Skip to main content

Singapore! (Colonel's Edition)

By: Diffraction Entertainment

Type: Boxed Game

Product Line: War Games (Diffraction Entertainment)

See Other Printings & Editions

Search on Singapore!

MSRP old price: $577.00

Price Reduced

Product Info

Title
Singapore! (Colonel's Edition)
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2015
Dimensions
15.75x12x3.25"
NKG Part #
2147600325
Type
Boxed Game
Age Range
12 Years and Up
# Players
2 Players
Game Length
180 Minutes

Description

SINGAPORE! is the sixth title in the immense (in acclaim as well as size) TSWW Game Series. Singapore is Diffraction Entertainment’s first Pacific Theatre Title.

Singapore! is the all-encompassing operational game dealing with what started as the ill-fated ABDACOM Theatre, and ended as the victorious South East Asia Command. The game includes the appallingly poor Allied performance in Malaya, Burma, and the Dutch East Indies, as well as the long drag towards victory over the tenacious (some would say fanatical) Japanese forces in South East Asia.

The game includes the following:

Maps

21 TSWW Standard (18” x 26”) maps - although to be honest 3 are a little smaller than that, but you get the idea, its not small…. On the map area are Burma, Malaya, Singapore, Sumatra, Thailand, Laos, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), Cambodia, and Java, as well as most or part of China, India, Borneo, and Vietnam. The Celebes are effectively off map, and will appear in Operation Watchtower, whilst Timor is in the far South Eastern corner of the map area.

As is normal with large TSWW games, the map areas are designed to split into smaller segments to permit players with limited room to enjoy the Singapore! game experience without recourse to wall papering their house, or buying an aircraft hangar!

The maps are to the same standard as Mare Nostrum, Merkur, and Balkan Fury in terms of the map art, and have the plasticized finish standardized with the release of Operation Merkur.

Counters

9 counter sheets with 2520 world class counters covering the British, Chinese, American, Australian, West and East African, Indian, Japanese, Dutch, Thai, and Vichy French militaries that so bitterly contested the region during the campaigns from 1941 to 1945. In addition to the base forces the game includes a variety of what if units for all the major powers, showing what could have been deployed had more resources or political will have been shown.

Orders of Battle

Singapore! is the only game to known games available that shows the entire campaign area in one box, and as such has a variety of modules to entertain and challenge board war gamers:

  • The Grand Campaign
  • Malaya 1941 (the Japanese invasion of Malaya)
  • Burma 1942 (the Japanese invasion of Burma)
  • Sumatra 1942 (the Japanese invasion of Sumatra)
  • Java 1942 (the Japanese invasion of Java)
  • Timor 1942 (the Japanese invasion of Timor)
  • Battle of the Java Sea (the disastrous Allied riposte to the Japanese invasion of Java)
  • The evacuation of Java (Nagumo goes South)
  • The Indian Ocean Raid (Nagumo goes West)
  • Ceylon (the planned Japanese invasion of the island, scheduled for mid to late summer of 1942)
  • First Arakan (the British counter strike into the Arakan, 1943)
  • Second Arakan (the British offensive into the Arakan, 1944)
  • Kohima/Imphal… The Road of Bones (the Japanese invasion of India, 1944)
  • Burma 1945 (the 14th Army supported by the Sino-American forces under General Stillwell’s operations to open the Ledo Road, and the liberation of Burma
  • Operation Zipper (the planned British invasion of Malaya)

    Additionally provided is significant Japanese air and naval assets for what if play, which, given that the Combined Fleet spent significant periods of time in the Lingga Roads (just south of Singapore) is not that silly when you stop and consider it… and it may also be why for extended periods the British Eastern Fleet was heavily reinforced, despite not being engaged directly with its Japanese counter parts.

    Rules and Charts

    These are in effect, the gold standard for the TSWW system, incorporating a variety of revisions, as well as modifications and additions to the logistical system to enable it to illustrate not just the tremendous difficulty of operations in the jungles of Asia, but the magnificent achievements by the USAAF and the RAF in over coming aerial resupply of two capable armies in the field. The charts clearly reflect the same processes and include significant new work on the Japanese forces.