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Great War at Sea #1 - The Mediterranean (2nd Edition, 2nd Printing)

By: Avalanche Press

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: Great War at Sea

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Last Stocked on 12/9/2024

Product Info

Title
Great War at Sea #1 - The Mediterranean (2nd Edition, 2nd Printing)
Publisher
Product Line
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2001
Dimensions
9x12x1"
NKG Part #
2147470177
MFG. Part #
APL0016-2ND
Type
Boxed Game
Age Range
12 Years and Up
# Players
2 Players
Game Length
30 - 180 Minutes

Description

In August 1914, the German battle cruiser Goeben eluded her pursuers, racing across the Mediterranean Sea to Constantinople and setting off a chain of events that would completely change the face of the Middle East and ultimately the world. Her escape is only the best-known of the dozens of naval operations conducted on the Mediterranean, Black and Adriatic Seas during the First World War.

Great War at Sea: Mediterranean is an exciting board wargame based on naval conflict in these seas during the First World War. There are seventy scenarios, or separate game situations, based on actual or potential activities by the fleets of Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, Italy, Russia, France and Britain and the smaller navies of Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Japan.

There are also scenarios based on actions that took place during the Italo-Turkish War and the Balkan Wars, and in the chaotic times following the end of World War One.

Twelve of the scenarios are battle scenarios, useful for learning the game system or for quick fun. The 58 operational scenarios cover a wide variety of situations: The Italo-Turkish War of 1911-1912 and the Balkan War between Greece and Turkey usually pit small and outdated fleets against one another. A number of scenarios cover the First World War’s most intense but possibly least-known naval campaign, the struggle for control of the Black Sea. The struggle for the Adriatic between Austria-Hungary and Italy is also shown. Several scenarios explore war plans for campaigns arching over the entire Mediterranean, based on the actual staff studies. The scenarios are based on primary research in several military archives and represent a serious historical study of the era.

The playing pieces sport accurate, highly detailed drawings of the ships that made history. Eleven nations are represented: Germany, Britain, France, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Romania, Bulgaria and Japan. The ships range from elderly ironclads relegated to coastal defense duties to massive super-battleships like the Italian Caracciolo class that were designed but never built.