News from GMT

Two spots of good news in the new GMT monthly update:

China’s War 1937-41 status is now At The Printer, with 1,791 pre-orders… you still have time to get yours at the discounted price of $55.00!

And, A Distant Plain is going in for a 4th printing, with 532 pre-orders so far! You can get one for the discounted price of $56.00.

In other news, Colonial Twilight is marked as “Out of Stock”. I doubt there will be a reprint as it took them nearly 8 years to reach this point. Hope you got one while the gettin’ was good.

There was also a sombre observance of the passing of Rodger MacGowan, one of the best cover artists for board wargames. He did two covers for my games, Distant Plain and Colonial Twilight and I loved both of them. I liked to contrast the cover he did for Labyrinth, featuring a US soldier striding confidently “out of the box” across a grayscale chessboard, with the cover for A Distant Plain, which shows a section of tired but determined troops heading “into the box” towards the hills in the distance. He had a remarkable sensitivity for these kinds of things.

Panel at SDHistCon 2024 Winter Quarters: games on African conflicts

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Friends!

I hope you were planning on attending Harold Buchanan’s one-day online event SDHistcon 2024 Winter Quarters… it’s cheap ($10 to attend, everything else free) and will be nearly 20 hours of game sessions, panels and seminars… from 0000 to 2000 hrs Saturday, February 3.

At 1200 Pacific time I will be on a panel called “Wargaming Africa”, on post-WW II conflict on that continent… something that has never had its due share of attention but that is slowly changing.

Besides me (having done Colonial Twilight, Algeria, District Commander ZNO and Somalia Interventions), there will be Yann de Villenueve of the upcoming COIN-goes-to-Somalia game A Fading Star, Chris Davis with a game in development on the first Ethiopian Civil War and Phil Kendall of the Ragnar Brothers to discuss his modern classic, Angola.

https://tabletop.events/conventions/sdhist-online-2024-winter-quarters for the landing page

Besides this panel, I intend to attend two other interesting seminars: “Unsavory Play: Casting Players in Difficult Roles” (with Dan Bullock, Liz Davidson and Amabel Holland – three great minds) at 1000 Pacific time, and GUWS at SDHistcon” at 1400 when the Georgetown University Wargaming Society will show some of their very inventive mini-game projects.

There will be lots of demos, interviews, talks and play sessions as well! All kinds of new projects get shown off at this event.

I hope to see you there!

Colonial Twilight: how-to-play video, French language review

A couple of new Colonial Twilight items. 

First, a new how-to-play video on Youtube by “Discover the Meeple”, a bit over an hour long… I have not had the opportunity to review it so not sure if they got it all right. I’m sure they did.

Second, a very nice French-language review of Colonial Twilight, with a link to French translations of all the game materials and more besides. I’m always happy to see more coverage of this game by French players. 

Colonial Twilight – une histoire de la guerre d’indépendance algérienne

http://www.ludistratege.com/colonial-twilight/

 

Video: “The Postcolonial Turn in Commercial Historical Board Wargames”

A talk by Maurice Suckling of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for the Georgetown University Wargaming Society.

The title describes a quite specific circle drawn around the topic, which is fine… and yes, he does invoke my name and work more than once in his talk!

Money quote: “Well, yes… if that is the only perspective that you can conceive of, then that is the only perspective that you can have.”

Very worth a listen!

Two Interviews: The British Way, La Jeu de la Guerre

ONE

https://elwargameronovato.blogspot.com/2022/05/the-british-way-interview-stephen.html

Daniel Iniesta interviewed Stephen Rangazas, whose 4-pack of cut-down GMT COIN system games is forthcoming from GMT.

The British Way picks up on four postwar British entanglements: Malaya, Palestine, Kenya and Cyprus. He says:

The main changes to the core COIN mechanics for The British Way was altering the way two player COIN works. I streamlined the two-player sequence of play designed by Brian Train in Colonial Twilight and changed victory to work off an overall Political Will Track to reflect that these were really head-to-head challenges between the British and insurgents. There are also significant variations to the core COIN mechanics with the two more clandestine cell-based insurgencies in Cyprus and Palestine. Finally, I think the multipack really benefited from the linked campaign scenario and designing a macro game that covers four smaller COIN games required innovating from what had been done before in the series.

It’s kind of interesting to me that my “4-box” family of games that partly inspired Volko Ruhnke’s design for the COIN system (Algeria particularly) also depended heavily on an overall Political Will or Support Track that reflected each side’s cohesion and popular support (I suppose more accurately government support for the British, since these were decolonization campaigns) in a non-zero-sum way. So kind of a return to base, in its way.

The games are limited in size and component count – not more than 18 cards played in a game, so it’s done in 1-2 hours.

I’m looking forward to this package very much!

TWO

The very clever Fred Serval has an interview with Alex Galloway about Guy Debord’s La Jeu de la Guerra for his podcast Homo Ludens. History about Debord and his game, and talk about Galloway’s work on a digital version of the game (still in process). Also, a neat clip from the Situationist detourned film, “Can Dialectics Break Bricks?”

And some time later (July 2022), Fred posts part 2, where he plays through a game with Alex Galloway and they discuss the design and adaptation of the game, among other things.

Obit: Yacef Saadi, Abimael Guzman

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Yacef Saadi, military commander of the FLN’s Algiers Autonomous Zone during the Battle of Algiers, has died age 93.

This went almost unreported in English language media, so French language link. https://information.tv5monde.com/afrique/algerie-dernier-hommage-yacef-saadi-figure-emblematique-de-la-bataille-d-alger-423953

Saadi’s name would likely be lost to history if he had not made a place for it by bringing Gillo Pontecorvo’s film on the Battle of Algiers into the world.

Pontecorvo couldn’t get money for the project in Italy, so when he was approached in 1964 by Yacef Saadi, who was the director of the Casbah Film Company – Algeria’s first and only film production company – with an offer of money and logistical cooperation, they set to work. Saadi altered the script significantly several times during the process, and gave himself the major role of Djafar in the film – that is, he plays himself in the movie, though under another name. Pontecorvo put up with this because Saadi’s political connections with the Algerian government allowed them to film in Algiers and the Casbah zone itself, for five months in 1965. President Houari Bomedienne, who had recently taken power from Ahmed Ben Bella in a coup d’etat, made sure the film got all the necessary permissions, and loaned both troops and equipment from the Algerian Army for crowd scenes (which explains the jarring appearance of a Soviet SU-100 assault gun in the riot scene near the end of the film).

Yacef Saadi did not only rewrite the film, he rewrote the role he played in its subject. Towards the end of the Battle of Algiers a tip from a double agent led the French to Yacef Saadi’s hideout, where he was discovered with Zohra Drif, one of the women who had set bombs in the milk bar attack. Both of them talked freely, without physical coercion, and were kept prisoner until the end of the war in 1962. At the beginning of the film you see a frightened man who has just been tortured into giving up the location of Ali-la-Pointe, the last leader of the FLN in Algiers. This man never existed. In fact, it was Yacef Saadi himself who led the French paras to the hideout, because the real life equivalent of “Little Omar” in the movie was Saadi’s nephew, working as an errand boy for Ali-La-Pointe, and the boy’s mother had appealed to him to save his life.

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In other news, Abimael Guzman, leader of the Sendero Luminoso movement in Peru, has died in prison aged 86.

He had been in solitary confinement more or less continuously since his capture in 1992; I was a bit surprised he lasted this long.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-49110427

Melodice: playlist for your favourite games

Now here’s a clever thing!

Melodice.org will assemble a Youtube playlist of favourite musical pieces based on player submissions. Let this play while you are playing, to set the mood.

You can search for different games, so here are two I found for A Distant Plain and Colonial Twilight, and two I made for Nights of Fire and District Commander Kandahar:

https://melodice.org/playlist/a-distant-plain-2013/

https://melodice.org/playlist/colonial-twilight-the-french-algerian-war-1954-62-2017/

https://melodice.org/playlist/nights-of-fire-battle-for-budapest-2019/

https://melodice.org/playlist/district-commander-kandahar-2020/

On Youtube: Heavy Cardboard plays Colonial Twilight

On the Tube of You, Edward from “Heavy Cardboard” (on the 6th anniversary of his show!) plays a COIN system game for the first time: Colonial Twilight. He does something a little different: he plays the short scenario and takes the role of Government, introducing and teaching the game as he goes, while the Peanut Gallery (everyone watching: including Volko Ruhnke himself for a while!) discusses and suggests the FLN moves. What a great idea to learn the game collectively!

He didn’t promise to play the game well, and you know what, I don’t play games particularly well either; never have. But the play and the learning of it is the thing, for me.

Thanks Edward! I appreciate it.

(note: the stream goes for about 7 hours since it’s his first COIN game, and he introduces everything about the game first… so feel free to skip ahead to the game itself. The main commenter in the Peanut Galley, Laura Guy, very ably played the FLN!)

Colonial Twilight: unboxing video

Featuring Andrei Achim and his enormous knife!

 

 

Crepuscule d’Empire?

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Saw this on the Book of Face today:

PIXIE et ASYNCRON ont l’immense plaisir d’annoncer qu’un accord avec l’éditeur américain GMT a été conclu en vue de localiser et d’éditer des jeux en français qui proviennent du catalogue de GMT et, en particulier, d’offrir à la communauté francophone, le nec plus ultra de ce qui se fait matière de jeu d’histoire asymétrique : la réputée série COIN.

Pour inaugurer cette collaboration, nous avons choisi comme premier jeu, Falling Sky (vol VI) et son extension Ariovistus. Cet opus traite de la Guerre des Gaules et de César contre les chefs gaulois, dont le célèbre Vercingétorix. L’extension Ariovistus est le prequel de Falling Sky, le début de la conquête romaine de la Gaule, qui permet de jouer la faction germanique.

Well, isn’t that something!

Makes sense they would start with Falling Sky. Everyone loves Asterix.

But I wonder if/when they will get around to Colonial Twilight. Not everyone likes Colonel Mathieu.

On s’engage, et puis on voit….

Oooppp, here is something that did not appear on the other notices, I saw this on Strategikon… (translated):

A subscription will be launched in early April on the Ulule platform in order to finance the production of the French edition of the game. If this subscription is successful, other titles will then also be located.

“The game” in this case is Falling Sky.  Ulule is a French crowdfunding platform, not sure how or if it is different from the others, though they do have a manifesto.

https://www.ulule.com/

Meanwhile, I thought that I had done this already, but here are some French-language rules for Colonial Twilight done by Sebastien Vassort:

Colonial Twilight Règles FR V.0.1

And a link to a French-language translation of the Event Cards, done by Vincent Tulasne:

http://www.ludistratege.fr/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Traduction-cartes-V1.pdf

Click to access Traduction-cartes-V1.pdf

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