Across Suez

Across Suez

"Across Suez" is a board game simulating operational level ground combat between Egypt and Israel at the Battle of Chinese Farm during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War. The game is an introductory level product with an emphasis on playability over simulation value.

Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1980 issued Across Suez in a 1" accordion box with a paper map. Decision Games in 1995 reissued "Across Suez" with additional counters for new variants and scenarios.

Game Play

The Israeli player seeks to establish a bridgehead across the Suez Canal while the Egyptian player attempts to block this. Israeli units are generally quicker, stronger, better supported, and able to push Egyptian forces back, but stringent victory conditions maintain game balance. Games are usually concluded in 1-2 hours.

Play is divided into seven turns governed by the standard move-shoot sequence, zones of control, a terrain effects chart, and a differential combat results table (CRT). Artillery fire is abstract. Air and naval power are not simulated. Units begin the game at set locations and both sides later receive reinforcements. Night game-turns (turns one, four, and seven) slow movement and disallow artillery use. Both sides may achieve combined arms effects, which result in a column shift on the CRT, for a specific attack by attacking with armor units and infantry or mechanized infantry.

The Israeli side achieves victory if at the end of the seventh turn the player has installed a bridge over the Suez Canal, has crossed at least six Israeli units over the canal, and maintains a clear line of communication (LOC) back to the Israeli starting point. If not, the Egyptian player wins. There are no ties.

SPI did not include variant scenarios or alternate rules.

Simulation Value

"Across Suez" has limited simulation value and does not describe Egyptian or Israeli military equipment or tactics during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War or provide significant context about the events leading to or resulting from the battle at Chinese Farm.

The introductory paragraph to the rules credits only the Egyptian Third Army with launching the successful October 6 cross-canal surprise attack, when three of the five infantry divisions involved were actually from the Second Army. Order of battle data is generally correct, but unit counters contain only designation and type, not size. The map omits Nahala Road, which ran along the Great Bitter Lake between the Bar Lev Line strongpoints of Lakehan and Matzmed. And the designers appear to have focused on the role of Israel's unique rolling armored bridge, described as a "convoy of bulky bridge sections" and historically laid on October 19 across the canal, rather than a pontoon bridge put down two days prior.

Game play unfolds much along historical lines, but the LOC victory condition tends to lead the Egyptian player to rush the Israeli LOC near game end regardless of the actual military value of such a move, i.e., gaming the rules rather than gaming the scenario. Combat also typically results in substantially greater numbers of units destroyed, on both sides, than the historical record supports.

SPI did not include designer's notes or references.

Components

100 die-cut counters (54 are blank) representing Egyptian and Israeli units; an 11" by 17" hexagon-patterned abstract scale map, one six-sided die, and a rulebook.

Credits

Design: Mark Herman with Jim Dunnigan
Physical Systems and Graphics: Redmond A. Simonsen
Development: Bob Jervis & Brad Hessel
Playtesting: Brad Hessel, Redmond Simonsen, Justin Leites, Philip Marchal
Production: Rosalind Fruchtman, Ted Koller, Manfred F. Milkuhn, Michael Moore, Bob Ryer, Patricia J. Snyder

Second Edition

Decision Games in 1995 released a second edition of "Across Suez" that closely followed the original SPI version, with the exception of graphics tweaks. Game mechanics did not change. The second edition also included 16 additional Arab and Israeli counters, as first described by James Meldrum in "Moves" #60, to allow for an airborne landing variant and an amphibious landing variant to the historical scenario, and a further 18 Soviet and US counters, as first published in "Moves" #82 again by James Meldrum, for five non-historical scenarios.

External links

*
* [http://grognard.com/titlea.html#a067 "Across Suez"] at Web-Grognards
* [http://talk.consimworld.com/WebX?13@316.Gb5ydbqWcfP.42@.1dd09f96/0| "Across Suez"] at ConsimWorld

Sources

"Elusive Victory: The Arab-Israeli Wars, 1947-1974", by Trevor N. Dupuy, Harper and Row, New York, 1978
"Across Suez, The Battle of the Chinese Farm, October 15, 1973", by Trevor N. Dupuy, in Strategy & Tactics #82, September-October 1980
"Across Suez", by Richard Berg, in Richard Berg's Review of Games #7, December 1980
"Across Suez: A Game Review", by Henry C. Robinette, in Campaign Magazine #102, March-April 1982
"On the Banks of the Suez", by Avraham Adan, Presido Press, 1991
"Across Suez/Go to Origins!", by Rich Erwin, in Paper Wars #24, March 1996
"Across Suez", by Rick D. Stuart, in Zone of Control Magazine #5, Winter 1996
"Arabs at War: Military Effectiveness 1948-1991", by Kenneth M. Pollack, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, 2002
"Crossing of the Suez, The", by Lt. General Saad El Shazly, American Mideast Research, revised English edition, 2003


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Suez Canal — Suez Canal, as seen from Earth orbit Original owner Suez Canal Company (Compagnie Universelle du Canal Maritime de Suez) Construction began …   Wikipedia

  • Suez Crisis — The Tripartite Aggression The Sinai War Part of the Cold War and the Arab–Israeli conflict …   Wikipedia

  • Suez (disambiguation) — Suez is a seaport town in north eastern Egypt. It can also be used to describe the following:*Suez Canal, a large artificial maritime canal in Egypt **Suez Canal Authority, the authority which owns and maintains the Suez Canal **Suez Canal Bridge …   Wikipedia

  • Suez Canal — ship canal across the Isthmus of Suez, joining the Mediterranean & the Gulf of Suez: c. 107 mi (172 km) long …   English World dictionary

  • Suez Canal — a canal in NE Egypt, cutting across the Isthmus of Suez and connecting the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. 107 mi. (172 km) long. * * * Ship canal, Isthmus of Suez, Egypt. Connecting the Red Sea with the eastern Mediterranean Sea, it extends 100… …   Universalium

  • Suez Canal overhead line crossing — Overhead line crossing The Suez Canal overhead line crossing is an important electrical power line built across the Suez Canal in 1998, located in the city of Suez, Suez Governorate, Egypt. It is designed for two 500 kV circuits. Because the… …   Wikipedia

  • Suez Canal —    A 100 mile long sea level canal in Egypt, across the isthmus of Suez between Port Said on the Mediterranean and the Gulf of Suez at the north end of the Red Sea, opened in 1869. It was built by a French consortium led by Ferdinand de Lesseps,… …   Encyclopedia of the Age of Imperialism, 1800–1914

  • Suez Canal — ship canal across the Isthmus of Suez; 107 mi …   Webster's Gazetteer

  • Suez Canal — /suɛz kəˈnæl/ (say soohez kuh nal) noun a canal across the Isthmus of Suez, connecting the Mediterranean and the Red Sea; constructed 1854–69 by Ferdinand de Lesseps with French and Egyptian backing. About 160 km long …  

  • First Suez Offensive — The First Suez Offensive was an attack launched by forces of the Ottoman Empire against British Empire forces in Egypt during World War I, in order to capture the Suez Canal. The offensive began on January 28, 1915 and ended with an Ottoman… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”