Crimea

Gary Grigsby’s War in the East: The German-Soviet War 1941-1945 is a turn-based World War II strategy game stretching across the entire Eastern Front. Gamers can engage in an epic campaign, including division-sized battles with realistic and historical terrain, weather, orders of battle, logistics and combat results.

The critically and fan-acclaimed Eastern Front mega-game Gary Grigsby’s War in the East just got bigger and better with Gary Grigsby’s War in the East: Don to the Danube! This expansion to the award-winning War in the East comes with a wide array of later war scenarios ranging from short but intense 6 turn bouts like the Battle for Kharkov (1942) to immense 37-turn engagements taking place across multiple nations like Drama on the Danube (Summer 1944 – Spring 1945).

Moderators: Joel Billings, Sabre21, elmo3

Post Reply
User avatar
TheLysander
Posts: 56
Joined: Mon Feb 27, 2017 6:01 am
Location: England

Crimea

Post by TheLysander »

It's 42 and im at the gates of sevastopol yet the russians control the east bank of the salagir. One russian tank corps broke through near the coast at point 99,114 and moved west to point 98,113. He was encircled. Yet the next turn the entire crimea excluding areas in ZoC by my divisions had been converted to enemy occupied hexes and thus isolating all the units in the area. My question is why did this happen if the russian player did not take these hexes one by one??
User avatar
Telemecus
Posts: 4689
Joined: Sun Mar 20, 2016 8:32 pm
Contact:

RE: Crimea

Post by Telemecus »

If hexes are isolated (cannot trace a supply line to home) then they will flip to enemy control unless they are occupied by your units or in their ZOC. Presumably during your opponents turn the enemy cut off the supply routes to all of those hexes - and they then flipped to their control at the end of their turn.
Wargamers Discord https://discord.gg/U6DcDxT
User avatar
AlexSF
Posts: 184
Joined: Mon Sep 02, 2013 11:20 am
Location: France

RE: Crimea

Post by AlexSF »


Evil laugh [:D]...
"My centre is yielding. My right is retreating. Situation excellent. I am attacking." Maréchal Foch, 1914.
Post Reply

Return to “Gary Grigsby's War in the East Series”