November 11, 2006

CGC Scheduled EVENTS

Updated 2/16/2007 7:53 PM

Meeting location: Ramada Inn

225 Lordship Blvd, Stratford, CT   Map



Morning

 

9:00 AM

 

Title: WWII: The Struggle for Europe and Asia

Host: Mark Melenovsky

Rules:  Custom - somewhere between Axis & Allies and A World at War

Description:  WWII the Struggle for Europe and Asia is a game that has the feel of a simulation like A World at War or World in Flames with the aesthetics of playing with miniatures in a game that can be played in a long day. The game is best played by two to seven players each playing a combination of the eight major powers embroiled in the conflict. The game allows players to manage their country's military production, declare war, as well as plan and conduct strategic level combat across the entire European and Asian theatres. See www.ww2wargame.com for details or contact

Mark at sales@ww2wargame.com with any questions.

 

 

9AM

 

OPEN

Afternoon

2 PM

 

Continuation of 

“WWII: The Struggle for Europe and Asia

 

2 PM

 

Title:   Pirates of … NO Pirates!  Space the final front… (no cant use that )   ROCKET MAN!!!!!!!

Host: Matthew Roos

Rules: Basic

Description: ( fill in with your best “ William Shatner ” ) She … packed my bags last night… preflight… Zero hour.. nine a.m…. And I'm gonna be HIGH!!…As.. A.. kite.. By… then….. Because.. I’M A ROCK..ET MAN Rocket man Burnin' out his fuse.. Up here… ALONE ! ( yes that is the way “ Bill “ sings).   Each player will randomly pick ships from the 30 or so ships I have ) and we will go ROCK hunting on or around about 15 asteroids and blow things up !!! ( WOOOOHOOOO HE BLOWED UP REAL GOOD !!!! ) Buy and sell ships and so on and so no and so on . . .

Evening

 

CGC Annual Auction – No Events

 

 

CGC Annual Auction – No Events

  Parting Shot Dept.,

"Let me have war, say I; it exceeds peace as far as day does night; it's spritely, waking, audible, and full of vent   

Peace is very apoplexy, lethargy: mulled, deaf, sleepy, insensible;    a getter of more bastard children than war's destroyer of men."

-- William Shakespeare, Coriolanus