Your First Wargame?
Moderator: maddog986
RE: RE:
The board game Richtofen's War by Avalon Hill. WWI aerial combat. Had fairly realistic representations of air to air combat including deflection shots, attacking from above, below, behind and in front. Damage effects were cummulative and could affect performance during the current mission. Tactics of fighting in flights came into play. Climb and dive were based on the airplane. When I was fifteen... oh sorry did I fall asleep?
never in driblets, but in mass
RE: RE:
I'm pretty sure it was an old grigsby game, Carrier Force I think it was. You could play the Battle of Midway, Coral Sea, Eastern Solomons, or Santa Cruz. I was like 11 and my Dad and I would play it for hours and hours.
SF3C B. B. New USS North Carolina BB-55 - Permission is granted to go ashore for the last shore leave. (1926-2003)
- riverbravo
- Posts: 336
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2003 10:25 am
- Location: Bay St Louis Ms.
RE: RE:
We have a cool cement wall on the beach that we would play "D-Day" on with our plastic tommy guns coming out of the water to rid the mississippi gulf coast of fascist[;)]
Other than that I think it was Squad Leader.
Other than that I think it was Squad Leader.
I laugh at hurricanes!
RE: RE:
First board wargame was AH's Original Gettysburg, with the square grid.
First computer wargame was Chris Crawford's Eastern Front for the Atari 800XL, came on a cartridge. Those were the days...
First computer wargame was Chris Crawford's Eastern Front for the Atari 800XL, came on a cartridge. Those were the days...
" If it be now, tis not to come: if it be not to come, it will be now; if it be not now, yet it will come: the readiness is all"
Clan [GOAT]
Clan [GOAT]
RE: RE:
I would have to say Axis and Allies,though i had ordered a couple miniature games out of comic books(but can't remember their names).
The one thing i didn't like about the game though was it didn't give you enough pieces for a couple countries to start the game properly.You had to use these stupid chits that came with it to represent the excess troops..or you could send away for "extra" troop packs at additional cost[8|]
The one thing i didn't like about the game though was it didn't give you enough pieces for a couple countries to start the game properly.You had to use these stupid chits that came with it to represent the excess troops..or you could send away for "extra" troop packs at additional cost[8|]
"..if you want to make a baby cry, first you give it a lollipop. Then you take it away."
- W Thorne_MatrixForum
- Posts: 97
- Joined: Fri Feb 28, 2003 3:11 am
- Location: Houston
RE: RE:
My first was Close Combat 1. Never played board games but have always been a big history buff. So I have Doug and Eric to blame for the mess I'm in.
- FlashfyreSP
- Posts: 1192
- Joined: Sat Jul 06, 2002 9:39 am
- Location: Combat Information Center
- Contact:
RE: RE:
First board wargame: Of course, it had to be RISK.
First computer wargame: Tanks! The forerunner to this great series of Steel Panthers.
First computer wargame: Tanks! The forerunner to this great series of Steel Panthers.
- Sleeping_Dragon
- Posts: 590
- Joined: Thu Aug 21, 2003 1:08 am
- Location: Raleigh NC, USA
RE: RE:
1st board game: Risk 1st 'real' board game Avalon Hill's 'Bull Run'
1st comp game... something on the Commadore64, can't remember the name, but never got into it.. 1st 'real' comp game The 'V for Victory' series
1st comp game... something on the Commadore64, can't remember the name, but never got into it.. 1st 'real' comp game The 'V for Victory' series
Power does not corrupt; It merely attracts the corruptable.
AKA: Bblue
AKA: Bblue
- David Sandberg
- Posts: 32
- Joined: Thu Oct 16, 2003 3:00 pm
- Location: Minnesota
RE: Your First Wargame?
My first board wargame was Avalon Hill's Tactics II. A primitive one, to be sure, but I still found it interesting enough to get me to try some other AH games, including Panzerblitz, which was the one that REALLY got me into the genre in a big way.
I don't recall the first computer wargame I got ... it may have been one of the V for Victory series games, but I can't be sure about that. Actually I was into combat flight sims on the PC long before I re-entered the world of wargaming, and certainly remember the first software of THAT sort which I bought ... it was the original Falcon, which I thought was so unbelievably cool on my 10Mhz AT with the high-res monochrome Hercules card.
I don't recall the first computer wargame I got ... it may have been one of the V for Victory series games, but I can't be sure about that. Actually I was into combat flight sims on the PC long before I re-entered the world of wargaming, and certainly remember the first software of THAT sort which I bought ... it was the original Falcon, which I thought was so unbelievably cool on my 10Mhz AT with the high-res monochrome Hercules card.

-
- Posts: 86
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2004 7:46 pm
RE: Your First Wargame?
I grew up playing with my brothers. Our first was PanzerBlitz. We skipped school and played in our tree hut. Within a few months we had taken a huge 6' x 8' piece of scrap plywood, painted it white and drawn a map on it. We bought extra counters from Avalon Hill and the three of us had a war going. Sometimes it even became physical between us and even 25 years later we still know shorthand words like "The Hill", "The Island" and "the Hummels in the forest" that instantly decribe a particular time of that war.
I can remember gazing thru those gorgeous full color Avalon Hill catalogs. Amazingly, we played for over three years before we even found out about other wargame companies such as SPI.
I can remember gazing thru those gorgeous full color Avalon Hill catalogs. Amazingly, we played for over three years before we even found out about other wargame companies such as SPI.
- Tom Stearns
- Posts: 20
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2004 7:08 pm
- Location: Houston, Texas
RE: Your First Wargame?
Question can be answered a couple of different ways.
1. First war type game played/owned? Risk and Battle Cry
2. First "real" war game played? Third Reich and Luftwaffe
3. First "real" war game owned? Panzer Blitz
When I was about 10 years old a friend introduced me to the Avalon Hill games above. I then bought my own. I now own approximatley 100 or so. I would much rather sit down at a table face to face with a human and play a war game than play a computer game. Unfortunately, the realities of adulthood, parenthood, and husbandhood make board gaming virtually impossible. Luckily my young boys are growing older and I have the past couple of years been able to introduce them to simple war games. Hopefully I will be able to grow their interest and win out vs PS2.
Here's to the return to the good old days of board wargaming.
1. First war type game played/owned? Risk and Battle Cry
2. First "real" war game played? Third Reich and Luftwaffe
3. First "real" war game owned? Panzer Blitz
When I was about 10 years old a friend introduced me to the Avalon Hill games above. I then bought my own. I now own approximatley 100 or so. I would much rather sit down at a table face to face with a human and play a war game than play a computer game. Unfortunately, the realities of adulthood, parenthood, and husbandhood make board gaming virtually impossible. Luckily my young boys are growing older and I have the past couple of years been able to introduce them to simple war games. Hopefully I will be able to grow their interest and win out vs PS2.
Here's to the return to the good old days of board wargaming.
We're gonna dance with who brung us.
- Airborne82nd
- Posts: 67
- Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2002 4:24 am
- Location: Evans City, PA, USA
RE: Your First Wargame?
First Wargame ever: AHs Luftwaffe
First SPI wargame: Fast Carriers
First computer wargame: Hmm, not really sure. Had a C64 with the original Carriers at War and Gunship (sim).
First CD rom game: Panzer General
First SPI wargame: Fast Carriers
First computer wargame: Hmm, not really sure. Had a C64 with the original Carriers at War and Gunship (sim).
First CD rom game: Panzer General
"Land Soft, Kill Quiet"
RE: Your First Wargame?
First board game SPI's Waterloo in 1974, my wife of 2 months beat me!! She never played again, quit while she was ahead
Played with miniature figures from about 1965 onwards, still got them all.
First computer game was Austerlitz played on an Atari 64.
Played with miniature figures from about 1965 onwards, still got them all.
First computer game was Austerlitz played on an Atari 64.
RE: Your First Wargame?
Like a few others here, I had great fun with toy soldiers as a kid ... first the big clumsy green, tan, and grey ones and later the 1/72 sets. Later, my brother and I used Micronauts and Star Wars toys as armies, killing them with elastic bands! Then one Christmas my parents bought us AH's "Third Reich" and the sophistication began ...
RE: Your First Wargame?
"B-17 Queen of the Skies" by Avalon Hill. Although it was a solitare game, I played that thing four hours on end.
Slick
-----------------------------
"Life's tough, it's tougher if you're stupid."
-John Wayne
-----------------------------
"Life's tough, it's tougher if you're stupid."
-John Wayne
- stevel40831
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2004 7:15 pm
RE: Your First Wargame?
First computer wargame - East Front by Chris Crawford
First non-wargamers wargame - Risk
First real-wargamers wargme - Tactics II
First miniatures wargame - one my brother and I "invented" before we knew there was such a thing... we called it, interestingly enough, "war". We had a huge hard canvas tarp (10' x 6' or so) in the basement and we'd pile junk under it, creating hills and valleys. We'd then pick a side of the battlefield/canvas and deploy our 1/72 unpainted troops that we bought with our meager allowances. It made for interesting match ups as the local hobby store had a very limited selection of soldiers. One of us would have a nice mix of Japanese soldiers and American Marines and the other would have U.S. Civil War cavalry and German Afrika Korps infantry. We'd then take turns moving the guys around, a few inches for each soldier, and then you were allowed to "shoot" a certain number of times with a ping pong ball... if an enemy guy fell he was dead. The carcasses had to stay on the battlefield to simulate reality.... ah, those were the days!
First naval miniatures wargame - another brilliant invention of mine... we'd take the models that I'd spent hours building and duke it out. I had probably 40-50 ships and we'd each pick one out and stand about 20 yards apart and begin firing... to simulate "firing" we'd throw darts at each others ships. Pieces would fly off upon impact and we'd laugh like hell... when you were luck enough to get a critical hit (i.e. the dart stuck in the ship) you were allowed to pour model cement over the hole and you could put a match to it for a certain amount of time. The owner of the ship had to sit idly by for that time and then, after that time, he could put it out. You could not use water though, you had to blow it out... man was that fun! I can still see us laughing so hard that you couldn't blow out the fire and the whole ship would be a black hulk by the time it was over! Such fun...
Steve
First non-wargamers wargame - Risk
First real-wargamers wargme - Tactics II
First miniatures wargame - one my brother and I "invented" before we knew there was such a thing... we called it, interestingly enough, "war". We had a huge hard canvas tarp (10' x 6' or so) in the basement and we'd pile junk under it, creating hills and valleys. We'd then pick a side of the battlefield/canvas and deploy our 1/72 unpainted troops that we bought with our meager allowances. It made for interesting match ups as the local hobby store had a very limited selection of soldiers. One of us would have a nice mix of Japanese soldiers and American Marines and the other would have U.S. Civil War cavalry and German Afrika Korps infantry. We'd then take turns moving the guys around, a few inches for each soldier, and then you were allowed to "shoot" a certain number of times with a ping pong ball... if an enemy guy fell he was dead. The carcasses had to stay on the battlefield to simulate reality.... ah, those were the days!
First naval miniatures wargame - another brilliant invention of mine... we'd take the models that I'd spent hours building and duke it out. I had probably 40-50 ships and we'd each pick one out and stand about 20 yards apart and begin firing... to simulate "firing" we'd throw darts at each others ships. Pieces would fly off upon impact and we'd laugh like hell... when you were luck enough to get a critical hit (i.e. the dart stuck in the ship) you were allowed to pour model cement over the hole and you could put a match to it for a certain amount of time. The owner of the ship had to sit idly by for that time and then, after that time, he could put it out. You could not use water though, you had to blow it out... man was that fun! I can still see us laughing so hard that you couldn't blow out the fire and the whole ship would be a black hulk by the time it was over! Such fun...
Steve
Steve
RE: Your First Wargame?
First board wargame was Avalon Hills original Gettysburg game. Then Avalon Hill's D-day, Bulge, and Panzerblitz.
First computer wargame was Panzer General.
First computer wargame was Panzer General.