Last Sunday saw a fantastic D Day outing almost 82 years to the day. Fox Green Omaha beach, but with so many players taking part we also dropped in a bridge for the Para's to defend from any German's looking to reinforce the beach. You can thank AI for the narrative.
The sea was still churning behind them when the first men of the 16th Infantry Regiment staggered onto Fox Green.
The smoke from burning landing craft drifted low across the surf, mixing with the spray and the grit kicked up by machine‑gun fire. The German lacked that killer blow numerous DD Shermans were hit one vanished in a plume of water and steel before it could even fire a shot. The second crawled onto the sand, turret already traversing toward WN62, only to be struck by an anti‑tank round that punched through its side and left it burning like a beacon on the beach.
The infantry pressed on pinned behind the shingle, the survivors of the first wave were a patchwork of shattered platoons—riflemen without officers, engineers without equipment. The German guns raked the beach in long, merciless sweeps inflicting multiple pins on each squad.
But inch by inch, the Americans began to push forward.
The engineers were the first to break the paralysis. Crawling through sand and smoke, they cleared a narrow breach in the seawall helped by naval artillery fire. It wasn’t much—just enough but it was the first crack in the German grip on Fox Green.
The Rangers surged up the bluffs.
At WN62, the defenders fought with grim determination. MG42s chattered from concrete embrasures, and mortar rounds burst among the advancing Americans. The cost was brutal—men fell in clusters, some never even seeing the enemy who killed them. But the Rangers flanked the position, scaling a ravine under covering fire from the destroyers offshore. When they reached the bunker complex, the fight turned to close‑quarters chaos—grenades, rifles, and raw desperation.
By midday, WN62 fell silent.
To the east, WN61 held out longer. Its guns had already claimed one of the Shermans and dozens of infantrymen. But with WN62 neutralized, the defenders found themselves exposed. A coordinated assault by the remnants of two rifle platoons finally overran the trenches. The last German gun crew surrendered after their ammunition ran out.
WN64, isolated and battered by naval fire, collapsed soon after.
The Sherman's advanced up the draw.
In the rear the Germans faired no better in attempting to break through the para's defending the bridge. Every attempt to break though the cordon was thwarted, multiple German vehicles - all that was left to was to face against each other on opposite river banks.
Back to the beach when the firing finally died down, Fox Green was a landscape of wreckage—burning tanks, shattered landing craft, and the bodies of men who had crossed an ocean to reach this strip of sand. The Americans had secured the beachhead.
They had lost two tanks and numerous men, but the bluffs were theirs, the strongpoints silenced, and the path inland open. The cost of Fox Green would be remembered, not for the ground gained, but for the men who refused to yield it.
A cracking days gaming - end to end action with everyone engaged. German firing was rather poor but it was still a tough ask for the Allies to break though. Thank goodness for the Naval Gun fire to keep jerries head down.
Played using Bolt Action V3.











A superb looking game
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