Plan West
About Plan West
Plan West⢠- While Poland mobilizes and the diplomats try to find a peaceful solution to the Danzig situation, Hitler launches a back-stabbing attack without a formal declaration of war...Read More
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Reviews
Following "A lost Victory" footsteps. Easy and entertaining game on the Polish campaign in WWII. The Germans win easily the war, but winning the game is much more difficult, given the activations by chits.
Nice map with NATO symbol counters. The game rules are easy and clear. The players re-fight the first 10 days of the German invasion into Poland in 1939. By using a chit activation system each player randomly draws chit identifying a group of units which may now be moved. The map depicts the western part of Poland thus leaving the Soviet military operations out. Note that blitzkrieg tactics are still at their infancy so do not expect to overrun the Polish units in one game turn. Hard fighting for the Germans to attain their goals and for the Poles to delay and stall their adversary's ambitions. The results are highly realistic.
How do you turn the Polish campaign, widely perceived as a walk-over, into a good game? Plan West does two very smart things.
First, it focusses on the first week and a half of battle at a close operational level. Units are divisions or smaller and turns only a day each. At this scale the frontier battles, where the Poles held on desperately, are a real dog-fight. It takes the Germans a couple turns of hard slogging to earn their breakthroughs. Even then, there's a tense balance between closing the pockets that form, relieving East Prussia, and occupying Warsaw (an instant victory), all in terrain crossed by numerous rivers and lakes. 10 Turns and a 3/4 size map cover this phase in a compact package that ends before things get boring. Which means leaving out the Russian drive through Eastern Poland, but - since that was more an occupation than an invasion, after the real fighting was done - no loss.
Second, this is not the blitzkrieg wielding Wehrmacht of 1941 or even 1940. The Germans invaded Poland on the hop, with a horde of recently recruited divisions and a doctrine still in evolution. Thus, the Poles get a shift in their favour on Turn 1 (a reverse surprise bonus!) and the Germans don't receive their good command chits till a few turns in. The historical set-up also scatters the small number of powerful Panzer divisions badly, while German Infantry divisions are no stronger than the better Polish divs. As the game progresses, and the German player fights through the frontier defences, starts receiving the better command chits, and gets the Panzers concentrated into a couple of breakthroughs, you can see the Germans learning the techniques they would unleash on France a year later.
There are a couple of rough edges: out of command units can be stalled, motionless, forever - which seems odd at this scale. And the CRT contains no split results, where both sides take losses. This is wrong, given how attritional WWII combat actually was (Plan West mimics its design ancestor, "A Victory Lost", here).
Still, this is a game with a coherent theme and a fascinating point of view. I had more fun with it than the majority of hex wargames I've played recently.
When, Where, How?
The Rating is only for the Graphics, currently.
... Rating in progress ...
A well done game about the beginnings of wwII. The germans are all but blitzkrieg. Hrd fighting, still the Poles dos not have much of a chance except defending. A good game where there is a good attacker and good defender.
Chit-driven design which covers a rarely-addressed campaign. Good replay value - not a 'stroll' for the Germans. Involving for both sides.