The calm before the storm |
Showing posts with label Stalingrad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stalingrad. Show all posts
Wednesday, 25 February 2015
Crossfire at Cavalier AARs
Labels:
Cavalier,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Stalingrad
Friday, 20 February 2015
Crossfire at Cavalier
Tonbridge Wargames Club is staging my 'Crossfiregrad' game as a participation game at Cavalier this Sunday. If you're a reader of this blog, please come over and say hello, and if you're a Crossfire enthusiast or would like to give it a try, please volunteer for a game!
Here are the posters we will be using on the stand:
Here are the posters we will be using on the stand:
Labels:
Cavalier,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Stalingrad
Saturday, 8 November 2014
Crossfiregrad facelift Part 3: finishing touches to the scenery
It's been about three years since I first posted about what I have come to call my 'Crossfiregrad' project - a Stalingradesque cityscape for playing Crossfire. It's been through several reincarnations. This post illustrates the final touches and the final look of the cityscape.
Labels:
15mm,
Cork Tiles,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Scenery,
Stalingrad,
Terrain,
Tiles,
WW2
Thursday, 27 February 2014
Crossfiregrad facelift Part 2: Game trial
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View from the German assault gun late in the game. |
Labels:
15mm,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Mike Caudron,
Scenery,
Stalingrad,
Terrain,
Tiles,
WW2
Saturday, 16 March 2013
Crossfiregrad facelift Part 1

Invariably providing both armies and the scenery, I tend to think in terms of 'games' rather than armies, and 'Crossfiregrad' is the new title I've given my Crossfire mini-Stalingrad game. As previously mentioned, I've been wanting for a long time now to improve the look of this game by adding pavements and rubble-strewn streets, but was torn between (1) adding pavements to the buildings, (2) adding separate pavements or (3) modelling pavements and roads as part of a modular tile system.
Labels:
15mm,
Cork Tiles,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Scenery,
Stalingrad,
Terrain,
Tiles,
WW2
Friday, 22 June 2012
Current priorities
28mm Irish War of Independence for FUBAR rules
All finished apart from varnishing. That's waiting for a warm dry day but there's little sign of that.
15mm Crossfire 'Stalingrad'
I'm now planning to create some new cork terrain boards incorporating roads and to add separate pavements to the buildings. This will hopefully improve the aesthetics and make the 'Stalingrad' cityscape a little more convincing.
15mm Armies for Maurice rules
These rules have recently captured my interest. I'm looking at doing the the Jacobite Rising of 1745 and the Irish Rebellion of 1798 in 15mm and maybe the American War of Independence in 15mm or 10mm. The Seven Years War (Austrians vs Prussians) also appeals.
I've been drooling over the look of 28mm figures, but they would take a long time to paint, would be bulky to carry and require a big table. I think 6mm could be rather fiddly with each unit consisting of four separate square bases. So 15mm, or maybe 10mm, seems a better idea.
In any event, painting up even two new armies in 10 or 15mm is time-consuming. I get there in the end, but by then my interest in the period and/or rules has usually passed on to something else. It's a no-no in some clubs but I'm seriously wondering if putting unpainted figures on the table is the only answer. I could then be using one pair of armies whilst painting another. Alternatively I could make up some counters like the birds-eye-view counters used in the rulebook diagrams.
All finished apart from varnishing. That's waiting for a warm dry day but there's little sign of that.
15mm Crossfire 'Stalingrad'
I'm now planning to create some new cork terrain boards incorporating roads and to add separate pavements to the buildings. This will hopefully improve the aesthetics and make the 'Stalingrad' cityscape a little more convincing.
15mm Armies for Maurice rules
These rules have recently captured my interest. I'm looking at doing the the Jacobite Rising of 1745 and the Irish Rebellion of 1798 in 15mm and maybe the American War of Independence in 15mm or 10mm. The Seven Years War (Austrians vs Prussians) also appeals.
I've been drooling over the look of 28mm figures, but they would take a long time to paint, would be bulky to carry and require a big table. I think 6mm could be rather fiddly with each unit consisting of four separate square bases. So 15mm, or maybe 10mm, seems a better idea.
In any event, painting up even two new armies in 10 or 15mm is time-consuming. I get there in the end, but by then my interest in the period and/or rules has usually passed on to something else. It's a no-no in some clubs but I'm seriously wondering if putting unpainted figures on the table is the only answer. I could then be using one pair of armies whilst painting another. Alternatively I could make up some counters like the birds-eye-view counters used in the rulebook diagrams.
Sunday, 6 November 2011
15mm Stalingrad armies for Crossfire
Labels:
15mm,
Battlefront Miniatures,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Peter Pig,
Stalingrad,
WW2
15mm Crossfire - Stalingrad games
May 2011 game
These shots are of a Crossfire 'Stalingrad' game played at my local club in May 2011. The home-made foamboard buildings have undergone some trauma and need patching up in places. If I was making these again I'd make them slightly smaller (3" x 3" modules) and add some rubble on the outsides. If I did this now the 4" x 4" structures wouldn't fit in the Really Useful Boxes in which I store and transport them.
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The Soviet left flank. Note the T34 (Stalingrad variant) straight from the factory! The colour represents red lead primer and is coincidentally good camouflage against the red brick rubble. |
15mm Crossfire - foamboard buildings for Stalingrad
I
used foamboard (foamcore) to produce some 15mm buildings for my Stalingrad project.
Many wargames use templates for built-up areas. The buildings are purely aesthetic and
are moved around or even removed when the areas are occupied by troops. For
Crossfire I wanted some multi-storey structures with individual footprints of
about 4"/100mm into which elements (representing squads) could actually be placed.
I bought some readymades but I also decided to make some ruined and semi-ruined
buildings from foamboard. There are lots of good articles on the Web to which
I am indebted. This is just an account of my personal approach. Foamboard has
a layer of foam sandwiched between two layers of card and can be bought in 3mm
and 5mm thicknesses from art shops for as little as £2 for an A3 sheet. After
some experiment, I developed the following procedure.
Design the buildings
on a computer. I use CorelDraw and allow a basic height of 30mm per storey for
15mm scale. Print
out the designs and trim to size with scissors. Stick the print-outs to
the foamboard using Spraymount. The model illustrated is actually a double
unit (4" x 8").
Labels:
15mm,
Crossfire,
Crossfiregrad,
Foamboard,
Scenery,
Scratchbuild,
Stalingrad,
WW2
15mm Crossfire - Stalingrad
Inspired by Steven Thomas' '2 foot city scenario' for Crossfire, my 'Stalingrad' project involves small German and Russian forces (15mm Peter Pig figures) and an extensive cityscape. I'm using some J R Miniatures buildings from Magister Militum and some generic ruins from Ironclad Miniatures, but most of the buildings are scratchbuilt using modular foamboard units.
These pictures show the cityscape as originally envisaged. Unfortunately, placing figures within the mult-storey buildings proved to be fiddly, confusing (the bases got lost) and complex (house rules were needed). At first I separated the floors and used all the buildings as single-storey, but this didn't look right. Finally, I stuck the buildings back together.
My cityscape now consists of rubble areas interspersed with buildings, and I will add some pictures of these in a later post. Bases are placed only on the top floors. A single-storey building accommodates two squads with an extra squad allowed for each extra storey. This allows the buildings with more floors to be occupied by stronger forces. Gameplay is otherwise exactly as in the basic rules.
These pictures show the cityscape as originally envisaged. Unfortunately, placing figures within the mult-storey buildings proved to be fiddly, confusing (the bases got lost) and complex (house rules were needed). At first I separated the floors and used all the buildings as single-storey, but this didn't look right. Finally, I stuck the buildings back together.
My cityscape now consists of rubble areas interspersed with buildings, and I will add some pictures of these in a later post. Bases are placed only on the top floors. A single-storey building accommodates two squads with an extra squad allowed for each extra storey. This allows the buildings with more floors to be occupied by stronger forces. Gameplay is otherwise exactly as in the basic rules.
![]() |
The '2 foot city' in progress. |
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