Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1:1.2 Petite size, U.S. standard clothing size: 1:1.125 Petite size, U.S. standard clothing size: 1:1: 12 in: 304.80 mm Full scale, life-size. Some models of real and fictional weapons and of scientific or anatomical subjects in this scale. >1:1 Larger than life-size. Some models of scientific or anatomical subjects in these scales.
Axis & Allies Miniatures is a miniature wargaming system including both a rule set and a line of 1/100 scale miniature armor (15 mm figure scale) collectible miniatures.The game is set in the World War II era with units representing individual vehicles and artillery or squads of infantry.
Scale foot Scale ratio Comments 2 mm: ≈0.333 mm: ≈1:914: Useful for gaming in tight spaces or representing large forces. Popular scale for Victorian science fiction (VSF) games. 3 mm: ≈0.508 mm: 1:600: As with 2 mm figures, useful for gaming in tight spaces or representing large forces. Primarily used for World War II and Modern land and ...
Victory at Sea is a hardback book that contains a set of wargame rules used to simulate naval combat during World War II using 1/1800 scale. [1] The rules, both basic and advanced, take up about 20% of the 206-page book. [1] Other sections contain scenarios, longer campaigns, lists of ships, and illustrations of ship counters.
Advanced Squad Leader (ASL) is a tactical-level board wargame, originally marketed by Avalon Hill Games, that simulates actions of squad sized units in World War II. It is a detailed game system for two or more players (with solitary play also possible). Components include the ASL Rulebook and various games called modules.
Flames of War allows players to wargame company-level battles from the European, Pacific, and North African Theatres of World War II, using 1/100 scale miniatures (15 mm figure scale) and miniature armor. In the 1st Edition rulebook, basic army lists were provided for the mid-war period (1942–1943), while Battlefront published early (1939 ...
The market for 1:350 scale ship model kits expanded further after Hasegawa released a newly tooled kit of the Japanese battleship Mikasa in 2005, which featured modern molding and greater detail. Other Japanese companies including Aoshima, Fujimi, Pit-Road and Fine Molds have followed suit to produce a number of Japanese World War II ships.
Micro armour is usually differentiated from tabletop games based on human shaped heroic scale / infantry skirmish game scale figures (even if the high and low ends of each respective category overlap) because the scales used by most micro armour games are smaller (armour skirmish game scale) and the represented playing field larger - though it is not nearly as large as in naval wargaming.