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Tiger of Malaya - The Fall of Singapore 1941-1942

By: Avalanche Press

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: War Games - World War II (Avalanche Press)

Last Stocked on 10/27/2024

Product Info

Title
Tiger of Malaya - The Fall of Singapore 1941-1942
Publisher
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2007
Dimensions
9x12x1"
NKG Part #
2147369589
MFG. Part #
APL0604
Type
Boxed Game
Age Range
12 Years and Up
# Players
2 Players
Game Length
120 - 240 Minutes

Description

In December 1941, Japanese troops landed in northern Malaya as part of their rapid advance into the resource-rich British and Dutch colonies of the South Seas. For the next two months they fought their way down the Malayan peninsula, steadily pushing back the British, Indian, Australian and Malay troops who opposed them.

The heaviest fighting of the campaign began in January, as the Allied defense stiffened in the Sultanate of Johore at the southern end of the peninsula. The Japanese overcame the Allied defenses, aided by some weak generalship on the British/Australian side, and in February launched an attack on “Fortress Singapore.” By Valentine’s Day, the “impregnable” island was in Japanese hands and Britain’s influence East of Suez was shattered forever.

Tiger of Malaya re-creates this campaign, with a major twist. While the battle raged for Johore, troop convoys steamed across the Indian Ocean bringing the 7th Australian Infantry Division, one of the best fighting units of the war, and the 7th Armored Brigade, part of the crack “Desert Rats” division. They eventually landed in Burma when Singapore seemed lost, but if the Allied player can mount a strong enough defense these fresh forces will arrive to defend Malaya. With them, the Allies stand an excellent chance of not only stopping the Japanese but turning the tables against them.

Like Winter Fury, Tiger of Malaya uses a “variable impulse” game system to model the two armies’ very different capabilities. Each turn, each player puts a number of markers into a common container. These are then drawn one by one, the number drawn varying with the current weather condition.