Corps Command Dawn's Early Light -Digital Download

Corps Command: Dawn's Early Light
Corps Command: Dawn's Early Light

Peter Bogdasarian's Corps Command: Dawn's Early Light Digital Download

The Corps Command system comes to the Eisenbach Gap in an instantly available print and play product. 

The Download Comes With:
Mark H. Walker's Lock 'n Load

Band of Heroes A 17" x 22" map that beautifully depicts the lush, West Germn landscape of the Eisenbach Gap.
Band of Heroes 136 colorful, 5/8" counters, representing the battalions and brigades that fought the first battle of World War III.
Band of Heroes Easy to learn, quick to read, rules. Be up and playing in less time than it takes to set up other games. Better yet, if you know how to play Corps Command: Totensonntag you know the basics of Corps Command: Dawn's Early Light.
Band of Heroes

Players' Aid card and Terrain Effects Chart.

Band of Heroes All available in a game you download instantly, print and play.


 

Interested in the professionally printed version, with die-cut counters? Click here to pre-order a copy of Corps Command: Dawn's Early Light.

Enjoyed Dawn's Early Light? Please place a preorder for Corps Command: Totensonntag. Click here for more information.

Line of Fire #10 has a new module for Dawn's Early Light with a new map and die-cut counters. Click here to order.

May 14, 1985.

The Soviet First Tank Army crosses the border into Germany and strikes into the Eisenbach Gap, seeking to rip open the belly of NATO's defenses. American and German troops scramble from their bases to try and delay the Soviets, for if they get through, they will drive all the way to the Rhine. Over two thousand tanks will meet in the decisive engagement of the war.

The Corps Command system returns with a modern twist! Asset chits allow players to bring in reinforcements and influence the battlespace with gunships, chemical attacks and electronic warfare. New defensive fire rules give an attacker a reason to sweat and encourage players to match their units to the right terrain. All of this with the same lean, mean and simple system as the first game in the series, Corps Command: Totensonntag.

The Soviets hit hard but fold fast - as their units wear down they lose initiative, making them less and less capable, and the clock is against them. The NATO (American and German) forces defending the Gap are highly capable but are outnumbered and playing for time. Both players are being asked to do the impossible - to win the greatest tank battle of all time.

September 15, 2008.


Corps Command games are designed to be played - they are light on rules and require merely a couple hours to finish. The emphasis here is on lean, mean and simple.
The heart of the game system is the initiative mechanic. The players' initiative rolls determine not only who acts first, but also which units move and how far they go. A player will often be forced to decide between getting there fast and arriving with the biggest force.
Combat hurts and then it kills. As units accumulate hits, their combat effectiveness gradually declines until they finally shatter and fall apart completely. Players will want to pull their forces back before they reach such a level of misery and degradation, but will the initiative system give them the chance to do so?
Neither player is a spectator. The Soviets must attack, attack, and attack again. NATO, however, cannot sit idly by, lest it be defeated in detail. The ridge that divides the map forces the West German/American player to defend two fronts, and how she allocates her resources will often decide the battle. The strategic situation, combined with the initiative system, ensures that no two games will play out the same way.
Designed by Peter Bogdasarian, Corps Command is an introduction to not only a game, but a complete operational gaming system. Dawn's Early Light and Totensonntag are just the beginning.

Abrams of the 13th Armored fight on.

The 1st Guards Tank Division assaults the NATO units.



 

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