Italian Bersaglieri Weapon Company – Tactical Suggestions

By Benny Christiansen

The Italian book introduced a new kind of formation for me. The Bergsalieri Weapons Company was a formation, that I found very interesting.

At first glance, I could not see myself fielding a whole formation, but having read a few pages, the potentially fun and efficient lists became apparent to me. I’m not the best of the best, but I win more games than I lose, and so these suggestions would be for players who are mediocre or similar

In general, I am a big fan of Italian infantry formations. I find it easy to keep them alive. They are hit on 4+ and capable of a 30 cm cross-country dash. Combined with the Follow Me, they are up and in the face of an enemy, within a turn. In missions where there is more than 40 cm between the lines, I recommend using the L6/40 or AB41 platoons to make sure the distance is only 40 cm.

The Weapon Platoon

The Weapon Platoons are flexible. They have a few units that are capable of assault and can count as “extra hits”, but basically they are a unit of guns. The Anti-Tank Rifle is quite capable of stopping assaulting tanks with its AT5, in particular units such as the Stuarts, that typically are hit on 2+. The HMG can be a serious deterrent for any assaulting allied infantry unit, in particular, the American units, that are hit on 3+. Another important thing to remember is when your opponent has No He on his tanks, such as the Crusaders. This makes it a +1 to hit infantry, and thus making it even harder to take your teams out at a distance.

The strength and the weakness of these platoons, along with the Elefantinos, is that they are infantry. It means they have an awesome save of 3+, and great speed with a tactical move of 20 cm, plus movement orders. It also means they are in Bad Spirits when the platoon commander is surrounded by less than 2 other teams from the platoon within command distance.

So how to use this formation at its best? As mentioned above I recommend it to be combined with Bersaglieri Rifle Company. This is among other things because where I play we either use Battle Plans, predetermined attackers, or similar to find the attacker and defender. If, where you play, the infantry does not get to attack very often, you may prefer to add the Weapons Company with another type of formation.

An example could be like this

This is a little more than 50 points.

I added the L6/40 platoon at the Weapons Company, but it may be wiser for you to put it under another formation.

In my lists, I prefer to play the infantry very aggressively. The Italians are extremely fast and capable of moving right up in the face of an enemy, putting pressure on from the start. This is not depending on the mission. If I have to defend I’ll still send platoons towards my enemy. With the V4 rules, a 9 man platoon needs to lose 7 men to make a test.

In case you have the points to have the units on the table, there are no reasons not to use them to put pressure on the opponent. If your opponent is the aggressor, he will be forced to deal with your units. You can deploy them on one side or at the center, as you see fit. It depends on the missions, but if you are defending, and it is unclear to you where he might attack, I suggest you put it in the center. You have the movement to be able to get past his forward force. In general, you can get 30 centimetres away from your own deployment zone in turn one.

Make sure to use terrain to your advantage, but also your movement distance. 30 cm is quite a bit.

After having moved away from your own deployment zone it can be quite effective to leave your HMG team behind, particularly, if you play vs inf/mech. Use the remainder of the weapons platoon to move up into the opponent’s deployment zone or move towards the back of a weak support unit. When you use your points on infantry and weapons instead of Tanks, you often get a large number of teams. This has the advantage, that you can take the casualties your opponent inflicts on you while you are making your maneuver.

From this point on it is difficult to predict the game and tactics you can use, but my suggestion is that you use the danger that your weapon platoons possess to make your opponent take away unit(s) from his primary assault when you are defending. Quite often the opponent will target your weapons platoons, and this is why I suggest you combine it with the Rifle Platoons. If the opponent stops the weapons platoons, you will have a very strong veteran infantry unit at your opponent’s deployment zone. It is a rare occasion where this causes no concern to him at all. Your price – in points – for this durable and dangerous pressure force is  15 points.

47mm Anti Tank gun platoons.

As mentioned above, the Elefantino platoon has an advantage to most other Anti Tank units. It is an infantry unit. This means that buildings are a valid “go to” zone for them. Be mindful of this, when you choose table quarters or deployment. As an infantry unit it moves faster than normal anti-tank units, and thus can be used differently and potentially much more aggressively than the other AT units. The downside is the low AT value of 6. The AT value means that it is very unlikely you will be shooting at your opponents medium tanks head-on. You will, however, find it quite capable of being a threat to units with Crusaders, Stuarts, Honey, Daimler and 1/2track transports, even at long range due to the HEAT special rule

For me, it leaves me with two options for the 47mm AT gun. I can leave it “at home” defending together with other infantry teams at an objective (remember, as it is an infantry team, it does not block LOS when shooting for instance in defensive fire). Or I can take it out and put pressure on the opponent, similar to the way I suggest for the Weapon Platoon above. Pay attention to the fact that your range is 24″/60cm and that you have the HEAT special rule.  The difference is, however, that while the Weapon Platoon has extra teams, that can provide the platoon with a chance to survive enemy fire without losing its “punch” the Elefantinos are alone. This means that as soon as the platoon is below 3 teams, it has to start taking tests.

This suggests that with it could be wise to build the platoons up according to your intention. In this case, it would mean an aggressive platoon, where you feel you are taking a risk, might be better only to invest in 2 teams, where a defensive platoon would have 4 teams in it. This way, if you lose it, you do not lose an expensive unit, while the 4 shots of range 24″/60cm with 4+ FP can be dangerous to infantry, gun teams and light armored vehicles all alike.

The other advantage in the combination of formations here is that we have a whopping four potential choices. If we continue with the formations made above, it could look like this:

60 points

Again, let us pretend we are fielding this. We have the L6/40 tanks to help us create a deployment zone big enough for several platoons if we are attacking and we are more than 40 cm away.

If we are defending in a Meeting Engagement we have one big rifle platoon and 2 47mm platoons to defend and the rest CAN be used to put pressure on, and attack our opponent either the units or the objectives. If we are attacking we have 39 teams with a 3+ save. All of them can be up front and in the optimal position during turn 1 or 2. In this instance, I have used Assault Mortars, but if you prefer, you can use normal mortars, to provide smoke for your assault.

Try also, if you have the money and soldiers to field it, to imagine a formation like this for 35 points:

3 HMGs, 8 AT guns plus the 3 AT rifles and 11 infantry teams. All with 3+ save

It can be a flexible support formation for anything in the Italian Avanti book.

It is my hope that this has provided you with a few ideas as to how to use your Weapons Company and the platoons within it.

6 thoughts on “Italian Bersaglieri Weapon Company – Tactical Suggestions”

  1. We played a league all summer. I played my Italians. And used a weapons company. While I really like Italians and enjoy playing them there are several things you must take into account. Those are Heavy Tanks of any army if they have more then armor 6 on the front and sides. Artillery. And lots of MGs. A Honey list can and will kill you if they attack. And there are people out there that will take them. As many Honey’s as they can. While your A/T guns can punch them, very quickly a full company of them will over run you guns and shoot up your infantry. You just can’t kill them quickly enough. British Heavy Tanks just flat out suck to Italians. Armor 6 all around at the lowest. So unless you take German Support or your own assault guns or you own 90mms or 88s, they can basically do anything they want and you really can’t do much about it. And if you do face them, guess what? The very first thing the other side will do is kill your heavy A/T assets. And then go where they want! I think one of the worse things that Battle Front did was down grade the 47/32 from 7 to 6. That made the Italians so much worse to play! Up to V4 those guns punched 7. For some reason, BF made them punch 6 for V4. And it really effected Italian play. Unlike the down grade of the 6 lbr. which did not really effect them all that much, it does effect the Italians quite a bit. However, Make sure to watch out for hordes of light tanks, Heavy Tanks and of course lots of artillery while playing Italians!

  2. What are your thoughts on using the card for -2 points per weapons platoon? If you do that you could also load in the 47mm or the 20mm AA.

  3. one italian command card adds the ability to attack at night, do you think this will complement this strategy?

  4. I have played Italians a few times in V4 MW. Weapons Platoons are fun and useful, but I’d *never* in a million years use them offensively, save to dash them forwards and Follow Me into a building outside my deployment zone. Running at the opponent’s Deployment Zone sound very dangerous to me. With the launch of Enemy at the Gates, the shortcomings of the Solothrun and 47/32 against armour are extremely evident, and a good reason for me to keep them on the defensive with heavier guns to protect them. The AT 6 of the 47/32 rather than AT 7, is due to the introduction of HEAT-ammunition in V4. Along with the reduction in ROF, the 47/32 is not the powerhouse it used to be, and I find the AT-units of 47/32s have situational use at best.

    I have always used the Legions of Rome card to downgrade the platoons – you’re just as difficult to hit, and you kick out just as much damage. Still Rally on 4+, the biggest downside is a Skill of 5+. This might be improved to 4+, but not reliably. For my purposes of static objective defence, they are just great. I’ve thrown in a 20/65 before, but I find 2 points are expensive for a ROF 3 gun with limited range.

  5. Nice work, thx for the contribution. I like your thinking with the Weapons Platoons, assault assault assault.

  6. As a minor point, Support Units like the L6/40 are not related to any particular Formation, they are support for all of your Formations.

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