FICHA DEL JUEGO
Precio:
38,5 € - 20% = 30,8 €
38,5 € - 20% = 30,8 €
Comprando este juego podrás ganar OcaPoints. Edición:
En la Tienda MasQueOca existen varios estados en los que puede estar un juego:
| En stock: el juego está actualmente en nuestros almacenes y disponible para su envío. (*) | Últimas unidades: tenemos en stock unas pocas unidades del juego bien por tratarse de una oferta especial en precio o porque el editor ya ha agotado las unidades de las que disponía y de momento no tiene previsto hacer una reimpresión. (**) |
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| Precompra: el juego tiene una fecha aproximada de recepción, está indicada en la ficha del juego, esta fecha no es fija ni vinculante y pudiera adelantarse o atrasarse por causas ajenas a nuestra voluntad. Se procederá al envío del pedido en cuanto lo recibamos de acuerdo a las reglas de Pedidos en Precompra. ¡Atención, las precompras no son reembolsables y se consideran como productos encargados específicamente por el cliente!
P500: el juego no ha sido todavía editado, pero se puede reservar sin compromiso para poder tenerlo asegurado cuando se edite. No es posible adquirirlo todavía pero sí reservarlo. Cuando el juego alcance el número de reservas necesarias o por decisión editorial pasará al estado Precompra. |
Disponible Bajo Demanda: el juego no está en este momento en nuestros almacenes, pero en principio estamos esperando su reposición por parte del proveedor. El tiempo de reposición aproximado para un juego nacional es de 1 semana y para un juego de importación suele ser de 3/4 semanas, pudiera ser que recibamos la reposición antes o que en el caso de la importación se demore por causas ajenas a nuestra voluntad. (***) ¡Atención, las compras bajo demanda de juegos de importación no son reembolsables! Pero si un juego no estuviera disponible en el editor, en el momento en que tuviésemos constancia te avisaríamos para que pueda solicitar su cambio o anulación. |
| Pendiente de Primera Edición: el juego no ha sido todavía editado, pero se puede reservar sin compromiso para poder tenerlo asegurado cuando se edite. No es posible adquirirlo todavía pero sí reservarlo. Cuando tengamos una fecha aproximada de recepción el juego pasará al estado Precompra. | Agotado / Pendiente de Reedición: el juego se encuentra agotado por el fabricante y está preparando una reedición. El juego se puede reservar sin compromiso para poder recibir la información del mismo en el momento que se reedite. No es posible adquirirlo todavía pero sí reservarlo. Cuando tengamos una fecha de recepción el juego pasará a Precompra. |
| Oportunidades: el juego está en stock en unidades limitadas. Las Oportunidades son juegos que o bien han sufrido algún desperfecto en la caja o bien han sido abiertos por alguna razón (comprobaciones de control de calidad, etc), pero que su contenido está perfecto. Es decir, son juegos que contienen todo lo necesario para poder jugarlo. No se remitirán fotos específicas del estado de las cajas, a todos los efectos se debe considerar como si se comprase el juego sin caja y sin inserto, aunque la gran mayoría de las veces son desperfectos sin importancia. Estos juegos, dada la naturaleza de los mismos, no admiten cambios ni devoluciones. | Chollos: el juego está en stock en unidades limitadas. Los chollos son juegos nuevos a estrenar que ofrecemos a precios especiales. La oferta está limitada en el tiempo y a las unidades que se pongan en oferta, una vez se retiren de la sección de Chollos su precio volverá a ser el estándar. Estos juegos, dada la naturaleza de los mismos, no admiten cambios ni devoluciones. |
| Descatalogado: el juego ha sido descatalogado por el fabricante por lo que en principio no se espera ninguna reimpresión. No obstante, en contadas ocasiones, un fabricante decide volver a imprimir un juego. No es posible adquirir el juego, pero sí reservarlo. Si tenemos constancia de una reimpresión y una fecha aproximada de recepción, pasará a Precompra. | |
(**) Salvo que en el mismo momento de realizar la compra se realice en paralelo otra compra que agote las unidades, dada esta situación el juego pasará a disponible bajo demanda a precio normal o a descatalogado y se lo comunicaríamos por correo electrónico.
(***) Salvo que al solicitar la reposición al editor nos comunique que el juego esté descatalogado o pendiente de reimpresión. Lo que se comunicará por correo electrónico en cuanto tengamos conocimiento.
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Battles of the Shenandoah: A Death Valley Expansion Battles for the Shenandoah: A Death Valley Expansion is the ninth installment of the Great Battles of the American Civil War (GBACW) series, published by GMT Games. Four full battles are included. McDowell, May 8, 1862 McDowell is considered the first battle of Stonewall Jackson’s 1862 Valley Campaign. After his loss at Kernstown, Confederate General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson retreated up the Shenandoah Valley, finally stopping at Swift Run Gap to rebuild his army. By May of 1862, the threat from the north had diminished when two of the three Union divisions under General Nathaniel Banks were redeployed to support the Union advance on Richmond. However, there was another Union force, led by Brigadier General Robert H. Milroy, approaching the critical town of Staunton from the west. Jackson planned to drive the Union from the Shenandoah Valley and help relieve the pressure on Richmond by consolidating several scattered Confederate forces and defeating the two Union armies in detail. The first step was to move his army to join Brigadier General Edward “Alleghany” Johnson’s Army of the Northwest and defeat Milroy. The Confederate armies were consolidated on May 6 and begun advancing on Milroy’s Union force. Milroy retreated before them until May 8th, when he was reinforced with a brigade under Brigadier General Robert C. Schenck. That afternoon, the aggressive Milroy turned to attack the Confederate forces arriving on the heights overlooking the hamlet of McDowell. 2nd Winchester, June 13, 14, and 15, 1863 2nd Winchester is the battle that cleared the way for Robert E. Lee’s Gettysburg Campaign. In June of 1863, General Robert E. Lee finalized his plans for his second invasion of the north. The supply line was to be routed through the lower Shenandoah Valley, then primarily occupied by a Union garrison at Winchester with smaller garrisons at Berryville and Martinsburg. Lee assigned the task of clearing the Valley to Lieutenant General Richard S. Ewell, now in command of II Corps after Jackson’s death at Chancellorsville in May. The Union garrison at Winchester consisted of the 8500 men of the 2nd Division, VIII Corps, commanded by Major General Robert H. Milroy. Milroy had made extensive improvements to the fortifications around Winchester and was confident that he could hold the position against anything the Confederates could throw at him. He was so confident that he ignored orders to abandon Winchester. On June 13, he discovered that Ewell had arrived. Piedmont, June 5, 1864 Piedmont was the first Union victory in the Valley since Kernstown in 1862. The Confederate loss compelled Lee to send Lieutenant General Jubal Early’s II Corps to retake the Shenandoah Valley, effectively ending any hope Lee may have had for offensive operations around Richmond. After New Market, Union Major General Franz Sigel was replaced with the more aggressive Major General David Hunter, who made another move up the Valley with a larger and better organized army of 12,000 men. Hunter’s move caught the Confederates by surprise. Initially, the only opposition was a brigade of Confederate cavalry led by Brigadier General John D. Imboden. Every able-bodied man in the area was called to the Confederate colors, including miners and militia reservists. Two brigades of infantry under Brigadier General William E. “Grumble” Jones and a cavalry brigade led by Brigadier General John C. Vaughn were rushed by rail from the Trans-Allegheny Department. The combined Confederate force, commanded by Grumble Jones, numbered about 5000 men. On June 5th, the Confederate cavalry skirmished with the leading Union cavalry, delaying the Union advance long enough so that Grumble Jones could deploy his newly arrived troops and begin fortifying a new position near the hamlet of Piedmont. Hunter’s infantry arrived at this new line around noon. Cool Spring, July 18, 1864 Cool Spring is a battle from Jubal Early’s 1864 Valley Campaign. During his retreat from the drive on Washington, Early moved into the Shenandoah Valley through Snicker’s Gap and crossed the Shenandoah River at Castleman’s Ferry. His Union pursuers, formations from VI Corps, XIX Corps, and the Army of West Virginia led by Major General Horatio G. Wright, were close behind. Brevet Major General George Crook, at the head of Wright’s column, was ordered to “cross if practicable and attack” with his Army of West Virginia. When a cavalry probe of Castleman’s Ferry was easily repulsed, it was decided to move downstream, cross the Shenandoah River at Island Ford, and then turn south to catch the Confederate defenders of Castleman’s Ferry in flank. Crook’s 1st Division, led by Colonel Joseph Thoburn, began the crossing in the middle of the afternoon after waiting for the lead division of VI Corps to arrive in support. The fords appeared to be lightly defended by the Confederates, but a captured skirmisher revealed that the divisions of Brigadier General Gabriel Wharton and Major General Robert Rodes were nearby. The lateness of the Union move surprised Early, but he had issued orders the night before to contest any Union crossing, and Wharton and Rodes were both moving within the hour. The Great Battles of the American Civil War Series: This series is one of the hobby’s longest-lived design concepts, springing from the legendary regimental level Gettysburg game – Terrible Swift Sword (SPI) – designed by Richard Berg in 1976. Under GMT Games, the rules system has remained stable but has shown remarkable flexibility to allow each game to smoothly incorporate additional rules to reflect the historical battles. The series relies on interactive chit-pull mechanics to simulate the oftentimes-chaotic nature of the 19th Century battlefield at the regimental level. The Game: Battles for the Shenandoah: A Death Valley Expansion contains four battle games with multiple scenarios. Experienced players will be able to play many of the scenarios in one sitting. The game reflects the development of the cavalry and the changes in infantry and artillery organization and tactics from 1862 through 1864. TIME SCALE: Each Turn = 1 Hour MAP SCALE: 145 Yards Per Hex with 25-Foot or 50-Foot Elevations UNIT SCALE: 50 Men or 1 Cannon per Strength Point Componets: • 560 counters • Two 17” x 22” double-sided maps • Two 11” x 17” double-sided maps • One 8 1/2” x 11” map • One Battle booklet • Eight Activation and Turn Record charts • One Terrain Effects Chart • One Range Effects Chart The remaining components necessary for play can be found in GMT’s Death Valley: Battles for the Shenandoah. These include the Player Aid Cards, the 2nd Disorder Chart, the game markers, four maps, and a ten-sided die. The GBACW Series Rules can be found on the GMT website.
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