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Fateful Stand

By: Critical Hit

Type: Ziplock

Product Line: Advanced Squad Leader - Western Front

Last Stocked on 4/12/2024

Product Info

Title
Fateful Stand
Publisher
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2013
Dimensions
12.5x9.5x.2"
NKG Part #
2147538159
MFG. Part #
CRTASLFS
Type
Ziplock

Description

Please note that in 2013 Critical Hit started producing products with 12" x 18" cardstock maps. This ASL product will contain this new style of map.

The warm weather ... at least in the Northern Hemisphere ... is finally headed our way. What better time than NOW to bring you back to the dead of Winter. It is the Battle of the Bulge and once again some of the finest soldiers ever birthed by a great nation ... are standing firm ... against the violent force of an entire Panzer Division. There is no turning back on the road to Bastogne, the linchpin to Hitler's last offensive ... and the scene of A Fateful Stand ... replete with new counter art, a full collection of combat counters in Winter gear and camo schemes. Baby, it's cold outside! But we aim to warm the hearts of tactical-level gamers north and south of the equator.

NOVILLE, BELGIUM, 19 December 1944: Team Desobry (named for Major William R. Desobry, Commanding Officer of the 20th Armored Infantry Battalion, 10th Armored Division) assembled in the Noville area at 2300 hours on December 18. Because the unit arrived in the area during the hours of darkness, full advantage of the natural defenses of the terrain could not be made. Desobry set up a perimeter defense of the town under Captain Gordon Geiger of Battalion Headquarters Company. He sent forward three outposts, each consisting of a depleted platoon of infantry and a section of medium tanks. One went east on the road to Bourcy. Another went northeast on the Houffalize road and the third set up its roadblock at some crosstrails on the road towards Vaux. Desobry's outpost line was about 800 yards from his main body and engineers were instructed to install minefields in support of the roadblocks. Mines could not be laid due to a steady flow of American stragglers down these same roads.

Despite having orders to incorporate stragglers into his lines, with the exception of a platoon of armored infantry from CCR, 9th Armored Division, most of the retreating soldiers took to the cellars of Noville, hors de combat. At 0430 hours on December 19 the stream of stragglers ceased suddenly. At 0530 a group of half-tracks could be heard and dimly seen approaching the block on the Bourcy road. In the darkness the outpost could not tell whether they were friend or enemy. The sentry to the front yelled "Halt!" four times. The first vehicle pulled to a grinding halt within a few yards of him. Someone in the half-track yelled something in German. From a bank on the right of the road, Desobry's men showered the half-track with hand grenades. Several exploded as they landed in the vehicle. There was loud screaming as some of the Germans jumped or fell from the half-track and lay in the road. The rest of the enemy column quickly unloaded and deployed in the ditches along the road.

There ensued a 20-minute close-up fight with grenades and automatic weapons and although the roadblock crew was greatly outnumbered, the bullet fire did them no hurt because of the protection of the embankment. Staff Sergeant Leon D. Gantt finally decided that too many German potato-mashers were coming into the position and ordered his men to withdraw about 100 yards. At this the Germans turned their half-track around and ran for safety; they were apparently a reconnaissance element and had completed their mission by finding the American outpost. During the action the two tanks had done nothing although they were within 100 yards of the German column. Sergeant Gantt went to Second Lieutenant Allen L. Johnson and asked him why. Johnson replied that he hadn't been sure what to do. He then fired a couple of Parthian shots down the road but the enemy had already disappeared into the fog and darkness. At dawn the outpost fell back on Noville according to instructions.

Welcome to the second in our series of ASLComp boxed modules! ASLComp FATEFUL STAND puts YOU on the road to Bastogne, amidst the men of the 101st 'Screaming Eagles' as they are rushed forward to stem the tide of Hitler's Wacht Am Rhein offensive ... and save the crossroads that success or failure revolves around! The map is an evocative 'winterized' rendition of the battlefield ... the soldier art is also accurate for the period and time of year ... the tanks are whitewashed ... all that's missing is YOU and your hot hand on the dice as a few critical hits may be required to hold on.

What you get:

  • A set of brand new scenarios depicting the battle, sized small, medium and large!
  • Three separate counter sheets providing all of the combat counters needed to play the module, just bring your ASLRB and system marker counters!
  • Color, three hole punched special rules.
  • Color play aid.
  • Storage baggie, oh baby!