Hello All,
As you may have read below Volcano has just updated his B44 Alt scenario pack and has kindly uploaded two of them to the H2H section :)
You can also download the whole package at Glenn's site
http://members.shaw.ca/gcsaunders/downloads4_VM.html
Also if you are already testing these games all you need to do is register the test to earn bonus points!
The two scenarios are...............
#16_07s: The Peiper is Paid_Alt
West Wall, Dec 16th 1944: The 1st SSLAH Panzer Division was the strongest fighting unit in the Sixth Panzer Army. Undiluted by any large influx of untrained replacements, it had an available armored strength on Dec 16th of about a hundred tanks, equally divided between Mark IVs and Panthers, plus forty-two Tiger tanks belonging to the 501st SS Panzer Detachment. The road net in the Sixth Panzer Army would not permit the commitment of the 1st SS Panzer as a division, even if two of the five roads allocated the army were employed. The division was therefore divided into four columns or kampfgruppen: the first, commanded by Colonel Peiper, contained the bulk of the 1st Panzer Regiment and thus represented the armored spearhead of the division. The original route for Peiper's KG was Route D assigned by 6th SS Pz Korps. Peiper could not follow the route exactly as given for a variety of reasons. The actual route he took was Losheim, Lanzerath, Honsfeld, Bullingen, Moderscheid, Ligneuville, here the road divided. Peiper had a precisely defined mission: his KG was to seize the Meuse River crossings at Huy, making full use of the element of surprise and driving west without regard to any flank protection. Therefore, his path lay straight ahead, through Stavelot, Trois Ponts, Werbomont, Ouffet, Seny, Huy - a distance of some 50 miles. Only a few short miles to the north lay Malmedy and the road to Spa and Liege. Malmedy and the Meuse crossing sites in the vicinity of Liege, however, were in the zone assigned the 12th SS Panzer Division. Whatever timetable he was using, if indeed he had any precise timetable in mind, his KG was making good progress and the element of surprise, as shown by the lack of any formal resistance, was working to his advantage. This explains why Peiper stuck to this route. This scenario was designed for you to follow in Peiper's footsteps, although having much more information, and hindsight from 50 years ago, may give you an edge. It can also be PBEM. [Size, medium] Designers Note: If played with Explicit Supply rules ON, the following victory point levels are recommended to be used: 1250-1500-1750-2000. Editor's notes: *This scenario was altered to allow German and SS panzer and panzer grenadier division as well as corps and army level pioneers to breakdown into companies. This allows more flexibility but still restricts other lower quality axis divisions. *Some of the US 2nd and 99th Infantry Division's artillery was removed on the north edge of the map since they would have been supporting the rest of its division to the northeast.
#18_01: The Race for Bastogne_Alt
Bastogne, Dec 18th, 1944: After two days of fighting, the US line cracked, Panzer Lehr and the 2nd Panzer Division surged forward towards the key crossroads at Bastogne, supported on the south flank by the 5th Parachute Division. Only small pockets of resistance stood in their way but, further west, the 101st Airborne Division was racing forward to stem the tide. Meanwhile the road conditions, and weather in general, deteriorated. [Size medium] Editor's notes: This scenario was altered to allow German and SS panzer and panzer grenadier division as well as corps and army level pioneers to breakdown into companies. This allows more flexibility but still restricts other lower quality axis divisions.
Any problems/question just let me know!