OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

This new stand alone release based on the legendary War in the Pacific from 2 by 3 Games adds significant improvements and changes to enhance game play, improve realism, and increase historical accuracy. With dozens of new features, new art, and engine improvements, War in the Pacific: Admiral's Edition brings you the most realistic and immersive WWII Pacific Theater wargame ever!

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denisonh
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by denisonh »

My biological maternal grandfather served in the Marines in the Pacific, and my Grandma's cousin was on Bataan(MIA)
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Tanaka
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by Tanaka »

My grandfather flew in B-29's out of Saipan.
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homer82
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by homer82 »

Giving a sailor a platform to tell stories can be dangerous but I'll limit myself. :D

1983 or so a buddy and I are in a train station somewhere between Yokosuka and Tokyo studying the train line map when my buddy lurches forward as if pushed from behind. We both turn around to see an older Japanese man covered in burn scars scowling at us. We figured he survived firebombing and so we just walked away.

A couple of years later, I learned my uncle's father (by marriage) was a Bataan Death March survivor. I only learned this after being told by my uncle that introducing his father to my new Japanese bride wouldn't be a good idea. I get it.

I was a Cryptologic Technician (CT) in the USN and in 1999 was assigned to CINCPACFLT (N3DC). That year we moved our offices from the 4th deck of our building to brand new offices in the totally renovated basement. This is the same basement known as Station Hypo in '42. No ghosts that I sensed but as a lover of history it was strange being there.
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Moltrey
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by Moltrey »

My father served in the USN beginning in Nov '41 with basic at Farragut, ID. Later as AO2 or Aviation Ordnanceman 2nd Class he taught gunnery school at Pensacola, FL before joining the fleet on Bon Homme Richard and lastly Randolph.
Assigned to Fighter/Bomber Squadron 16 (VBF-16) with SB2C Helldivers and took part in the Philippine Sea and raids on Japan as part of TF 58. He nearly walked off the bow one dark night after missing a deck light heading to his berth up forward.

I still have all his Navy items, ranging from his skullcap and red cap, CV News copies published on ship and a Pratt & Whitney engine ID metal cap from a wrecked aircraft and lots of pictures. The highlight is a folded pilot's Sea of Japan silk map with all the names of the squadron crews that were killed around the edge.
Dad passed in Dec '12 from Parkinsons complications at 89.
"Chew, if only you could see what I've seen with your eyes." - Roy Batty
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orabera
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by orabera »

Both of my grandfathers were 4F during WWII, so no close relations in the war. One was a farmer with kids (mom) and the other was a small farming town cop with kids (dad) who tried to enlist after Pearl Harbor but was rejected. Flat feet supposedly. He apparently fought several "battles" against drunken Mexican farm workers who had been brought in during the war for harvests.

My paternal grandfathers cousin was a B-29 gunner flying missions out of Saipan. When the second big fire bombing raid raid hit Nagoya on March 11/12 no B-29's were shot down, but one did suffer an engine fire on takeoff and crashed off Saipan with no survivors. Grandpa's cousin was the one gunner on that flight.

And then there was one great Aunts husband was a pre-war Marine who served through the Pacific as a crewman on 5" gun on a Treaty CA. Don't remember which cruiser, I remember he claimed he was at Coral Sea, Midway, and Guadalcanal and his ship wasn't sunk. Which would put him on the Portland probably. His fondest memories were of docking in Panama before the war, NSFW memories. Graduated college after the war, received a commission and commanded a Marine company guarding hospital during the Korean War.
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Don Bowen
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by Don Bowen »

bradfordkay wrote: Fri Aug 22, 2025 6:44 pm My grandfather was a Lt Col in a quartermaster unit and I know that he was in the Philippines in '45. Unfortunately, he died in 1960, my dad died in 1985 (was a teenager during the war), and my grandmother passed in 1988 so I have no one to ask for more information.
My Father was a Master Sergeant and chief clerk in the 1st Quartermaster Depot, Philippines 1945. Is Quartermaster Depot was the quartermaster unit responsible for rearming the Philippine Guerilla Units in Luzon. Perhaps the same unit??

Also my cousin was in the 60th Coast Artillery, original garrison of Corregidor 1941.

Both are gone now. Hell, us Vietnam war guys are growing very old as well.
rockmedic109
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by rockmedic109 »

My father-in-law was on a plane for Australia when the war ended. He stayed in and eventually became a Lt Col. He was originally a pilot and then switched to something to do with electronics before retiring.

A weekend neighbor {my parents had a house on the coast that we went to on weekends} flew P-38s. I believe he served in China at some time.

I've transported elderly vets to the hospital over the years. One served in the Solomons. He was surprised that I knew of the places he recalled.

One was in the Philippines and captured. He spent the war in a Japanese POW camp and objected very strongly to being placed in a care home run by an Asian. I cannot even imagine what he went through or what memories it was bringing up. I got him to agree to go to the hospital with me and talked to discharge planning to get him to a place where he would feel safe.
lopec
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by lopec »

My grandfather was an Army engineer that built airfields (and other facilities I assume) on Efate. So anyways, before and after the war he was a carpenter by trade and as a hobby built a lot of Sam Maloof replica furniture, he made chairs for family members etc. Well on the chair he made for me when I was about 1 years old in 1988, among other things he wrote "Dark Dowel Rosewood: Efate Island New Hebrides 1942-1944 Army Eng SWP."

So we have no idea how he got the wood back to the states or anything like that, but he kept enough of it for 40-some-odd years to use some of it in my chair. I haven't been able to fit in the chair for 35+ years but at least the cats still enjoy it.

I really need to try to get a hold of his service records to get a more complete picture of what he did. I think the family stories were he contracted malaria (like everyone else did in the South Pacific) so badly that he may have been sent home (he always said it nearly killed him.) I have found some hospital admission records of him being admitted to a field hospital on Efate in June of 42, and I know the first plane(s) landed on the runways there around May of 42, so I assume he must of been amongst the first elements sent to the island for base building. IIRC the first Marine elements arrived in April, and the Seabees arrived in May. Off the top of my head I can't seem to recall or find specifically what Army elements were there at the start, but there you go.

So anytime in game when I'm in the South Pacific and around the New Hebrides I can't help but think of my Grandfather.
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tonybot
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by tonybot »

My wife's father served on the destroyer USS Lang. That ship escorted the US Wasp to deliver Spitfires to Malta and then served in the Guadalcanal Campaign. I regret never having met him before he died in 1986. My wife still has pictures of him that showed he was an avid boxer.
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Gilmer
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Re: OT: Real Life Connections to War in the Pacific

Post by Gilmer »

The one connection I have (possibly) of the list of men who died on the Arizona, there is someone with my same last name. It's a very unusual last name, so there's a decent chance I'm related to any of them in the USA. Did my section of the family know him? No. It surprised me when my aunt said she had visited the memorial and saw our last name (her maiden name) on the list of men who had died.
"Venimus, vidimus, Deus vicit" John III Sobieski as he entered Vienna on 9/12/1683. "I came, I saw, God conquered."
He that has a mind to fight, let him fight, for now is the time. - Anacreon
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