Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He concluded, "Even so, Afrika Korps is an enjoyable and entertaining game." [4] R. B. McArthur, writing for Washingtonian in 1980, said that "Avalon Hill's Afrika Korps, Stalingrad, D-Day, and Battle of the Bulge cover World War II in Europe pretty thoroughly. They are mostly popular with teenagers; those who actually fought in the war tend to ...
Desert Rats vs. Afrika Korps, released as Afrika Korps vs. Desert Rats outside the UK and U.S., is a real-time tactics game that is based on the North African campaign of World War II. The single player missions are playable as the German Afrika Korps or the British Desert Rats. There is also an option for online multiplayer.
Afrika Korps was the German expeditionary force in Africa during World War II. Afrika Korps may also refer to: Afrika Korps (game), a 1964 Avalon Hill board game; Desert Rats vs. Afrika Korps, a 2004 real-time tactics video game
The "Best of the West" was the generic series name used by toy manufacturer, Louis Marx and Company, from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s to market a line of articulated 12-inch action figures featuring a western play theme. The focal character in the series was the iconic cowboy action figure named Johnny West.
12001-12057: 1/12 Big scale racing car series; 14001-14142: 1/12 Motorcycles; 16001-16042: 1/6 Big scale motorcycles series; 20001-20071: 1/20 Grand Prix collection; 24001-24364: 1/24 Sport cars series; 25201-25217: Limited special editions; 31001-31911: 1/700 Waterline (I) 32501-32605: 1/48 Military miniatures series; 35001-35387: 1/35 ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Lou Zocchi was one of the first editors for Avalon Hill's magazine, The General, and a regular contributor during its first 11 years of publication. [2] He also playtested such early wargames as Bismark, Afrika Korps, Jutland, Stalingrad, and a number of titles Avalon Hill did not publish. [2]
The Special Interrogation Group (SIG) [a] was a unit of the British Army during World War II, formed largely of German-speaking Jewish volunteers from Mandatory Palestine. Disguised as soldiers of the German Afrika Korps, members of the SIG undertook commando and sabotage operations against Axis forces during the Western Desert Campaign. [1] [2 ...