RE: What's the most complicated board wargame you ever played?
Posted: Fri Mar 26, 2021 11:38 pm
USN from SPI - Maps were huge!
Very similar to my story. Couldn't read until I was 7. However once I could I loved reading. At age of 11\12 it was Lord of the Rings that really blew my mind.
I started The Lord of the Rings when I was 10 but my interest was killed when the story reached Tom Bombadil. I re-read it a couple of years later and the book blew my mind. I still hate Tom Bombadil and, to this day, I never read even one of the numerous songs and poems interspersed through the book.ORIGINAL: Neilster
Very similar to my story. Couldn't read until I was 7. However once I could I loved reading. At age of 11\12 it was Lord of the Rings that really blew my mind.
I read The Lord of the Rings when I was seven or eight. My brother who was four years older than me and a huge fan of the book was at first amused that I was attempting it, and then annoyed and claimed that even if I was reading it, I couldn't understand it. He asked me loads of questions and I was able to answer them all.
I enjoyed it but it's still a massive task for a kid that young. I didn't read it again until I was 20.
warspite1ORIGINAL: Grognerd_INC
Yeah all I remember is the regimental equivalent stacking rule, never finished a game of it.
You said it.ORIGINAL: RFalvo69
I started The Lord of the Rings when I was 10 but my interest was killed when the story reached Tom Bombadil. I re-read it a couple of years later and the book blew my mind. I still hate Tom Bombadil and, to this day, I never read even one of the numerous songs and poems interspersed through the book.ORIGINAL: Neilster
Very similar to my story. Couldn't read until I was 7. However once I could I loved reading. At age of 11\12 it was Lord of the Rings that really blew my mind.
I read The Lord of the Rings when I was seven or eight. My brother who was four years older than me and a huge fan of the book was at first amused that I was attempting it, and then annoyed and claimed that even if I was reading it, I couldn't understand it. He asked me loads of questions and I was able to answer them all.
I enjoyed it but it's still a massive task for a kid that young. I didn't read it again until I was 20.
ORIGINAL: Lobster
Probably GDW's Europa Series. All of the maps put together on my basement floor. It was physically complicated as much as mentally complicated. We toyed with the idea of a winch and trolley system to suspend players over the maps. [:D]
After a few turns it became painfully apparent (literally) it was not going to be possible to play the game.
I saw Fire in the East/Scorched Earth being played in a now closed gaming club in Catanzaro, in the late '90s. It was a September-June marathon, with three people on each side. They even had a home made wall map where they marked the progress with red and blue pencils. Sometimes I watched the game and it didn't seem very complex, only gigantic. Anyway, these guys had a great fun in playing it.ORIGINAL: MrsWargamer
ORIGINAL: Lobster
Probably GDW's Europa Series. All of the maps put together on my basement floor. It was physically complicated as much as mentally complicated. We toyed with the idea of a winch and trolley system to suspend players over the maps. [:D]
After a few turns it became painfully apparent (literally) it was not going to be possible to play the game.
Yep.
I have Western Desert and Marita Merkur.
I had France for 1940. And I dreamed of having enough space for Fire in the East.
But, I couldn't even afford an apartment that big in my 20s let alone a spare room that size.