Royal Navy briefing
Following a recent action,
the Japanese battlecruiser Kongo has
put into a minor port for boiler repairs.
You are to prevent her putting to sea.
In order to draw off local Japanese forces, you must detach either
The harbour entrance is protected by a blockship and two 8” guns.
While Kongo is the main target, any damage caused to the harbour installations would be a bonus.
Force L
HMS Suffolk (8” cruiser)
HMS Gurkha
HMS Jaguar
HMS Jackal
HMS Javelin
HMS Janus
Imperial Japanese Navy briefing
Following a recent action,
the battlecruiser Kongo has
put into a minor port for boiler repairs.
You must save the Kongo and get it to open waters.
The harbour entrance is protected by a blockship and two 8” guns. Two destroyers are also present, one in port (with steam up) and one at sea.
The blockship is an old towed barge which can be moved into place when under threat (as soon as an enemy ship is spotted). On it’s first turn it moves 1 knot, the second 2 knots, third 4 knots and on the forth turn reaches it’s 8 knot maximum.
Kongo only has one turret (2 guns) operational for the first 4 turns, then two until turn ten when a third turret can be used. By turn ten the ship has steam pressure and can cast off and move (max 4 kts then doubling each turn until it reaches it’s maximum).
Kongo (see notes above)
Isokaze
Kuroshio
For our game, Martin and I did the umpiring. Lloyd led the RN and decided to detach Suffolk. He led his flotilla from aboard HMS Gurkha. The other RN commanders were Ian, Tony and Dave.
The Japanese were led by wily and inscrutable John, assisted by wily and inscrutable Jerry.
Interestingly, Kongo was the last major Japanese warship to be constructed abroad - in Britain (Barrow in Furness).
6 comments:
Tim
Looking forward to your next post. But you wimped out and played indoors!
Cheers
PD
Peter Douglas
Well it was raining. And windy. A dodgy combination when using balsa ships....
Tim
OK, but I want to see you play outdoors sometime. FYI the day we played, the ships were metal and mounted on steel bases. But the wind blew over a tool box full of lengths of 2x4s!
Cheers
PD
Peter Douglas
We're planning an outdoor game. In July... I've experimented with sticking the ships to lengths of 1x2.
Hmm, tasty scenario
Geordie
Feel free to shamelessly steal it - that's why I reproduced the complete briefings.
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