Help support TMP


Two If By Sea Available


Back to Hobby News


Joe Legan writes:

Downloaded it and it is well researched with a lot of information and many many ships stats. Bravo Chris. I plan to use this with Post Captain.


Areas of Interest

18th Century

Featured Hobby News Article


Featured Link


Featured Ruleset


Featured Showcase Article

1:700 Black Seas British Brigs

Personal logo Editor in Chief Bill The Editor of TMP Fezian paints brigs for the British fleet.


Featured Workbench Article

From Fish Tank to Tabletop

Personal logo Editor in Chief Bill The Editor of TMP Fezian receives a gift from his wife…


Featured Profile Article

Herod's Gate

Part II of the Gates of Old Jerusalem.


439 hits since 29 Oct 2024


©1994-2024 Bill Armintrout
Comments or corrections?


TMP logo

Membership

Please sign in to your membership account, or, if you are not yet a member, please sign up for your free membership account.

Wargame Vault announces the availability of:

From Chris Stoesen

PDF – Sale Price $12.00 USD

Two If By Sea

A set of scenarios to be used with the TooFatLardies rules Kiss Me Hardy, using the changes for ships under the rate from To Covet Glory. The book contains ship stats for a large number of vessels, from large Ship Sloops to the smallest cutters and Bermuda Sloops used by the Royal Navy and the American Continental Navy and State Navies (Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia).

The scenarios include twelve scenario sets. Each scenario set is one or more unique historical or fictional scenarios from the American Revolution. The first scenario details the British Schooner Halifax in 1769 in an incident before the war started. The scenarios continue through July of 1781. There is also a guide on setting up convoy escorts or raids on the Atlantic, Caribbean, or Far East trade routes.

There are 59 pages of scenarios and 121 pages of ship lists. There is also a section noting the types of merchant vessels that were likely to be encountered on the waters of the Americas during the war. Lastly, there are notes on the available models in both 1:300 and 1:700 scales, including links to the manufactures.

The scenarios should be adaptable to any rules system that can handle individual ship battles with vessels that are frigates or smaller.

For more information