Imperial Germany laid down her last dreadnought in January 1915, and never completed her. But planning continued for new classes of battleships, battle cruisers, armored cruisers, and scout cruisers. All understood that they could not possibly be built during the course of the ongoing First World War, but would be laid down afterwards. Across the North Sea, the British Admiralty had no clear idea of what the Germans might be planning to build, but planned their own new dreadnoughts to carry ever-more-powerful armaments. A supplement for Great War at Sea: Jutland, Jutland 1919 studies the German and British drawing-board battleships designed during the First World War that would never actually be launched. It includes background essays, 40 new scenarios, and 80 new die-cut playing pieces.

$29.99
Board Games
AVALANCHE PRESS
AVALANCHE PRESS
English
9781932091717
APL 0881