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  2. Panzer Leader (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzer_Leader_(game)

    The Panzer Leader map boards are interchangeable with the PanzerBlitz maps, and one could combine the two sets to make a larger battlefield. The scale is the same with the two games. The German units are interchangeable, and if one wanted, players can try a "what if" scenario with American/British forces vs. Soviet forces.

  3. PanzerBlitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PanzerBlitz

    PanzerBlitz is a tactical-scale board wargame published by Avalon Hill in 1970 that simulates armored combat set on the Eastern Front of World War II. The game, which was the most popular board wargame of the 1970s, is notable for being the first true board-based tactical-level, commercially available conflict simulation wargame.

  4. Tactical wargame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactical_wargame

    The problems with true tactical (company/battalion level) games were all too apparent. According to Lorrin Bird, writing in Special Issue #2 of Campaign Magazine: The major disappointment with the three major Avalon Hill games (Panzer Leader, PanzerBlitz and Arab-Israeli Wars) was the obvious sequential nature of the whole situation. A shoots ...

  5. List of Avalon Hill games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Avalon_Hill_games

    PanzerBlitz [3] 1970 Panzergruppe Guderian: 1984 First published by SPI in 1976 Panzerkrieg: 1983 Originally published by OSG Panzer Leader: 1974 Past Lives: 1988 Patton's Best: 1987 Paydirt: 1979 American football: Pennant Race: 1983 Baseball: Perilous Lands: 1985 A Powers & Perils adventure, published as a BookCase Game The Peter Principle: 1981

  6. Desert War: Tactical Warfare in North Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert_War:_Tactical...

    In the first years of its existence, SPI produced several tank combat wargames, including PanzerBlitz (1970), Combat Command (1972) and KampfPanzer (1973). SPI game designers Jim Dunnigan and Redmond A. Simonsen took elements from each of the three previous games and produced Desert War, [2] a non-historical game of desert combat, which was published in 1973.

  7. Hammer's Slammers (board game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammer's_Slammers_(board_game)

    Hammer's Slammers is a two-player board wargame using a hex grid map where players control various military units [1] including "Hammer's Slammers", a mercenary regiment commanded by Colonel Alois Hammer. [2] Game play is very similar to PanzerBlitz, using an alternating series of turns. The first player has the following phases: [2] Rally units

  8. Arab–Israeli Wars (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab–Israeli_Wars_(game)

    [2] In the 1980 book The Complete Book of Wargames, game designer Jon Freeman thought "while if in not in some ways as successful or as satisfying as its preeminent forefather [PanzerBlitz], The Arab-Israeli Wars is nonetheless a good tactical game." Freeman also thought the game system was outdated, saying, "The main problem is that the system ...

  9. Panzer (wargame) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzer_(wargame)

    Cover art by Rodger B. MacGowan, 1979. Panzer is a wargame series by Yaquinto includes several related wargames, distinguished by subtitles. "Panzer: A Tactical Game of Armored Combat on the Eastern Front, 1941-1945", is a board wargame published by Yaquinto Publications in 1979 that simulates Eastern Front combat between Axis forces and the Soviet Union during World War II.