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Instant action - SABOW style

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A small but satisfying battle of manoeuvre, in Steel Armor - Blaze of War!

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Many sims give us a way of jumping straight into virtual battle with the minimum of preliminaries and Graviteam’s wargame-based tanksim is now no exception. The original release featured what the new version of SABOW has accurately re-labelled a ‘Battle Editor’.  This provides a fast way of choosing multiple parameters to set up platoon-to-company level armoured battles.  To this, the new release has added some ‘instant action’ options – a firing range for the US M-60, driver training for the Soviet T-62 and – one for each tank – the ability to set up both sides instantly for a smaller-scale battle you can drop straight into. You can still get the best from SABOW by learning the wargame element, which gives you control over multiple tank and infantry platoons and other units. But if you want to get straight to the tanksimming, it’s now much easier, with these instant battles putting you right onto the battlefield as a tank platoon commander.

 

This short mission report describes one such encounter, which came as a pleasant surprise. I suppose I was expecting to face waves of enemies, advancing upon me as if in a Space Invaders arcade game; an opportunity for little more than some gunnery practice, but with targets that would shoot back. Fun and good practice but nothing special. If I was lucky, I might be able to squeeze in some platoon application of fire and maybe some ‘jockeying’ as the British Army calls the movement of tanks in defence, when moving between fire positions.

 

The advancing enemies did appear, but they weren’t overdone and this, along with sufficient time and the initial disposition of friendly forces, gave me the opportunity to think as well as shoot, to plan and execute movement and generally practice the tactical handling of my platoon. For an instant action scenario, it was actually rather more ‘tactical’ than with most such sim options I’ve seen. And this was the way of it.

 

SABOW models its two tanks – functionally, as well as visually - in such detail that I had decided to concentrate on playing and mastering one, rather than dividing my time more equally between them. Because its systems are simpler to learn – no stereoscopic rangefinder, for instance – I decided to focus on the sleek T-62. So, in the mood for a quick tanksimming fix, I decided to fire up a battle for that tank, clicking its icon on the main menu (the other T-62 icon, with the steering levers graphic, is for the driving course).

 

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This took me straight to a map of the battlefield, with my own side’s forces laid out. The briefing consisted of just a warning that enemy tanks were approaching , reinforced visually by some threatening red arrows directed at our positions (SABOW’s default is’ friendly red, enemy blue’ but I have reversed this in ‘options’ so we are the blue side). Sorry, no pics of this - I wasn't planning this to be a mission report, just some harmless, tank-bashing fun :)

 

The map was from the Iran-Iraq war, which is the best ‘tank country’ of SABOW’s three theatres, Angola and Afghanistan being the other two. The main headache with this terrain is the frequent presence of irrigation channels which block movement or channel it (sic!) over fords. Elsewhere, though basically level, there are low mounds or hills and smaller dips and folds in the ground, interspersed with clumps or rows of trees or bushes, all of which provides some cover from view and/or fire.

 

The map was clear of enemy sightings at this stage, but I could see that our side consisted of two tank platoons, facing north, marked as diamonds (you can cycle through alternative unit markers, including one which shows which way individual vehicles are pointing). Both platoons had the playable T62 so while I was started off with the left-hand platoon, I could have opted to play with either one, or indeed, swap platoons during the fighting. I tend not to do this as – when I’m in tanksimming mode – I prefer to role-play as a single platoon commander.

 

From the map, I could have spent a little while playing the overall commander role, setting up deployment and initial orders for one or both of our two platoons. I could have done this from with new 3-D deployment option, instead of the map. This being a defensive action with our platoons pre-deployed pretty well so as to block the enemy axis of advance,  I decided I would just jump straight into my assigned command tank, and take it from there!

 

And there I was, sitting in my T-62 with the other two tanks of my 3-tank platoon (Soviet-style, but also common British Army practice). Seeing that we were all lined up facing the enemy somewhere up north and that my tank had a sabot round ‘up the spout’, my first task was to scan ahead for the foe-man, just in case they were about to hit us. This I did using the gunner’s sight, the better to be ready to let fly quickly, if need be. All seemed quiet, so I decided I would now take stock and get as organised as circumstances – notably, the enemy - would allow.

 

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Back to the map I went. Offensive action – even in defence – is one of the most important of the Principles of War. So I decided that my objective should be not merely to hold ground, but to destroy the advancing enemy forces. Now then...how best might this be achieved? ‘By taking them in the flank, with fire from a covered position’ seemed the obvious answer. The more I thought about it, the better I liked this idea, compared to simply sitting tight or making minor adjustments to my current position. I could have paused the battle while I thought, but I didn’t need long. Scanning the map from left to right, my eyes were soon drawn to an area of what - from the contours - looked like a sort of rough, low hillock, just ahead and on the left flank. I quickly decided that my platoon would move there, leaving the other three T-62s where they were, on our right. Between us, we would catch the enemy advance in a crossfire. The fact that this scenario had not immediately thrown the enemy straight at us gave me hope I might be able to complete my move in time. Even if the opposition appeared sooner rather than later, I reasoned that the slightly higher ground we would be moving towards would screen us, enabling me to get onto the enemy’s flank while the other platoon kept them occupied, frontally.

 

Plan made! Even before a round had been fired, this little scenario was making me feel like I was right there, on the ground,  in the boots of a tank platoon commander, being presented with a realistic tactical situation and the opportunity to make my plans, dispositions and decisions accordingly.

 

I got my tanks into column formation and ordered my driver to advance and turn slightly left, headed for a ford over the nearest irrigation channel. This would have to be crossed, as it lay on the route to my chosen battle position.

 

One of the neat things about SABOW is that the AI drivers behave somewhat as if they have minds of their own. In other sims, it’s like you are just clicking up or down a notch in a throttle setting, when (playing as commander, or as gunner but the commander’s ability to give orders) you order a change of speed or direction. It can be frustrating sometimes, but now I’m used to SABOW, it feels more realistic that my driver will sometimes hesitate or slow down and needs more regular instructions. It's like your AI driver in SABOW is a human being seeing the world only through a couple of fixed periscopes set a few feet above ground level, rather than an unthinking robot.

 

Another nice touch is that the driver doesn’t just turn a fixed number of degrees for each key-press – the longer you hold down the ‘turn’ key (‘A’ or’ D’) to give a driving command, the greater the turn, with an icon displaying the turn angle so you can judge when to release the key.

 

If your driver stops at an obstacle, you can either issue a stock command which starts him attempting an avoiding manoeuvre, or you take over his role and drive the tank as you wish. And that’s what I did when I reached my first challenge on this mission, fording that irrigation channel. The ford was at what looked to be a wrecked bridge and as we came to this I took over the driver position myself, knowing that this is one sort of obstacle they will often be most resuctant to cross, left to their own devices. From there, while I can still use W-A-S-D keys to change direction and speed, I’m beginning to appreciate the additional mouse control option. It’s really rather neat, in the driver’s compartment view, to drag back left or right mouse buttons and watch the animated driver figure pull back on left or right steering levers, as your tank changes direction!

 

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As I descended towards the bottom of the channel, my tank swayed and bucked, negotiating the broken concrete slabs that lined the way down, presumably all that was left of the bridge. Nearing the water’s edge, I cast caution to the winds and gave her full throttle, both to get up the other side and to minimise our immersion, in case the water level swamped us and killed our engine.

 

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A quick glance over my virtual shoulder showed that my other two T-62s were bunched up at the start of the descent, seemingly hesitant. I’d worry about them later, i decided. That is, if I didn't drown my tank, trying to cross this b****y great ditch full of water.

 

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But all went well. Over we went then up and out the other side, jerking and swaying once again over the concrete slabs, as we hauled ouselves back up to ground level.

 

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I quickly switched to the tank commander’s station and we hurried off to find some nearby cover, from which I could scan the area before sorting out the others. I should probably have used standard obstacle crossing drill to get over the channel – say, stopping the other two to provide cover, before I crossed  - but I had been in a hurry. Now, was time enough to be more cautious. I gave the order to close hatches.

 

Halting behind a small hummock, I scanned ahead and to the right, from the tank commander’s magnified sight. All clear! And just as happily, looking back, I could see that my platoon-mates had sorted themselves out and were now making their own crossing. Soon they were close up behind me again and I rattled off towards the hillock where I planned we’d make our stand. As we stepped off I called my platoon into line formation, the better to concentrate our fire to the front, where the greatest threat must now lie.

 

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Making for the nearer, right-hand edge of this hillock, I could see that the lie of the land there would give me some cover straight ahead, but would leave me exposed to the right, where the enemy might well appear. I began to edge more to the left, avoiding the exposed flank and steering for the centre of the area of higher ground. I was encouraged to see that - as prior study of the map had suggested - this was not so much a continuous hill, but more a low cluster of smaller terrain features. The ground was broken, with lots of folds and dips of different sizes, like you might expect to see from some long-abandoned small town whose uneven heaps of ruins had long ago begun to merge with the surrounding terrain. I led the platoon into this, keeping us in closely-spaced line formation.

 

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We rolled over the uneven ground, amongst clumps of scattered vegetation. I began to swing around to the right, so that we would acquire lines of sight and fire out over the expected enemy lines of advance. We approached the northern limits of the area of broken ground and I slowed down, halting in a defiladed position with higher ground covering us to both flanks. This gave us only narrow, intermittent arcs of fire, ahead  to the north-east, but good protection from east and west. Although the shrubbery scattered around us further inhibited our view, I hoped it would also make us harder to spot. SABOW seems to handle cover quite well, to the extent that the planning map – I think at deployment stage – has tools which give you a visual indication of the level of cover provided in any given area. I hadn’t used this facility on this mission, as it is my habit to assess these things from the map’s conventional symbols. In this case, things seemed to have worked out tolerably well, leaving us hull or turret down to any bad guys able to see us. So far, so good!

 

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...to be continued!

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Let battle begin!

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So...I had got my platoon safely into my chosen battle position, from which I could either shoot up or move to envelop the expected enemy attack from the north. At this stage, I could - and probably should - have fine-tuned the positions of my other two tanks. SABOW offers you different ways of getting your tanks into cover. This includes a command to adopt defensive positions, but I have little experience of using that and was concerned it might have unpredictable and possibly bad results. Besides, I wanted to keep us tight, in the patch of close country where we’d set up. I could have jumped into each tank in turn and tested and adjusted their lines of sight and cover from within the tank itself, much as an infantryman should do when individually siting his slit trenches. But I am well used in tanksims to driving the whole platoon into my chosen battle position – I get us into line, well closed in, and then orient my final approach to my chosen cover so we all end up in a decent final position. Sometimes this works well, sometimes not so well. But this time, I was happy enough with the results.

We had a lot of dead ground to our right but that’s how I wanted it. The other platoon of T-62s had ‘eyes on’ that area and I planned to stay in cover until either I had a contact, or they did.  I was quite hoping they would hit contact first so that I could flank a preoccupied enemy. At the same time, I didn’t want to conceal my platoon so well that the enemy might be upon us before we saw them, if they moved up on the left flank, where we sat...

...which of course is what happened. I was scanning from the commander’s sight, as this is higher up and has a greater magnification than the gunner’s equivalent, lower down. The first sign of trouble was an AFV which crossed a distant skyline, pausing then disappearing again. No way was I going to give away our position by chancing a long-range shot. So I let that one pass. ‘Whites of their eyes’ and all that...well if not that close, at least within good first round hit probability range.

I don’t know how they did it, but the enemy managed to get rather dangerously close before we spotted them again. A radio message reported an enemy tank – I can’t recall whether from my own platoon or the other one. IIRC, SABOW identifies these messages, when displayed as text on-screen, with the name of the platoon or tank commander, rather than using their callsigns for some reason, which they also have.

Scanning in the direction indicated, I saw nothing.  I decided to call up the tactical map, which is no ‘God’s eye view’ but still displays all kinds of useful information, like a message log and spotted enemies. Before I could do this, the party kicked off,  good and proper.

Tank cannon fire erupted on my right and tracers flashed past. One of the shooters was a platoon-mate over there but I couldn’t see any bad guys. The tracers I saw seemed to be outgoing fire but there was likely some incoming, too.

In a cautious effort to get ‘eyes on’ I slowly rolled forward, but halted abruptly when I got a rather sudden shock.  An Iranian tank, a Chieftain no less, came into view just a few hundred meters away, in a patch of open ground to my half-right. He was rolling left to right across my line of sight, just about visible to me from the TC’s position and not yet visible to my gunner, lower down. Fortunately the Chieftain seemed to be engaged with our friends to his front. I edged forward but only succeeded in worsening my view of him, so uneven was the ground. Much to my relief, by the time I finally got my gun onto him, someone else’s rounds had slammed into him and he started to burn.

 

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I knew fine well he wouldn’t be on his own and rolled slowly forward again. Sure enough, this brought a second Chieftain into view and I put two rounds into his exposed sides.  His hatches popped open and the crew bailed out.

There was still some firing going on over to the right but I could see nothing more and looking back, I could see that my other two T-62s also seemed to have run out of targets. I considered edging further forward from the position we were now in, but conventional tank wisdom favours reversing out before moving forward again – so that you don’t re-appear from a position the enemy may now be concentrating on. In Steel Fury’s fast and furious little actions, this will often mean the battle moves away without you. But this being SABOW and a defensive operation, I decided I would play it by the book and disengage, before popping up somewhere else.  So I gave the command to back up.

In SABOW, your orders are treated as platoon orders unless you consciously first limit them to your own vehicle. Knowing that AI-driven tanks in other tanksims will often turn around rather than reversing when following a platoon leader’s move – exposing thinner armour to the enemy – I was pleased to see that the other T-62s reversed with me.  Ahead of me in the pic below, you can see the empty cases from the two main gun rounds I had fired, lying where they fell after being ejected out of that little flap in the top rear of my T-62's turret. Had such a system been adopted in the cost-conscious British Army, I expect we would have been sent out after the battle, to 'pick up our brass' for refilling or recycling :)

 

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Backing over the broken ground, my tank rolled and pitched like a ship at sea but I kept going until I was confident that we had ‘broken trail’ and were now well out of sight.

 

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Still moving back, I turned right until I faced west then stopped and moved off, ahead this time, in that direction. I called the others into column formation. My plan now was to take a wide left hook and come up on the enemy’s flank again, not only from a different position but putting a bit more space between us.

My platoon was soon in a neat column and we swung west and around the hillock which had been our first battle position. We were in more open country now but with the hillock to our right front, hiding us from the enemy in that direction. As we came around towards where I expected the enemy might start appearing, I got us back into line and circled on around the hillock, hugging its cover on our right but gradually bringing into sight more and more of the battlefield.
 

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Things seemed to have settled down so I used the opportunity to call up the tactical map. Mousing over the reports in the message log – mainly of contacts - I could check who had made which reports. This confirmed that the stay-behind T-62 platoon had indeed been in action. My own platoon had narrowly escaped the enemy coming upon us at close range in our first battle position but despite that, things had panned out reasonably well. The enemy advance seemed to have been halted, with no losses on our side.

 

The terrain to the north seemed clear of the enemy and with my left flank seemingly safe enough, I continued my circling movement, intending to mop up the battlefield and destroy any enemy forces remaining in that area, perhaps gone to ground or pinned there by the other T-62 platoon.

 

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As we advanced, first one then the other of the two knocked out Chieftains came back into clear view.

 

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A little further on, I suddenly spotted an M60, stationary and hull down some distance away, facing south, away from us. Taking no chances, I put a couple of rounds into the side of his turret. Getting no reaction, I left it at that. ‘Keep shooting till it changes shape or catches fire’ is fine and dandy as motto for tank-vs-tank combat, but T-62s carry rather less ammo than Western tanks and this particular Western tank was quite possibly dead before I shot him.

 

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Finally, the battlefield lay exposed before us. Nothing left, but burning or abandoned tank hulks. The Iranian attack had been well and truly blunted, with no losses on our side.  Not a bad day’s work!
 

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All in all, for a small-scale, no-frills, ‘instant action’ mission, this one had been a pleasant surprise. No mad enemy rush, let alone one concentrating on the player, just a steady advance. A tactical problem was presented, with time, space and opportunity for the player to consider, decide on and execute a tactical solution. The action when it came was intense enough; but in between, there was time to practice and savour other important aspects of handling a virtual tank platoon in a combat environment. Things like planning platoon-level operations; obstacle crossing; managing formations; moving into and out of battle positions; not to mention a spot of commanding, gunning from and driving my own tank. Friendly and enemy AI had been believable and efficient. All this, in convincing terrain, with well-animated tanks whose appearance and functions are modelled with an attention to detail which seems to be second to none. And with an interface which – once you’ve got past the initial unfamiliarity of it all – puts so much at your fingertips. I’ve said it before on CombatAce and I’ll say it again – I’m finding that SABOW is a rather excellent tanksim and quite a package!

 

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PS as of 25 April, SABOW is on sale at Gamersgate; definitely recommended, if you're serious about your tanksimming and have any interest in Cold War era armour: http://www.gamersgate.com/DD-SABW/steel-armor-blaze-of-war

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Nice one Lima, again!! I've tried this episode many times & always ended up on the sharp end, reading this it didn't occur to me to go into the map, peruse the situation & alter tactics, I left the driving to the AI & as soon as the ford was crossed it was curtains, hmmm. You know, it hit me yesterday, even though you're ahead of me on this, we're only scratching the surface, the sheer scale of its potential is astronomic. It will be a long time coming before I reach those dizzy heights. As a side note, I would like to be able to have the map on a second screen, although the cross-over is instant compared to SF, that small sidewards glance is all that is needed a lot of the time.

Anyway, excellent report, keep it up man.

Delta out.

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Hmm, sounds like I got lucky! Or perhaps the more cautious approach paid off. In the previous mission, a campaign one, getting impatient, I just rattled off hunting for the advancing enemy, instead of planning my tank platoon's moves one tactical bound at a time, from fire position to fire position. Result - enemy advance stopped and tanks destroyed but with heavy losses on my side. 

 

One thing I have found about both SABOW and SF is that it can be wise not to rush in, just for the sake of either trying to keep up with the onrushing AI in the advance or get directly to grips with the enemy, in defence. Sometimes I will just plough on but I would always recommend making a Combat Appreciation and coming up with a plan, all from from the map, before kicking off the mission. 'Aim-Enemy-Ground-Plan' is a simplified form I adopted in preference to the longer version, since I was taught it back about 1980 and it works equally well in sims. From the SABOW map, or now the 3d delopyment option, breaking the ground down into left, centre and right is helpful, just as the infantry section commander does from 10:50 in this clip from an early 1970s training film:

 

 

Yes there's a lot of depth and potential to this sim. Even now, choosing to concentrate on tactical handling of a tank platoon and finding I can do that, I have not yet experienced air or artillery support or explored the facilities for re-inforcements or repair - for example trying to recover damaged tanks from the battlefield, rather than just writing them off. Or tried out organising some tank-infantry co-operation, ideally with results like these:

 

 

...oh for a playable Chieftain, some FV432s and a central European map...maybe one from GT:OS! Hopefully there will be some add-ons, developer or user-made.

 

I'll start getting into some of SABOWs other features soon but for now and even with just two tanks playable, there is plenty to do and savour, just fighting my own tank and running my own platoon.

 

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Caution is key, Plan A & Plan B along with reading the map are vital. On that particular episode, I did none of those, just rushed in without any forethought. Still, improvement in my own missions, enemy no longer set as Targets, & I'm getting positive results - Victory, Total Victory. Am looking at the Angola situation for the forthcoming week, some personal interest there back in 76.

Back to it.

Delta out. 

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Updates for SABOW are still coming thick and fast from developers Graviteam. As well as the abillity of tanks to lay smoke screens, there are new tank control options. One of the cleverest and most useful - and until now, seen only in Steel Beasts - is a command to order your tank or tanks to start moving into and out of hull down positions, in between shots - called 'active defence' in SABOW. In fact there is now a new training mission to enable you to understand and practice this. And another one, to practice the use of smoke generators.

 

In fact, a new main menu option, 'Missions', has been added...

 

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...to give more convenient access to the mounting number of additional single missions, which I expect will provide an equally-convenient way to access user-made missions, too...

 

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The 'active defence' mission is for the M-60 and starts with a text prompt to advance to a crest line ahead, to engage advancing enemies.

 

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You have a couple of tanks on this mission. As you advance, a HEAT round is loaded and your wingman slides over to your right.

 

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As you come up to the crest, the on-screen text messages continue to prompt you, like an instructor on a real training exercise.

 

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Having sighted the enemy through the gunner's sight - the one shown below with the simpler reticle is used with the analogue ballistic fire control computer and stereo rangefinder - you are prompted to ctrl+click on a target, to get a range from the tank commander, who dials this into the computer...

 

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You are then told to hit the hotkey which will start your tanks 'jockeying' (to use the British Army term) into and out of fire positions, relative to your selected target...

 

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This is where it gets really cool! You can take a shot, then your AI driver will back up into cover, while your loader chambers the next round...

 

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Your tank will then move forward again into a hull down position, halting long enough for you to take your shot, then back into cover while reloading, then move up again. Unless you have ordered otherwise, your wingman will do the same. This is a joy to behold!

 

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You can intervene at any time, as the text messages below suggests, for example, to change firing position or to order a short stop ahead of time.

 

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In the pic below, my own tank is reversing into cover after firing, while my wingman has started to move forward again for his next shot.

 

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Tanks appear to move back up to the same fire position each time. While it would be safer to 'pop up' even slightly to one side each time, you can adjust this manually at any point.

 

The convincing detail in which SABOW replicates so many aspects of the functioning and handling of its featured tanks I am finding incredibly impressive and immersive. Largely thanks to the wargame layer, SABOW has what I believe may be the best single-player campaign system of any tanksim, ever. The sounds and visuals are just great. The most recent update added some improved damage modelling and associated effects: the sudden, vicious flare-ups of the ammo cooking off in a knocked-out tank look at once fearsome, authentic and spectacular, without being overdone. The first time I saw this, I just went, 'Oh WOW!' and could not suppress a grin.

 

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New video clip showing some of the new features here:

 

 

A few weeks ago, when I finally decided to make the effort to get acquainted with this one, I was wondering if SABOW would be much good as a tanksim. Now, I'm beginning to wonder if there is a better one.

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Emboldened by my success in that single mission, I decided to return to my current campaign, playing for the Iraqi side in the war with Iran. Last campaign mission, we had moved out from our defensive positions and met an Iranian advance more or less head on. Though we'd stopped the enemy in his tracks, we had paid a high price, in terms of tanks knocked out, at any rate.

 

It's now the early afternoon of 7th January and fighting has broken out on both shoulders of the enemy salient, marked in blue below. The enemy is renewing his attacks towards my unit, the 10th Detached Armoured Brigade, in the bottom right hand corner of the map. I haven't been given any specific orders from on high but it's fairly obvious that the task will be to stop the enemy attack. In SABOW's campaigns, much as in real life, victory is decided according to the ground you manage to occupy...or in this case, prevent the other side from occupying.

 

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I'm still learning the ropes as far as SABOW's campaigns go - for example, so far I've not so far encountered air or artillery support options, the bad weather in this campaign being enough to explain the lack of the former. But I do know that having opted to join the developing battle, my next step is to set out my forces in the 'Deployment' screen, seen below. Bottom centre, you can see the icons that show that I am still commanding three T-62 platoons. Though we have had some re-inforcements, one of the platoons is down to two tanks, the others having the full three.

 

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I decided I didn't like the offered deployment, with all of us bunched up around the key point we were evidently to defend, marked 'Assyria 1'. Unfortunately I didn't take a screenshot of my deployment - you'll see this later - but after a look at the map, I decided to move my 1st platoon well to the north, up to the position marked 'Ummayad 2'. There I sited them in defensive positions with arcs of fire to the south-west. I kept the under-strength 2nd platoon near 'Assyria 1' but backed them into the wood, facing north and west. My third platoon I placed more or less in between these two, just inside the north-west corner of the large wood behind 'Assyria 1', facing west. I would have liked to place this platoon further back, in depth and in reserve, out of sight behind a low crest further east. But that was not allowed. SABOW can be quite strict about platoons sticking to their assigned areas (in terms of map squares), it seems. for each platoon in turn, I adjusted the positions of tanks individually, till I was satisfied.

 

I then went to the 'Initial Orders' screen and set arcs of fire so that they all overlapped nicely, covering from north-west to south-east. The markings on the map told me my tanks were all dug in and my plan was to let the enemy come to is and destroy him by concentric fire from our fixed positions. The ground over which he was most likely to advance would form an excellent killing ground, into which at least two platoons should be able to fire simultaneously. Or so I hoped!

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_38_57_0002.jpg

 

...to be continued!

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I unpaused the action and found myself in the tank commander's station of the command tank of my first platoon, up at 'Ummayad 2'. It was raining heavily, thoroughly murky conditions with visibility poor. I quickly gave the platoon the order to close up and stay concealed, checking that they were also ordered to fire at will.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_40_45_0004.jpg

 

I could see that the enemy might be at quite close quarters when they appeared - hopefully, under our guns, as they crossed ahead of us, from right to left. On our right, hopefully hiding us from the Iranians until they appeared in front of us, we had some cover from a slight rise in the ground, topped with a long strip of woodland. Next to my left-hand tank, which was dug in like all our T-62s, was a Chieftain knocked out in the previous battle.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_39_51_0003.jpg

 

Scanning my arcs through the commander's sight, I could see that my chosen killing ground was littered with some other wrecks from the enemy's last attack, in the form of a couple of knocked-out M113 APCs. I hoped that this sight would not deter them from coming much the same way, although I was hoping the next attack would come from slightly further south.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_41_47_0008.jpg

 

I next switched to my second platoon, set back inside the edge of the wood at 'Assyria 1'. They were deep enough into the woods to be reasonably well concealed without completely sacrificing their fields of fire. I was still quite worried about them, though, for they seemed likely to be at the sharp end of the enemy's attack. They would be the anvil against which my first platoon would smash the enemy. My dispositions were in any event designed to ensure that no single platoon would meet the enemy unaided, mutual support being an important principle of defensive operations.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_43_18_0010.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_43_30_0011.jpg

 

Finally I 'visited' my third platoon, in the centre. I would have prefered to have them out of sight as a mobile reserve but I didn't have the elbow room so here they were, set back slightly from my planned killing ground but with arcs of fire which overlapped with the other platoons, on either side of them. In the pic below, taken from the commander's cupola of the platoon leader's tank, you can see the other two T-62s, just ahead and to either side, all well dug in.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_44_05_0013.jpg

 

Again, I gave orders to close up and stay concealed. From the commander's sight I scanned left and right. Once more I could see casualties from the last fight, in this case a T-62, one of my own losses no doubt, and beyond that, an enemy M-113.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_45_43_0017.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_45_26_0016.jpg

 

Having had a look at the battlefield from the viewpoint of each platoon in turn, I switched back to the first platoon and settled down to wait. Here's the tactical map, pictured at about this point in time. My first platoon is top right, with the command tank the green diamond. The third platoon is the group of three red diamonds in the centre, with the two further south, near 'Assyria 1', representing the second platoon, on my left flank. The blue segments represent my allocated arcs of fire (I've suggested to Graviteam that they lighten these markings as for one or more platoons, then tend to obliterate the map markings beneath!)

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_52_12_0022.jpg

 

Nervously, I went to the commander's sight and scanned left to right and back again, with the occasional wider sweep in case the Iranians somehow managed to elude other friendly forces to come in behind us. But all there was to be seen was my number three tank, dug in to my left rear...

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_51_10_0021.jpg

 

...and to my right front, my number two, next to the dead Chieftain, with the equally-dead carcasses of the enemy APCs looming through the murk just ahead.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_48_35_0020.jpg

 

I had the feeling that I should have set up this platoon further north, away from the open ground ahead, in case the enemy came in more to the north than I was hoping they would. But I was committed. I wasn't going to forsake our current dug-in positions, for the sake of a few hundred metres more separation. I was about as ready as I was ever going to be. The next move would be the enemy's.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_46_51_0018.jpg

 

...to be continued!

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I had started time compression to reduce the time spent waiting around for the real fun to begin, but only a few minutes had passed, before it all kicked off. My first indication that trouble had arrived was a 'Spotrep' from A3/3, the number three tank in my Third Platoon, in the centre of my ragged platoon line (radio messages are displayed as text, the voices all being Russian). As I called up the map to locate the sighting, he also sent a Contact Report, being engaged with APCs to his front. Whether from the murky conditions or clever use of terrain, the enemy had somehow arrived pretty well right in front of our positions, just 700 metres away. This wasn't quite turning out as I'd planned; I'd hoped to hit them further out. Anyway they had arrived in our killing ground and it was now time to do some killing.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_52_25_0023.jpg

 

As well as the text from the Spotrep and the contact report, you can see the entry in the message log, top right of the map screen in the screenshot above. Mousing over each message will display details of the sender, who is also highlighted via a 'transmitting radio mast' graphic, superimposed on their vehicle marker. Neat!

 

So, battle had commenced and while the enemy so far consisted of APCs, I was anxious that my centre platoon was engaged on its own. time to see if we could lend them some support and hopefully, catch the enemy advance from their flank. I dropped down to the gunner's sight and scanned left and right. Nothing! Where were the beggars? Moving out of our tank scrapes and into the open, to go hunting an unseen but very present enemy, was not how I'd planned this one would go.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_53_12_0024.jpg

 

Suddenly, my tank commander burst onto the intercom with a fire order - a tank! I used to have a bit of bother interpreting his directions but now I'm well used to it and I quickly laid my gun in the direction he'd indicated, referring to the little turret direction indicator icon, bottom centre of the screen. And there he was - unmistakeably a mighty Chieftain, lumbering out of the murk and heading our way. Furtunately his own gun was laid to our left, towards our Third Platoon. I had a sabot round 'up the spout' and let him have it, only to see the tracer flash skywards from a ricochet. I fumed with impatience as my 115mm gun elevated for the reloading cycle, taking my sight with it.

 

 shot_2015_05_02_21_53_21_0025.jpg

 

The big Iranian tank swung to our right, exposing more of his side to my platoon, possibly still fixated with the enemies to the east. This part of my plan was working out, but that Chieftain was refusing to die, despite the fact that the T-62 to my front had also started shooting. Our slow rate of fire didn't help and at one point the Chieftain drifted behind my right-hand tank, masking him from my own fire. As he came back into sight, I let him have a HEAT round, firing practically over the fenders of the T-62 just ahead of me. You can see the muck thrown up by my muzzle blast in the pic below, taken as the gun elevates to reload, with one of the crew celebrating our hit over the intercom.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_54_36_0028.jpg

 

Finally, after what seemed like ages but was probably just a few short seconds, the Chieftain started to burn and the tension began to unwind a notch or two. I returned to the tank commander's sight and had a brief look at him, just to be sure.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_55_46_0030.jpg

 

But the battle wasn't over yet! To the left of the burning enemy tank, wisps of smoke showed where another AFV was putting down some smoke for concealment and it wasn't long before I heard another Contact Report on the radio. While closed down in your own tank in SABOW you can't hear too much of what's going on outside but although I couldn't get 'eyes on' any more enemies, I could see tracers from cannon fire going back in forth to my front. A look at the map showed me that the battle was in full swing. From a quick glance it seemed that there were two killed enemy tanks to our front and a live APC in dead ground somewhere further out. And enemy infantry, likely debussed from that and possibly other APCs, were assaulting the woods in between my Second and Third Platoons. From dead quiet to utter chaos in seconds! In other words, absolutely fantastic! Just what the tanksim doctor ordered! SABOW had delivered me a great little battle. Now all I had to do was win it!

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_56_17_0031.jpg

 

...to be continued!

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I dropped back to the gunner's sight in the command tank of my First Platoon. To the left of the burning Chieftain, the last wisps were fading of a smoke screen. I couldn't see any other enemies, so concluded that this was likely laid earlier, by the knocked-out Iranian tank, whose turret, with its bank or electrically-fired smoke dischargers, had originally been facing that way.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_56_56_0032.jpg

 

Further left another tank burned. Though partly hidden by the lie of the land and some intervening vegetation, he looked like another Chieftain.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_57_40_0034.jpg

 

So far, this seemed to be going our way, although just sitting in a tank with a narrow field of fire, waiting for a mostly unseen enemy to make an appearance while relying on your initial dispositions turning out to be reasonably sound, was proving to be rather a nerve-wracking business. The urge to back out of our tank scrapes and seek out the enemy was considerable. But I held my ground. I'd made it my plan to fight from our fixed positions - a tactic used with some success by the Iraqi Army during the real-life version of the virtual battle I was now fighting - and I would stick to that.

 

Every now and again, ammo in one or other of the burning Chieftains would cook off, producing a bright flash and a bang I couldn't hear from inside my own tank. There but for the Grace of God, as they say...

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_58_10_0036.jpg

 

Then, it happened. The moment I had been dreading. Fortunately, my AI tank commander, with the benefit of a sight with greater magnification and sited higher up, had been keeping a good lookout and had spotted the enemy tank which was now stalking us, throught the woods on our right flank. Frantically, I swung the turret round to the indicated bearing.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_59_39_0039.jpg

 

The rain had stopped and visibility was better, but still I saw...nothing. Just trees and shrubbery. The ground dipped away in that direction. It seemed that with his higher sight position, my tank commander could see something that I could not. Then, there he was! Just becoming visible over the low crest amongst the vegetation, a third Chieftain! I had a HEAT round up the spout and as soon as I could get a clear shot at him, I let fly. At that range it would have been hard to miss...and I didn't.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_59_44_0040.jpg

 

This time, he burned at once. The boss indicated some troops in his vicinity and though I was pretty sure this was the bailed out enemy crew, I cut loose with some bursts from the co-ax in their general direction, just as an ammunition explosion flared in the enemy tank.

 

shot_2015_05_02_21_59_53_0041.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_01_36_0046.jpg

 

Although we had caught the other two Chieftains from the flank while they were attacking our other troops, that third one had definitely reacted to our presence by attempting to stalk us. However, I had deliberately placed the command tank of my two 3-tank platoons back from the other two, to provide a bit of depth and all-round defence. Despite our primary arcs of fire being to the front, my AI tank commander had been on the ball and had watched our flanks, especially that wood to our right. Top marks there to SABOW, for both friendly and enemy AI!

 

The battle seemed to have gone quiet in my platoon's sector so I now switched to my two-tank Second Platoon, in the woods just behind our position 'Assyria 1'. There was what sounded like a heavy MG firing somehere close by but from the command tank, I could see no targets, just a knocked-out M-113 APC in the killing ground to our front. I cut loose in his general direction with the co-ax. Tracer fire in SABOW is really well done, the rounds looking a most realistic pink colour and often bouncing or ricochetting on impact, just as I have seen them do in real life.

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_05_37_0054.jpg

 

At that point, as if in reply, there was a sort of whoosh which sounded like an incoming RPG and something went bang in the woods about 50 metres to my left; you can just about see the dark smoke from this impact in the screenshot below.

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_05_58_0056.jpg

 

Deciding that there must still be some really nasty people out there, I resumed hosing the ground to our front with the co-ax.

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_06_16_0057.jpg

 

That seemed to have the desired effect, as peace returned to the battlefield. I switched back to my original platoon, up north. All I could see was wrecked enemy armour, the ones from their most recent attack still burning. Every now and again I saw a distant figure running to the rear, likely unhorsed enemy crew. The T-62 ahead of us fired at these intermittent targets but considering this a waste of ammo, I ordered firing to cease. Meanwhile the burning tanks would flare up every so often as propellant fires took hold.

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_10_15_0061.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_10_43_0063.jpg

 

We weren't done yet, though! The radio net came alive with a report of enemy movement, spotted in the direction of the crossroads, a prominent landmark to our west and a known enemy strongpoint. The Second Platoon I had just left seemed best placed to deal with this, or at least get 'eyes on', so I switched back there. What was this? Another attack?

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_19_13_0073.jpg

 

There was now nothing to be seen, in the direction of the last sighting. To my left, something was burning, hidden by the trees. To my right, the under-strength platoon's second tank sat in its own defensive position, its turret turning at intervals as its gunner scanned his arcs.

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_20_49_0075.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_21_40_0076.jpg

 

A look at the map showed the battlefield littered with killed enemy arrmour. Most interesting of all, the latest report of movement near the crossroads indicated that the enemy there were in fact withdrawing northwards!

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_23_42_0078.jpg

 

We'd won!!! A few seconds later, the results screen confirmed what had suddenly become clear. No ordinary win, this, it was a Total Victory'!

 

shot_2015_05_02_22_24_05_0079.jpg

 

I didn't have time to tour the virtual battlefield and take the obligatory snaps of the destruction we had wrought but I'd seen it for myself through the gunsight. A good days work, ending with the Iranians withdrawIng from the tactically-important ground from which they had been attacking us for the last few engagements. The fight had been quite small in scale, emphasised by the realistically-limited view of the battlefield from the concealed positions I'd chosen to fight from, and with the map set to display only spotted targets. But it had been a tense, exciting, realistic and thoroughly immersive tanksimming experience.

 

No doubt about it now, in my mind. Steel Armor - Blaze of War is a top-notch tanksim, probably the best I have ever played and certainly second to none. If you take your tanksimming at all seriously, this is one you really must have.

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33Lima, Need help sir, for the life of me, cannot get Active Defense to operate sensibly !! I press 9 & it goes for cover in any direction, any chance of some idiot proof guidance? Much obliged.

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33Lima, Need help sir, for the life of me, cannot get Active Defense to operate sensibly !! I press 9 & it goes for cover in any direction, any chance of some idiot proof guidance? Much obliged.

 

I think the trick is to turn on the little crosshairs thingy with the Ctrl key - for example, from the TC station, may work from the gunner station too - and then with the mouse, place those on the target you want to be in cover from. Then click, right or left, can't recall. Then hit the '9' key. This seems to work for me; maybe if you don't select a target first, things get confused like you're describing, as if the driver is going, 'Cover? From what direction? Here...or maybe there? Oh, I give up!'.

 

The other thing is that so far, I have only used this in the training mission, where there is a low crest to your front, providing the AI with suitable, nearby cover. I'm not sure what would happen if I gave the order where no such cover existed. That too would likely confuse the driver, real or AI.

 

I don't know yet what happens if you try to set this up by clicking on a spot on the ground rather than an actual enemy. It may need the latter. And of course if there are several enemies, your solution will be good for just one, so care is likely needed.

 

Good luck!

 

I haven't tried the 'U' key yet, so I'm not sure how that one works out.

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Slow on the uptake as I can be, I have only just realised that the initial battle map you see when you start a campaign 'turn' isn't, as I had thought, just the wargame AI working through events and generating battles, one of which will involve the player. You can actually move units about via this map, thereby setting them up for whatever move you have in mind, be it offensive or defensive, possibly triggering a battle yourself.

 

In the campaign I've been playing, for the Iraqi side, the Iranian enemy has been making life difficult for us by repeatedly attacking out of a minor salient they hold, around a crossroads next to one of the region's ubiquitous irrigation channels. In the battle reported above, we destroyed their latest attack, resulting in some of their forces withdrawing to the north. Faced with the initial planning map at the start of the next turn, after watching the wargame AI doing some stuff as before, it was then that I discovered by chance that I could move my units around, within the area we held. So, starting with this, with us on the blue side in the bottom right-hand corner (and having opted to display units using NATO symbols, each one here representing a platoon)...

 

shot_2015_05_04_22_21_36_0005.jpg

 

 

...a few mouse-clicks redeployed my platoons along the southern and northern shoulders of the red enemy salient, as in the screenshot below. From these positions I would launch concentric attacks designed to 'pinch out' the enemy salient and finally occupy that troublesome crossroads. After that, we would re-orient and exploit to the west, catching other Iranian positions there between my advancing tanks and the friendly forces on the far side of the bigger, north-south bulge which the enemy had driven into our territory.

 

shot_2015_05_04_22_24_31_0008.jpg

 

Sure enough, my moves triggered SABOW to offer me a battle and I Iost no time in ordering my tank platoons to begin their attacks, as I had planned. Switching between the units and the tactical map, I was able to watch my plans take shape...although it sure does get dark early, in these parts.

 

shot_2015_05_04_22_49_47_0009.jpg

 

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Fortunately, night fighting and driving wise, the T-62's active IR systems were quite capable for the day, the view below being that from the tank commander's sight, which nicely reproduces the effect of looking at a scene illuminated by an Infra Red spotlight. Spooky!

 

shot_2015_05_04_22_30_59_0003.jpg

 

My plans went rather well...helped by the fact that the enemy seemed to have bugged out completely. Still, it was quite satisfying to watch from the turret of a covering platoon's tank, as another trio of T-62s, following my orders from the map, crossed the ford next to the crossroads and took up defensive positions on the southern side.

 

shot_2015_05_04_23_07_21_0023.jpg

 

My PC, I now suspect, is an enemy agent, because it saved the Iranians to the west from my phase 2 attack by re-booting at that critical juncture. Never mind; I've learned another few tricks along the way and will be all the better placed to drive the Iranian infidels from Iraq's holy ground, next time!

 

I'm still some way from seeing everything SABOW can do, let alone mastering it to the point I can get decent all-arms operations going, as opposed to trying to co-ordinate moves by just a few tank platoons, as on this mission. However, the tools are there and I'm getting to grips with them. What a package this is! With SABOW I can get the sort of experience I used to try to create with 1/300 scale minuatures on a tabletop, combined with a first-class tank simulator. Far from getting in the way of the tanksimming side, the wargame component enhances it, as well as adding interest of its own. Like a hand fits in a glove. A steel glove, in this case :)

 

shot_2015_04_21_22_05_23_0002.jpg

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To wind up this rather meandering mission(s) report I thought I should relate how my replayed night attack panned out, after being interrupted by a PC reboot last time. In short, I think I won, but I actually lost, officially!

 

As before, at the initial map screen, I lined up my tank platoons in positions around the enemy mini-salient in my sector, this time to its north and east. I planed to crush this 'Crossroads' position first. Then I would attack the marked enemy position at 'Darius 1', to the west. If that went well. I would then swing north and attack the enemy positions up there, opposite our people at 'Assyria 2'.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_22_15_0000.jpg

 

I had five platoons all told, not all of them up to full strength (and I soon discovered that one tank was still immobilized from previous damage - SABOW's campaign seems truly dynamic). I had no infantry or recce troops at my disposal, nor artillery support. This would be a tanks-only show. I clicked through my platoons in turn and gave each of them attack orders, some into positions from which they would be able to cover the crossroads from the north, others to assault through it from the east and shake out the far side. In the screenshot below, of the tactical map after several minutes of action, you can see that the platoons to the north of the red enemy salient are moving in bounds and one has already advanced up to the northern edge of the irrigation channel, just next to the Phase 1 objective, marked 'Crossroads.'

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_26_37_0003.jpg

 

If I'd had artillery support I would have made good use of this to hit suspected enemy positions as we advanced and perhaps put up some illumination over them. As it was, I was limited to what I could see and shoot from my tanks, in the darkness.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_28_24_0006.jpg

 

Despite being given 'Attack' rather than 'Move' orders, some of my crews turned their lights on at times, which was rather silly of them.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_30_43_0008.jpg

 

One such occasion was when I ordered the covering platoon to cross the irrigation channel and join the rest of the force, reorganising around the objective. Fortunately, this performance drew no fire, although it doubtless gave the enemy something interesting to look at.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_33_57_0010.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_34_50_0011.jpg

 

At this time I was commanding the lead tank in this platoon and it was quite a struggle to get us up the bank and back onto level ground, I think because we ran into a step in the ground. SABOW does a quite convincing job on the physics, conveying the best impression I have seen in any tanksim that you are in a real tracked vehicle driven by real people and moving over real terrain.

 

At this point, some confusion set in. A couple of platoons seemed to become split up, like some vehicles were no longer receiving radio messages or able to respond, or had just got separated and become lost or confused. I spent a bit of a while trying to get a grip. Anyone who's ever been on a night exercise, let alone a real operation in darkness, expects a certain amount of chaos to build up as things develop. So while it was frustrating, i did not find this unrealistic. If you're commanding a force in such conditions part of your job is keeping on top of things like this and I took it that this was a factor SABOW was simulating, intentionally or not. Military operations are not a chess game with pieces which move instantly at your beck and call.

 

The good news is that the message log credited us with having taken two key points, aptly named as these contribute significant victory points when SABOW is calculating winners and losers. I'm not sure that the enemy position to the west, 'Darius 1' was one of these, but it seemed unoccupied. So I decided that I would re-orient to the north and move straight to Phase 3, the attack on the enemy opposite our positions at 'Assyria 2'.

 

I had got the two platoons nearest the crossroads lined up and ready to jump off and was waiting for the more scattered platoons near 'Darius 1' to get into position, when the enemy finally decided to take a hand. A T-62 platoon east of the crossroads made a contact report: enemy armour to the north! Shortly afterwards, our men at 'Assyria 1' reported they were under attack. The enemy had turned the tables and now it was our turn to face the possible loss of a key point.

 

I would have preferred to have met this attack with my whole force but the enemy were evidently right on top of our positions and there was no time to lose. The two platoons already in position near the crossroads would have to pitch in now. I ordered both to attack northwards; hopefully they might catch the enemy in the flank. One platoon was slightly closer than the other so there would be an element of separation and therefore mutual support. The remaining platoons, further west and south, I ordered north on their left flank, to render what belated cover and support they could.

 

The first T-62s to reach the scene of battle were quickly engaged at very close quarters, with the platoon commander's tank knocked out before I had a chance to take over in person. Worse still, 'Assyria 2' was reported captured by the enemy. All of a sudden, this wasn't going so well!

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_54_36_0015.jpg

 

A smarter move would have been to jump to my second platoon which was just coming up; this I could have led into the fray to best effect. But instead I took over the second tank in the platoon that was already engaged. This tank too was hit almost immediately. We could still move but the gunner's main sight was out. I backed up desperately, scanning for targets. We got into some bushes which likely saved us from destruction. Tank cannon fire erupted all round. The platoons third T-62 flashed past close by, caught in the green light of our IR spotlight. I tried to follow him but he seemed to have vanished like a ghost in the night. Still no sign of the enemy. Where were they? Total chaos.

 

shot_2015_05_04_22_42_17_0006.jpg

 

It all ended as quickly as it had started. Firing died away. Something flared up next to me in the darkness. It was an Iranian Chietfain, burning.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_57_32_0016.jpg

 

That was it. The SABOW curtain came down at that point. Having taken two key points from the enemy and now apaprently beaten off their own attack, I was a bit surprised to be told we had lost. The statistics presented, seen in full below, just added to my confusion. It's probably not that complicated; all wargames have their methods of resolving a battle into who won and who didn't and I just need to get used to the SABOW way. At least we got an 'achievement' recognised.

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_57_47_0017.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_05_11_59_14_0018.jpg

 

Regardless, it was an interesting battle and the challenges of trying to manage my forces was part of the fun, not a distraction from the tanksimming. Somehow or other, SABOW gets the tanksim/wargame balance about right, for me. In this respect it actually does a better job than 'pure' tanksim M1 Tank Platoon II (where you tended to have to choose between abandoning your secondary units after the initial planning, or spending too much time micro-managing them in the IVIS screen 'map'). in fact, SABOW reminds me a lot of Steel Beasts in this respect, which is no bad thing!

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Hi Lima, Thanks for the reply, that does indeed make sense, will give it a go, and likewise, haven't tried the "U" key yet.

Thanks again.

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Hi Lima, Thanks for the reply, that does indeed make sense, will give it a go, and likewise, haven't tried the "U" key yet.

Thanks again.

 

It looks like we CAN initiate 'active' defence in respect of a given direction, without having to set a priority target. I should read the manuals more often, especially as they are updated after every game update! The 'tank manual' says:

 

5.1 Active Defense

To activate the active defense mode, press and hold the [0] by moving the center of sight to a point relative which will

seek cover, and release the button then. If you assign a priority target for the firing before, you can press [9] button, in this case

the cover is found with respect to the priority target. If you hold [shift] (or switch platoon command mode) command will be

executed only for player's tank.

In this mode, tanks will find cover for hull - the main firing position, and then cover for the entire tank - stand for

reloading, and will maneuver between them when fired from a main gun and requires reloading.

Points for maneuvering may be assigned manually by pressing or right mouse button in the cursor mode on the “Stop”

icon in the interface. The same button is used to forced moves between defense points. To stop the tank between this points

using the [E] button.

To rotate the tank (and formation) on the priority target, use the [K] button. Any order of rotation, stop, or change the

formation cancels active defense mode.

Table 5.3

 

Active defense interface

Interface Action

[grapic] The crew is looking cover for the tank hull and for the whole tank.

[graphic] The tank is moved between a position for firing (hull-down) and cover for reloading, respectively.

[graphic] Status of the main tank gun: a gun is not loaded or is not ready for firing, the projectile loaded and fire

can be opened.

 

It also says later on 'Mark of active defence point appears as a small red stroke' [on the top of screen situational awareness 'header tape'].

 

There's a lot of depth to this sim! I'm tempted to start an M-60 campaign next...

 

shot_2015_04_11_16_54_04_0003.jpg

 

...but first, I have a few scores to settle with my T-62s south of Susangerd!

 

shot_2015_05_05_23_05_27_0012.jpg

 

shot_2015_05_05_22_59_41_0006.jpg

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Ha, should take heed of my own doctrine, RTBM !! It never occurred to me to look there, didn't realise the updates affected the manual. I appreciate the effort you took in helping an idiot in distress.

Many thanks to you sir.

Good hunting.

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