Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Norway 1940 in model - 85 year since the invasion of Norway

Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Courtesy to Major Andreas Hauge for making both the illustration and the diorama. They're from the same battle. 

Today it's exactly 85 years since the German invasion of Norway (Operation Weserübung) and the Norwegian Campaign started (8th of April - 10th of June 1940). This battle and campaign is covered at 'Norway's Resistance Museum' located in Oslo, and opened to the public in 1970. The museum doesn't change their exhibitions very often, so it's been pretty much the same since I was a kid. The museum has a row of small dioramas showing the German attack on Norway in 1940, and like the museum exhibits, these 'dioramas' are old and made with what was available on the Norwegian market at the time. -Mostly various Airfix figures and Vinyl toy cars. Despite being 'simple' these dioramas was like a starting point to military modelling for many of us back in the 70ies. The dioramas gives a brief story about the battle of Norway.

Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
The Sinking of the German cruiser 'Blücher' in the early morning of April 9, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Sola airport (Stavanger) seized by German parachute troops on April 9, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
German units halted at Midtskogen near Elverum on the night of April 10th in an attempt to capture the King and the Government:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Åndalsnes bombed as British reinforcements are landed on April 20th 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Kristiansund or Molde bombed 1940 by Germans:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
A Norwegian unit stood its ground at Vinje svingen in Telemark until May 5, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Namsos bombed and fired after Allied landings on April 20, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Bodø wiped out by terror bombing on May 27, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
German positions at Læigastind north of Narvik overrun on May 7, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Narvik recaptured by Allies on May 28, 1940:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
In the final stagees of the Battle of Narvik the Allied forces were suddenly withdrawn to Europe, which left Norwegian forces facing the superior German forces alone and eventually Norway had to capitulate. 

The Resistance Museum also shows what the German occupation was like in Norway, about the Norwegians who resisted to the occupation and how they resisted. I'm not going to show it all, but I'm going to show you some of the models telling the history. 

The German occupation authorities arrested all teachers that resisted to follow orders and teach Norwegian children the Nazi ideology. There were rumours that the ship was going to be sunken by a German submarine, but it wasn't:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
The teachers and all others that resisted to the occupation and participated in illegal activities were imprisoned in German concentration camps. One of the larger ones in Norway was Grini:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
But some were sent to KZ-camps in Germany or Poland:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
To escape German authorities and imprisonment many Norwegians needed to flee the country. Some of them passed German units and managed to escape to neutral Sweden by foot:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
And some Norwegians escaped to Sweden or UK by fising travellers. My Granduncle was involved in this kind of transport to Sweden:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Many of those who escaped to UK and Sweden recived military training and went back to Norway to train and arm the Resistance movement and to perform sabotage actions:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
The Heavy Water production facilities on Vemork, Rjukan was targeted for several sabotage actions to prevent Nazi Germany to develop nuclear weapons:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Fishing-vessels we're not only transporting refugees into safety, but were also used to transport military equipment, weapons and saboteurs back to Norway and supplies to the Resistance movement. They risked to be controlled by German patrol boats when returning to the Norwegian coast:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
More often they were playing 'hide and seek' against German patrol boats along the Norwegian coast to avoid German controls:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Norwegian raiding units from SOE were often landed along the Norwegian coast to perform different sabotage operations...
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
...or raids on industries the German forces benefited from, and therefore was heavily guarded:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
The industrial railway of Thamshavn was often targeted for sabotage operations, as it was important for the Germans:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
...and when trying to repair locomotives, they were sabotaged at the workshops. It was so critical for the Germans so they needed to bring narrow gauged locomotives from Germany to operate the Thamshavn railway. 
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Military equipment, weapons and supplies for the Resistance movement was also delivered from UK by air:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Preparations to sink the German ship SS Donau:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
In November 1944 the very offensive communist resistance unit called 'Pelle Gruppa' launched a major sabotage operations against 2 wharfs in Oslo and destroyed 6 ships, 2 dry docks and one crane. One of those old wharfs is located next to the museum where I work, which now has become a shopping mall:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Blowing up Jørstad railway bridge and derailing a German troop train arriving later on in January 1945. The operation led to firefights between German and American units in Norway in the aftermath:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Operation Polar Bear; The Resistance movement stole 13 vessels from German control and sailed them to safety and out of German reach in neutral Sweden in February 1945:
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge
Towards the end of WW2 in Norway there was a couple of skirmishes between the Norwegian Resistance Movement and German forces assisted by Norwegian SS volunteers. One of them was the Battle of Haglebu. Due to better weapons the Norwegian Resistance won these firefights and managed to withdraw to safety. 
Norges Hjemmefront Museum, Norway's Resistance Museum. Operation Weserübung 1940. WW2 dioramas Norway. Diorama hjemmefrontmuseet. Major Andreas Hauge

This post was not meant to be a history-lesson, but if you followed this post so far and the links to the different events and operations I added here and there, you probably know more about WW2 in Norway than the average population in Norway now...

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Add realistic Squads and Squad Tactics to your Wargames

Links to websites which is useful if you want to create realistic Squads and Platoons and  Squad tactics for tabletop wargaming

Some of the skirmish wargame rules I've been playing, both the free and commercial ones, suggests some kind of 'Army Building' and how to make up units for the game (mostly limited to make balanced forces). Most of the rules and games I play however, does not. This is not a problem if you know what kind of units you want to bring to your tabletop battles, or you're into military history and know how to create those specific units for your game. I've found some websites that can help you create realistic Squad and Platoon level units for 20th and 21st century:

Battle Order

On the Battle Order website there is a lot of information on how to create different modern units on different levels for different countries and periods. Most of my skirmish games are based upon rifle Squads and at the Battle Order website there is a 'Graphic section' I have found most useful as it's describing number of members, what kind of weapons they are armed with for different countries and periods.
Links to websites which is useful if you want to create realistic Squads and Platoons and  Squad tactics for tabletop wargaming
This is an example of what you can find at Battle Order, showing a WW2 Homeguard Rifle Squad with number of members, ranks and weapons:
Links to websites which is useful if you want to create realistic Squads and Platoons and  Squad tactics for tabletop wargaming

FUBAR

The website for the free wargame rules FUBAR also consists some information on how to create WWII Squads and Platoons from different nations.
Links to websites which is useful if you want to create realistic Squads and Platoons and  Squad tactics for tabletop wargaming

Tactical Forge

If you create 'realistic' skirmish units for your game it would be nice to operate them in your game in a realistic manner as well, even if you have no military experience on Squad or Platoon level. On YouTube I recently found a channel named Tactical Forge. It's a very interesting YouTube-channel which instructs real life Squad tactics by using miniatures. The playlist Micro Tactics is most useful regarding wargames.

I recommend you to pay these websites a visit and hope you find them as useful as I did. I'll add links to them in the menu to the right.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue

Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon according to my scenario and interpreted by ChatGPT

Last year I attended the 'Wargame in a Wee Matchbox Challenge' with paper miniatures from Junior General and rules made by ChatGPT; Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon.

Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.

The rules was really simple, fast playing and easy, and I had to keep everything small to make it fit in a matchbox (which it eventually did). -Since the Challenge I've played the game several times with my oldest son. The game feels perhaps a little too simple, as gamers usually ends up behind cover exchanging fire with the opponents until one of them runs out of health. I wanted to see if it would help to this feeling and make the game more interesting if a little more was added to it than what would fit in a matchbox. So I decided to try out the very same simple rules and scenario with larger terrain and miniatures in 3D as I wanted to use my 54mm -ish Cowboys in a game.  I'm curious to see if a more '3D-game' gives another impression or 'deluxe version' of this simple game.

I had almost everything I needed to convert my 2D-game in the matchbox into a fully 3D one, except for a female hostage to rescue. I found one 28mm scale at Thingeverse and 3D-printed her to match the size of my 54mm -ish cowboys. I guess she can double up and I can use her as a civilian or a missionary in my Congo Crisis games too. 

Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.

Scenario: It's loosely based on the scene from 'A Fistfull of Dollars' when 'Joe' frees 'Marisol'; 3 outlaws are holding a woman hostage in the house, and our 'Hero' is there to free her.

Forces: Are dictated by the rules; 3 outlaws with health of 2 and hits on 5+ Vs. 'The Man with No Name' with a health of 4 and hits on a 4+ and activates first each turn.

The Rules:

Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.

The Game

The original set up for the game (as in the 'Matchbox Challenge), and my fully 3D set up for this game (which will not fit in any matchbox):
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
Our 'Hero' approaches the house where the 'Bad Guys' are holding a woman captive: 
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
The Bad Guys spot him at a distance and it doesn't look like he's gonna take them by surprise:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
As soon as a couple of the outlaws leaves the building, they get into our Hero's gun sight:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
But at this distance and moving targets the Hero misses, and the Bad Guys manage to get into cover and return fire:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
And very soon the firefight develops into a locked position where all combatants are in cover exchanging fire in a very dueling like battle. The Bad Guys are good shooters and our Hero takes a couple of hits. This situation does not look good for him at this stage:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
I think our Hero performs best under pressure because when it start to look real bad for him, he gets a couple of critical hits on one of his gunmen:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
And one of them are out of the fight:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
Then the nameless Hero focus his fire on the other gunman behind cover:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
And finally takes him out too:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
The Villain did not like this development in the gunfight, as he now has to go out and fight him himself:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
Just as the Villain leves the building he doesn't manage to even open fire before the nameless Hero opens fire... 
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
...and at very long range accurately hits the Villain beside the female hostage, and impacts a critical hit on him with a single shot:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.
After 15 minutes and 10 turns it look like the nameless Hero saved the day:
Free wargame rules: Old West Mini-Wargame: Showdown at High Noon - A Wargame in a Matchbox Epilogue.

Conclusion

So was this game any different than the Matchbox-version of it? - Not really, it's still the very same simple rules that makes battle develop more into static duels where the only modifier is it the fighters are Heroes' and have cover or not. The only difference with this game was that I was able to make even nicer images for the battle report.

And with this game and battle report its perhaps time to finally conclude my entry to the "2024 Wargame in a Wee Matchbox Challenge". It's been an interesting challenge and I would like to credit Alan at The Duchy of Tradgardland for the initiative to the challenge and the entries as follow. Well done everybody!!
I guess some of us has 'leftover matches' after emptying our boxes to join the 'Matchbox Challenge'. At the Model exhibition in Neumünster earlier this year I found this example what you can use your matches for. -At least if you have 3700 of them and 640 hours to spare...

- Perhaps an idea for a 'Challenge' in 2025??

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