I may be a little excited about this one. More so than usual.
Meh
Winning?
“… Is that what you think it’s about? I’m not trying to win. I’m not doing this because I want to beat someone … or because I hate someone or because I want to blame someone. It’s not because it’s fun. God knows it’s not because it’s easy. It’s not even because it works because it hardly ever does. I do what I do because it’s right. Because it’s decent. And above all, it’s kind. It’s just that. Just kind. If I run away today, good people will die. If I stand and fight, some of them might live … maybe not many, maybe not for long. Hey, maybe there’s no point in any of this at all, but it’s the best I can do, and I will stand here doing it until it kills me. You’re going to die, too, someday. When will that be? Have you thought about it? What would you die for? Who I am is where I stand. Where I stand is where I fall.”
I don’t want [him] to go.
Phone Update
Target for Today: Mission #1 AAR
After Action Report: August, 1942
Target for Today: Amiens (Airfield)
Bomber: Super-X (Mission #1)
Group position: Low
Bomber #: 15
Good fighter cover to and from target zone.
Outbound:
Zone 1: Good weather, no complications during take off.
Zone 2: 50% cloud cover, no German fighter resistance.
Zone 3: Clear skies, moderate German fighter resistance, mostly driven off by fighter cover, until 2 fighters got through. Both were shot down, 1xME 109 by Sgts Hayes and Stewart, 1xME 109 by Sgt. Martin.
Zone 4: Clear skies, no German fighter resistance.
Zone 5: TARGET ZONE – Clear skies, target slightly obscured, moderate German fighter resistance, driven off by fighter cover. Light Flak, no hits to bomber. Bomb run was on target, 50% of target damaged.
Inbound:
Zone 5: Clear skies, heavy German fighter resistance, driven off by fighter cover.
Zone 4: 50% cloud cover, no German fighter resistance.
Zone 3: 50% cloud cover, moderate German fighter resistance, driven off by fighter cover.
Zone 2: 50% cloud cover, no German fighter resistance.
Zone 1: Good weather, no complications during landing.
First mission under my belt, and I gotta say, I prefer this game to B-17 Flying Fortress Leader. I think both games play rather smoothly, once you figure out the mechanics of the rules.
I prefer to fly a single bomber in a group, instead of the entire group all at once. That’s probably due to my playing B-17 Queen of the Skies for so many years. TfT plays like an enhanced version of the original QotS game.
I’ll give the single bomber game in FFL a shot.
—
Zone 3
Long: “Fighter coming in, 1:30 high!”
Hayes: “There’s one on our 6, high!”
Stewart: “I see him!”
Stewart and Hayes opened fire, blasting the ME 109 to hell.
Stewart: “Ha! Got him!”
Hayes: “No, I got him!”
Stewart: “Call it a tie?”
Hayes: “Yeah, okay.”
Martin squeezes the trigger on his right waist gun, obliterating the remaining ME 109.
Mitchell: “Hey, the kid got one!”
Thompson: “Nice shooting there.”
Martin: “Thanks, Chief.”
Thompson: “Don’t call me ‘Chief’.”
Find a Crew
I found a random name/age/home state generator for Target for Today.
The crew of the B-17 Flying Fortress “Super-X”:
Name | Rank | Age | Home State | |
Bomber | Super-X | – | – | – |
Pilot | Wallace Thompson | Lt. | 21 | NY |
Co-Pilot | Leon Mitchell | Lt. | 28 | OH |
Navigator | Ronald Long | Lt. | 22 | TN |
Bombardier | Chester Bryant | Lt. | 25 | CT |
Engineer | Wayne Hill | Sgt. | 21 | IL |
Radio Operator | David Stewart | Sgt. | 22 | MT |
Ball Gunner | Billy Hughes | Sgt. | 23 | NJ |
Left Waist Gunner | Edwin Bennett | Sgt. | 23 | GA |
Right Waist Gunner | Philip Martin | Sgt. | 20 | CA |
Tail Gunner | Joe Hayes | Sgt. | 21 | MA |
This gives the game a bit more ‘character’, like it did in the older B-17 Queen of the Skies. By putting names to a fictional crew, you pull for them to survive.
Back in the day, I used names of people I knew. Still do, as the B-17 QotS campaign for the bomber “Facebook” will attest.
First mission is ready, raid on the airfields of Amiens, France.
Wheels up in the morning. I should be done with the rules by then.
Marleau
I’ve been calling for his trade or release for years.
Now that it’s happened, I’m a bit sad.
He’s been a part of the San Jose Sharks for the past 19 seasons, so it’s like watching a chunk of my own past leaving.
During those years, I was a huge fan, attending games, following them in their playoff runs, and until that 3-0 blown lead debacle in 2014, I would support them 100%.
Maybe 95%.
Anyways, good luck, Patrick Marleau, and thanks for all you did in San Jose.
*waits for Leafs #12 Marleau jersey to go on sale*
Target for Today
Man of Mysteries!
This year’s GI Joe Club 12″ Membership Figure is the Arcane Adventurer!
Which I’m naming “Harry”.
Behold!