2
Crisis in Burma
21
10
510120 510528
4 510528
999
Dynamic Campaign Game - With the fall of Singapore, Malaya was secure and the Japanese 15th Army was free to continue its operations, which had begun in mid-December with the capture of the airfield at Victoria Point, against the Commonwealth forces in Burma. Burma was vital to the Allied war effort against Japan as it was the only practical route for supplying China from India. However, the British, Indian and Burmese troops comprising Burcorps were poorly trained and equipped, which even the arrival of the 7th Armoured Brigade could not offset. Within weeks of the Japanese seizure of Moulmein and Martaban, the critical port at Rangoon had also fallen expanding the crisis in Burma to disastrous proportions. Both sides raced north to cross the Irrawaddy River, but even as Burcorps' rear guard blew the bridges at Mandalay, the Japanese were crossing the river and closing on the city. There was little option left to the Allies but to continue their retreat and attempt to prevent the invaders from driving into India by establishing fortifications at Imphal and Kohima. This then is the mission handed you as a Commonwealth commander in Burma. Or as a commander in the Japanese 15th Army, to you goes the honor of driving through Burma and inflicting one more disastrous defeat on the Allies. 
-1
Return to the Philippines
10
21
441020 441228
4 441228
999
Dynamic Campaign Game - During the summer of 1944 the Japanese had accepted the fact that American forces would be returning to the Philippines. However, while the American garrison numbered only 130,000, mostly untrained troops in 1941, the Japanese had roughly 350,000 well-trained and equipped men prepared to defend the islands in '44. Where and when the invasion would take place were the major questions occupying Imperial Headquarters and the 14th Area Army defending the islands. In the early morning hours of October 20th the waiting for both sides came to an end. Convoys loaded with assault forces of the US 6th Army steamed into Leyte Gulf and assembled off the eastern shore of Leyte, opposite the landing beaches stretching between Tacloban to Dulag. The battle for the Leyte Island had begun and would continue through the end of the year! If you are ready, step up and take your place as an American commander in General MacArthur's crusade to free the Filipino people from Japan's tyranny. Or instead, join General Yamashita's Japanese 14th Area Army and make the American devils pay a high price for their return. Either way, every decision you make could be the difference between victory or defeat. 
-1
Struggle for Luzon
10
21
450109 450628
4 450628
999
Dynamic Campaign Game - Having secured most of Leyte Island by the end of December 1944, General MacArthur turned his attention to the next phase of the American return to the Philippines: Luzon and the capitol city of Manila. On January 9th 1945, fresh divisions of General Krueger's US Sixth Army, supported by the Third and Seventh Fleets, began landing along the shore of Lingayen Gulf around Dagupan. Initial resistance was light. General Yamashita, commanding the Japanese 14th Army charged with defending the Philippines, had determined months before that it would be pointless to contest the invasion along the shore where American naval firepower would decimate any defenders. Instead, Yamashita planned a series of delaying actions along the 175-kilometer central plain to Manila before pulling his forces back into the dark rugged mountains. Realizing that the US Army could not be defeated on Luzon, Japanese Imperial Headquarters was determined to tie down as many divisions as possible while insuring that the American devils would pay a high price for the freedom of the Philippines. Now step forward, if you dare, and take command of a unit in MacArthur's army of liberation and batter your way from one end of Luzon to the other, or join the Japanese 14th Army and face the full furry of the awakened giant! 
-1
Clash of Arms
19
16
500725 501228
4 501228
999
Dynamic Campaign Game - Under the guise of a counter-attack, the North Korean Army struck in the pre-dawn hours of Sunday, June 25, 1950, crossing the 38th parallel behind a firestorm of artillery. The North claimed Republic of Korea Army (ROK) troops under the bandit traitor "Syngman Rhee" had crossed the border first, and that Rhee would be arrested and executed. Equipped with 242 tanks including 150 Soviet-made T-34 tanks, the North Korean military began the war with about 180 aircraft, including 40 YAK fighters and 70 attack bombers. Their navy was inconsequential. The South Korean Army had 65,000 soldiers armed, trained, and equipped by the U.S. military, and as a force was deficient in armor and artillery. The South Korean military also had no tanks, attack planes, or any anti-tank weapons. There were no large foreign combat units in the country when the war began, but there were large American forces stationed in nearby Japan. The North's well-planned attack with about 135,000 troops achieved surprise and quick successes. North Korea attacked a number of key places including Kaesong, Chuncheon, Uijeongbu and Ongjin. Within days, South Korean forces, outnumbered, outgunned, and often of dubious loyalty to the southern regime, were in full retreat or defecting en masse to the North. As the ground attack continued, the North Korean Air Force conducted bombing of Kimpo Airport near Seoul. North Korean forces occupied Seoul on the afternoon of June 28. However, North Korea's hope for a quick surrender by the Rhee government and the reunification of the peninsula evaporated when the United States and other foreign powers intervened and expanded the civil war into an international conflict. 
-1