climb on top of the turret, assisting the injured loader and gunner, both of whom were suffering from burns. His instinct was to run over and help but Franklin had a company to run, and the crew would have to make-do by themselves for now.
A Sagger missile streaked overhead, a clear miss, and a second struck the packed earth before the 11 tank, exploding harmlessly and flinging great clods of earth in all directions.
The ITV’s commander opened fire with a turret mounted M240, the red tracer identifying one of the dismounted Romanian anti-tank team’s positions for the remainder to engage but he stopped firing abruptly, hurriedly dropping from sight as Romanian infantry in turn zeroed green tracer onto him.
With a splash of muddy water Franklin arrived in a second platoon hole, they were engaging the enemy with their M16s and M240.
The company did not have a FIST and in the absence of a fire control order the mortars were silent. Franklin Stiles looked for the squad leader and saw him actively engaged in the fire fight. The young man was a supermarket trainee manager, and loader in the armored branch by way of a military trade, not an infantry leader, so despite his new title he had not yet acquired the skills to go with it.
Lt Stiles peered quickly over the lip of the position, needing only a moment to locate the enemy by the muzzle flashes. The Sagger team had not fired again and had either been killed, had their heads down or they were relocating. The infantry were not sitting handily upon any of the TRPs, the target reference points on the company’s defensive fire plan, and so an adjust-fire was required.
The company’s infantry positions all had field telephones with landlines laid to the CP and to the mortar carriers. The mortar tubes had already pivoted on their turntables to point towards the action, the crews impatiently awaited someone to tell them where to shoot.
"Mike Three One this is India Two Alpha, adjust fire, shift Delta Foxtrot one-zero-two-zero over"
A tinny voice greeted him without ceremony, reading back his information.
"This is Mike Three One, adjust fire, shift Delta Foxtrot one-zero-two-zero out"
"Adjust from Delta Foxtrot one-zero-two-zero…Left five-zero, Up one-zero-zero. Infantry in the tree line, over"
"Adjust from Delta Foxtrot one-zero-two-zero Left five-zero Up one-zero-zero. Infantry in the tree line, out"
Behind him the range, bearing and elevation settings for DF 1020 were identified on the fire plan, and then the adjustments applied before the number 1s of each crew received the required information.
Franklin could clearly hear the shouted orders from the rear.
“Charge two, elevation eleven zero zero, bearing forty two thirty, one round HE!”
Back home in the USA the Mississippi National Guard’s mortars ability had been regarded as adequate for their role. They were part-timers after all. Here in the middle of a war in Europe they had had plenty of practice in recent weeks. They weren’t fair-to-middling mortarmen any longer; they were veterans and expert at their trade.
The distinctive sound of both mortars was followed immediately by the fire direction centre’s verbal confirmation that rounds were in the air.
“Shot over.”
“Shot out.” Franklin acknowledged and stared at the treeline cautiously, the firefight had no victors yet and the red and green tracer flew back and forth.
The telephone handset clicked.
“Splash over” the FDC stated. He knew the time of flight and on a battle field with shells falling from more than one source it was important to know which explosion was your explosion.
Two bright flashes of light eclipsed the small arms fire of the Soviet troops.
“On target, fire for effect, over.”
“On target, fire for effect, out.”
The mortarmen responded accordingly, the number 2s putting four mortar bombs in the air per tube before the first one landed. Each mortar round was fused ‘super-quick’ as the targets were not dug-in for defense. The detonating round would not provide a deep crater for cover and if it struck a tree the effects against infantry were pretty vicious.
A flash of light accompanied each explosion but it took several seconds for the crump of the detonations to reach him.
Dead or just suppressed, the Soviet infantry in the wood line were no longer firing on them, but in two other places out on the night-time landscape machine guns opened fire, green tracer falling on the right flank of the American position.
The Javelins here had no worthwhile targets yet, they weren’t exactly flush with the weapons anyway, but a soldier had a Javelin’s CLU operating, using the thermal sight to identify targets. Franklin nudged him aside and looked for himself. The wood line where he had called in the fire mission was to the right of a fire break. It stretched away like a Roman road before him, and there, in the distance he caught the green glow of a vehicle passing briefly into view, and then a second heat source, also travelling right to left. He kept the CLU aimed at that point for a half minute longer but the movement of those two vehicles was not repeated. Was it just two, or had he merely caught the tail-end-Charlie’s of a tank brigade? That would certainly ruin his next Christmas and birthday, both.
Whatever it was, it was heading west along the forest firebreaks in the same direction as Autobahn 2.
Franklin returned the CLU and handed the telephone handset to the squad leader, reminding him that his primary job was to control the fight, not to join in. He then bent double as he ran back past the APC he had left, heading for the south side positions. He was the company commander, not a rifleman, but without working radios he had to get a handle on what they were up against by seeing for himself. He was almost there when somewhere a giant took a massive swing at an anvil and he flung himself down, gasping in pain with the effect it had on his ears. An afterimage floated before his eyes and he blinked furiously to clear it. The sound had been accompanied by a flash of intense light from the 13 tanks position.
A strange halo sat above the M1 and the stink of ozone filled Lt Stile’s nostrils. It was caused by a 125mm tungsten carbide sabot striking the M1 turret’s sloping glacis a glancing blow.
The enemy clearly had the 13 tank’s range with the very first shot, and whether or not it was beginner’s luck or the skill of much practice, the decision to stay or go was a no-brainer for the Abrams commander. 13 reversed backwards rapidly, pulling back out of its attacker’s view where it pivoted on its tracks, heading for a new position with a foot long scar glowing bright red on its turrets leading edge.
A Javelin missile was ejected from its launch tube, flying a short distance before the rocket motor cut in and it accelerated rapidly away. As Franklin regained his feet there was a distant flash of light as the missile killed the 13 tanks attacker.
This was a well-planned attack, allowing the infantry to dismount and attempt to take out his tanks by surprise from relatively close in before committing their own armor. Only now could he hear the sound of tanks and infantry fighting vehicles closing on his small group of defenders.
The rain wasn’t helping his Mk-1 eyeballs as he squinted through his binoculars but he was pretty sure there were vehicles moving parallel to the autobahn here too, also heading west.
The western side was currently clear of enemy but that may not remain that way for long. A vicious firefight was taking place down at the junction. He tried to recall how many the Feldjäger and engineers numbered. Was it twenty or so?
The combat engineers Marder was engaging targets Franklin was unable to see unaided but which included a Sagger team. He heard a missile launch an immediately the Marder’s 20mm cannon opened up, with the result that the missile went ballistic. He could only hope that the cause of that had been a dead Sagger crew as the firing on both sides petered out.
The rattle of tracks and drive sprockets grew louder from the northwest and again the Marder’s cannon opened fire, only to be cut short by a T-90’s main gun.
The Soviet tank troop advanced now with their main guns silent but the machine guns active, hunting down the field police and combat engineers at the junction before at last appearing from beneath autobahn 39 where it straddled autobahn 2.
Behind the tanks the infantry tore down cables and cut wires. Not all the wires were for demolition and a white flash, accompanied by a scream drew a rueful smile from Stiles, the ramrod of a power line maintenance crew back in Madison County.
Behind him the mortars were firing almost continuously now, swiveling first one way and then the other. That at least was something that the attackers seemed to lack, that and artillery.
“Small mercies.” Franklin muttered to himself. “Anymore where those came from, big fella?” he asked, looking up at the heavens, but all he got was wet.




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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by zakblood »

downloading now, thanks for the work and share, sorry thought it was a mission :( was going to play it and reply, i just got a picture?
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

My apology zakblood. These are just maps for a book. I have edited my post accordingly. Sorry for the inconvenience!
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by zakblood »

no apology needed, no inconvenience, only took 2 seconds, i'd read the book but tbh only read fantasy dnd etc atm, not really tried any war books apart from rome/medieval time etc, but do love my war games and films.

good luck with the book, and i'm sure if any one can someone here will, been reading forum for many years even though didn't join straight away, and hardly ever post.....
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by Mad Russian »

You don't have to post a lot on these forums to get a lot out of them. What I like best is that people in these forums are more into helping others than anything else. So, people can ask whatever questions they need to and not worry about being made to look like an idiot for not knowing something.

For that, you are all to be commended! [&o]



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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by 22sec »

In honor of this thread, my first map following the release of 2.03.

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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by Mad Russian »

In my map making experience water is the most challenging part of getting a map historically accurate. You've done a great job with the water on this map.

Of course, you know the water is too blue. [:D]

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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by WildCatNL »

Andy,

inspired by your scenario, I've created a Braunschweig (Brunswick) area game map (illustration game data file). You'll find it in the Mods & Scenarios sub-forum.
Since I lack the skills to create and tune scenarios, let's hope someone picks up the ball and moves it forward with a scenario.

Note: I did struggle matching your sketches against the (2013) Braunschweig map data (notably the Mittellandkanal canal position).

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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

As I have been writing about some imaginary geographic feature called The Vormundberg I thought I had better at least try and put some flesh on the bones...

49K words down, so perhaps another 110K before the final book is finished.

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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

I am very impressed W1II14m. My latest map is far more basic and took over twelve hours to create. How about yours?
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

I am but a humble amateur, so I am pretty impressed by these maps you guys create.
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by zakblood »

tt.asp?forumid=1296

plenty of help here above for map etc ^^

[&o]

not saying either i could do it, like to play, never modded tbh, might do a scenario as have played around abit, bit out of my depth and time frame tbh, bit late for me as i'm a ww2 buff, but do love how this game is going, keep up the writing and hope all goes well for you Andy

and your 4 maps on you site look great tbh as well so only 2 more for you to do :)

im sure if you wan't someone to help or do your maps for you there's plenty here to ask, you have the names and know where you want it to take place, just ask and you never know, can't hurt to ask....
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AndyF
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

Thank you mate.

My main problem is trying to crack the file size and retain quality but reduce the maps byte size. It pushes up the price of the paperbacks and I would prefer to keep them low (less is more, right?)The printers take 90% of the royalties as it is.

Obviously not a concern to a gaming site though.

Anyway, cheers again!
Military fiction writer, the 'Armageddon's Song' series.
British Army veteran.
WayneBGood
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by WayneBGood »

Hi Andy, read your series waiting impatiently for the next one. If you haven't had a chance his books are available from amazon.
they are pretty good reads!

Wayne
mikeCK
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by mikeCK »

I'm about 20% through the first one!
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AndyF
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by AndyF »

The language barrier.

A quick question for any Americans (and Geordies) who read this.

Back in the 1970s when I was in the mortar platoon of 2CG (2nd Bn Coldstream Guards) I had occasion to attempt to chat up a young lady who hailed from over your way, and I struck out entirely as she did not understand a word I was saying (I had a broad Geordie accent back then) and I have included the language barrier in the story a couple of times without including an example.

Here then is an extract from what will be the ultimate battle in Europe, and it concerns the instruction on the operation of the 30mm Rarden cannon to a paratrooper from Nevada by a Coldstreamer from Sunderland, Tyne & Wear* in the UK (* Geordieland).

I would welcome any comments as to whether or not it works, and 2/ Do you understand what the instructor is saying(without googling, of course)

The Warrior’s gunner came from Nevada and didn’t understand the offside rule, leg-before-wicket, or even the difference between Union and League. The British driver from Sunderland didn’t like the stop and start of American football or ‘Rounders for boys’, as he termed Baseball, so that kind of put a crimp on the usual source of male bonding conversation when they had first been crewed together. However, sufficient common ground, of a sort, had been found when it was revealed that the 82nd paratrooper was a reservist who’s day job was that of a croupier in a Las Vegas casino. Given that the driver’s Dad, an electrician, had once rewired a betting shop, that served as sufficient foundation for a firm friendship to begin.
The 30mm Rarden cannon in the Warriors small turret takes its name from its manufacturer, now defunct, the Royal Armament Research and Development establishment, Enfield, and the gunners training had been provided by the driver, with a non-technical introduction and insight into its rather user unfriendly operation.
“It’s gannin ta be a reet focken pain hand cranken the fust roond, fer ya marra!” but demonstration and imitation had made up for the language barrier that exists between English speakers from opposite sides of the Atlantic. It fired two types of ammunition, APDS, armour piercing discarding sabot, and HE. By day the HE rounds were recognisable of course by their yellow tips, and the three round clips were also yellow. At night, two round holes in the clip ensured correct identification by touch. APDS had black clips, blue tips and one hole in the clip.
A problem arose if the commander engaged a target of opportunity with less than three rounds, and allowed himself to be side tracked or distracted, losing count of how many rounds had been expended. Three clips were loaded at a time but it was important to count the rounds as they were fired or a ‘gap-in-feed’ would necessitate a full unload of the weapon followed by a reload. After three rounds a fresh clip of three had to be loaded despite there still being two full clips ready. The mantra was ‘Three rounds fired… three rounds required’.
“Divent forgit, nay single roond blats or ye’ll fockoop. Three roonds at a time is easy tay count, but mind ya hay-a couple o-loose ones tay hand, reet?”
Military fiction writer, the 'Armageddon's Song' series.
British Army veteran.
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Mad Russian
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by Mad Russian »

Not bad.

When I served a training session with BAOR one of the big differences was tea time. The US Army doesn't stop fighting to have tea. We also drink it, for the most part black. We prefer it to be a mild brown color with lots of ice. That was a major source of amazement for the Brits I served with. We eventually did try cream in our tea but that was almost a week after we got there.

If you switch the American to come from the south, Texas/Arkansas/Louisiana/North-South Carolina/Georgia you could use the southern drawl and Ya'll. Have them both be from a farm and you would have your connection. That could give you lots of literary license.

Just a thought.



Good Hunting.

MR
The most expensive thing in the world is free time.

Founder of HSG scenario design group for Combat Mission.
Panzer Command Ostfront Development Team.
Flashpoint Campaigns: Red Storm Development Team.
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zakblood
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by zakblood »

strange reference to not stopping for tea MR tbh, usa army stops for everything else, not going to say what either but can remember many old wars fought when the stopped for more than just tea, they have one of if not the biggest logistical support efforts than any other army, it's well known that they won't move unless they have every creature comfort, the same going is still true even today, over paid, over sxxxx and still over in some countries, the world police force that never got voted for or asked to be it either, i'm not anti war, anti usa or anti anything, but we dont stop for tea anymore than anyone else, have a lot smaller army, less of everything and are always fighting with less than everyone else, out of date, poorly equipped and always undermanned and outgunned but hardly ever outclassed.

h88p://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/how-the ... story.html

h88p://military-navy-army-airforce.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/top-10-most-powerful-armies-in-world.html

another great quote and find "American GI is the most energy-consuming soldier ever seen on the field of war"

also see,

“The US Army calculated that it would burn 40 million gallons of fuel in three weeks of combat in Iraq, an amount equivalent to the gasoline consumed by all Allied armies combined during the four years of World War I.”

h88p://www.resilience.org/stories/2006-02-26/u ... onsumption

ps, we do also like coffee :)
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wodin
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by wodin »

Cream in tea???? yuck..milk in tea...cream in coffee
JWW
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RE: Armageddon's Song

Post by JWW »

ORIGINAL: zakblood

strange reference to not stopping for tea MR tbh, usa army stops for everything else, not going to say what either but can remember many old wars fought when the stopped for more than just tea, they have one of if not the biggest logistical support efforts than any other army, it's well known that they won't move unless they have every creature comfort, the same going is still true even today, over paid, over sxxxx and still over in some countries, the world police force that never got voted for or asked to be it either, i'm not anti war, anti usa or anti anything, but we dont stop for tea anymore than anyone else, have a lot smaller army, less of everything and are always fighting with less than everyone else, out of date, poorly equipped and always undermanned and outgunned but hardly ever outclassed.

h88p://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/how-the ... story.html

h88p://military-navy-army-airforce.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/top-10-most-powerful-armies-in-world.html

another great quote and find "American GI is the most energy-consuming soldier ever seen on the field of war"

also see,

“The US Army calculated that it would burn 40 million gallons of fuel in three weeks of combat in Iraq, an amount equivalent to the gasoline consumed by all Allied armies combined during the four years of World War I.”

h88p://www.resilience.org/stories/2006-02-26/u ... onsumption

ps, we do also like coffee :)

You will not find it difficult to prove that battles, campaigns, and even wars have been won or lost primarily because of logistics. - General Dwight D. Eisenhower

Logistics comprises the means and arrangements which work out the plans of strategy and tactics. Strategy decides where to act; logistics brings the troops to this point. - General Antoine Henri Jomini, Precis de l'Art de la Guerre (The Art of War), 1838

“The amateurs discuss tactics: the professionals discuss logistics.” – Napoleon Bonaparte

Logistics...as vital to military success as daily food is to daily work. - Captain A.T. Mahan, Armaments and Arbitration, 1912

My logisticians are a humorless lot...they know if my campaign fails, they are the first ones I will slay. - Alexander

The tactics...no, amateurs discuss tactics,.... Professional soldiers study logistics. - Tom Clancy, Red Storm Rising

"An army marches on its stomach.” – Napoleon Bonaparte

*Note - As usual, regarding internet quotes, I won't vouch with certainty that the attribution is correct for all of them.
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