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Product Info

Title
#55 w/Objective Hamburg
Publisher
Category
Sub-category
Publish Year
2021
Dimensions
8.5x11x.5"
NKG Part #
2147911802
MFG. Part #
DCGMW55
Type
Magazine

Description

Objective Hamburg & Seven Days to the Rhine - War in Europe in the 1980s: In this fifth and final installment of the Seven Days to the Rhine Series, we analyze the situation in the far north of Germany.

Objective Hamburg is a two-player alternative history wargame intended to investigate the operational parameters that would have been in place during the first four days of fighting in that border area of West Germany had the Soviet Union decided to try to attack sometime in the early 1980s. It was during that time frame the Warsaw Pact achieved a possible decisive “correlation of forces” between their militaries and those of the West.

This game is the fifth and final volume of the 7DR (Seven Days to the Rhine) Series. Each single-volume game uses the same system and will be playable alone or mated to other games in the series. Each hexagon on the map represents 2.5 miles (four kilometers) from side to opposite side. The Warsaw Pact regiments, while the units of maneuver on the NATO side are battalions. Air power and electronic warfare counters and rules abstractly represent, the effects of one side or the other gaining temporary superiority within those sub-realms of conflict. Each day of real time consists of one nighttime and two daylight turns.

Components: One 22" x 34" map on one sheet & 400 counters

Other Articles:

  • Operation Game Warden: Mekong Delta, 1965-68: During 1968 alone, Game Warden sailors earned more than 500 Purple Hearts (some men earned two or three), an astounding feat considering the tiny percentage (about one-half of one percent) of naval personnel they comprised at that time.
  • The Indonesian–Malaysian Confrontation (1963–1966) : During Great Britain’s pullback after World War II, Britain fought several “Imperial Rearguard” campaigns in faraway corners of the empire. One of these rearguard actions, usually forgotten in the Malaya Emergency and Vietnam shadow, was the Indonesian-Malaysia Confrontation.
  • The Second Chechen War: Russia’s failed attempt to regain control of Chechnya in the First Chechen War ended in August 1996. Following the withdrawal of Russian forces, the situation in Chechnya failed to improve. By 1999, the Russians were better prepared, and an opportunity to intervene grew out of conflict in neighboring Dagestan.