Golan: The Last Syrian Offensive

31,99 €

Para pedir

ARTÍCULO PARA PEDIR

Compra este artículo y se lo encargamos exclusivamente para ti, al proveedor. El tiempo estimado de llegada a nuestro almacén puede oscilar entre 1 semana y 2 meses.

Un pedido que contiene al menos un artículo "Para Pedir" sólo se enviará cuando esté completo, porque solo se incluye un envío.

Para recibir ahora otros artículos que tenemos en stock, te recomendamos realizar un pedido por separado.

Editorial Decision Games

Idioma b_english.png

Dependencia del idioma (0-4) 2. Media


Núm. jugadores 2

Tiempo de juego 30 a 60 minutos

Autor Eric R. Harvey, Irad B. Hardy

Edad mínima 12

Temas Modern Warfare, Wargame

Mecánicas Hexagon Grid, Simulation

Cantidad

Te enviaremos un correo electrónico tan pronto como el artículo esté disponible.

Descripción

From the Decision Games website:

At the start of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, the Israelis could only spare two brigades to defend the strategic Golan Heights. On 6 October the Syrians attacked with five divisions, three of them mechanized, supported by mortars, artillery, mobile SAMs, and a heliborne commando brigade. The Israelis were therefore badly outnumbered, but were quickly reinforced by reservists (much sooner than the Syrians had anticipated). More significantly, the Israeli Air Force appeared overhead to impede the Syrian assault. However, the Syrians' surface-to-air missile batteries proved at least partially effective against those aircraft. Thus, among other things, the battle for the Golan would test the preeminence of air support against the ascendancy of the SAM.

Golan utilizes the new Fire & Movement combat system that's designed so players can augment their units with "support fire" during the course of the turn. From artillery to air strikes, units can receive support to engage enemy positions and formations, allowing combat to develop at all levels. But Golan also introduces a new element to the battlefield: surface to air missiles. The Syrians fielded numerous SAM batteries during their advance, downing many Israeli jets and compelling that air force to implement new tactics. A single armor battalion, for example — perhaps supported by air support — could be tasked to assault a lone enemy commando brigade defending a fort. As that attack gets underway, though, the air support may find itself under fire from a mobile SAM battery. More support will be necessary to take the fort, but assets are limited.

In Golan the attritional design of the new Combat Results Table simulates the true nature of modern warfare. Units are typically two-sided formations that can incur casualties, accurately replicating the realities of combat and the high losses sustained by both sides during the Yom Kippur War. Winning is thus a matter of maneuver, firepower and asset management.


Link BGG