L’art De La Guerre, the new Version (v4) explained by the Author, Hervé Caille

By Paolo Paglianti

One of the most played “ancient” and “medieval” ruleset, L’Art De La Guerre (ADG), is getting a new version later this month. Easy to play but deep and difficult to master, ADG has a very well-written (and well translated in English, Italian, Spanish, and French) manual, with a lot of examples that clarify almost all situations.

Most players use 15mm armies, but you can play also with 6mm or 28mm. The already good and smooth rules now get an improvement, made listening to the feedback from players all around the world. NoDiceNoGlory didn’t miss the opportunity to sit down with the author and have a chat about the incoming changes. Who better than the author, Hervé Caille, can explain the new changes? 

First, things firsts: you can find info about L’Art De La Guerre on the official site: . This is the main resource to find news and advice on how to play the game, or the preorder the ruleset of the new V4 version, which will be available later in April. If you live in Europe, you can preorder the ruleset also on

Sloop There It Is: Converting the Sloop of War ‘Sophie’

By Glenn Van Meter
One of the coolest parts of is the ships you get to use in the game. Firelock knocked it out of the park with their line of ships, even beyond just making a game where incorporating ships into gameplay is as seamless as possible. But to add to all of that they took the ships they make kits for and then added even more ships to the game based on those hulls. The difference is that the extra ships are simply rigged differently. While they point out that it isn’t necessary to actually change the rigging on your vessel, the modelers among us enjoy tinkering and making those variants.

Beginning a Soviet Horde in Bolt Action

By Troy A Hill

One of the joys and pitfalls of moving into a new area, and joining a new gaming group is that many of the local players in the new area already have their army builds done. When I lived in Southern California, there were a mix of players and armies. In my regular gaming group, no one was playing British, so I picked it up to compliment my US and my German Armies.

But, when I returned to North East Indiana in the States, and looked up the local crew, the most popular nation to play in the new local gaming group is… yep, British of one flavour or another.

What was I to do? Americans are the vanilla “easy mode” according to the Juggernauts. In my 15mm WWII wargaming days, I began with Americans and soon tired of them. Germans are definitely challenging. And with my grandmothers coming from lineages of Kaiser and Sigsbee surnames on one side, and Bechtel on the other side of the family, the German army seems like a good fit for me. So far, though, my interest in all things German seems limited to the DAK.

Well, when I played Warhammer Fantasy, I loved the horde armies of the goblins. Guess I should look at… The Soviets?

War in the East 2 – First Look

by David Garvin

Sometime back in the mid 1980s, I went to my friend Stephen’s house for the weekend. He was one of the first people who had a personal computer. On it he had a game called War in Russia. It covered the Eastern Front in its entirety, and between the two of us, we spent hours on it, using its now quite-dated graphics. We were not strangers to games on this level; however, the designer, Gary Grigsby, found a way to have the battles resolved down to the lowest levels.

Team Yankee West Germans Spoiled

By Howard West

The next new army book for has made it to our bunker in West Virginia and it is called WWIII West Germans, which will upgrade your FRG force to the same V2 standard we saw for the US, USSR, and the British. WWIII West Germans provides you with a single sourcebook for all of the West German forces in Team Yankee, this combines the inaugural book Leopard and Panzertruppen booklet with six new exciting formations. The book also provides some tweaks to the majority of the legacy formations and their respective units in them. If you have been waiting for the next Generation of Leopard-2 tanks and Marder Infantry Fighting Vehicles you will not be disappointed.

Painting World War Two Romanians

By Kreighton Long

The backbone of the World War Two Romanian army was the humble riflemen. Romania lacked the quality and quantity in armor of their German or Soviet peers and the heavy artillery that rained destruction on their victims on the Eastern Front was sorely lacking in Romanian arsenals. Without powerful armor formations or heavy guns the Romanian military was forced to rely on manpower rather than firepower.

The average Romanian rifleman was equipped in fairly simple, but functional, gear. Color photographs of Romanians from the war are hard to come by but illustrations from Osprey Publishing and photographs of contemporary reenactors helped to guide my color choices. The Romanian soldier wore a cotton tunic during the summer which bleached in the sun. During the winter the Romanian soldier wore woolen tunics which retained their darker khaki color. Woolen trousers were worn year round and maintained their color like the woolen tunic.

Starting a Romanian Army for Bolt Action

By Kreighton Long

As one project ends, or ends as much as any army building project for our hobby can, another begins to take shape. After building Bolt Action armies for Germans (Heer, Waffen SS, Fallschirmjager, Grossdeutschland Panzergrenadiers), Soviets (hordes of khaki), and the United States (29th Infantry Division and 101st Airborne Infantry) I started looking at a fresh new army.

I decided to take a look at the minor Axis powers. Building a minor Axis power would add some interesting flavor in my local meta which heavily emphasizes the major powers and would provide myself with a new challenge.

The first step was to pick up the book and look through the minor Axis powers with available lists.

The factions covered in the Armies of Italy and the Axis book include Italy, Finland, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Romania. Each faction has it’s own appeal and I dream of one day building an army for all factions but I needed to narrow down my choices for my first minor power. I mentally developed a three part criteria to help me pick: local meta, history, and aesthetic.

What Are Those Red and White Poles For?

By Robert Kelly

I’m sure that everyone has seen those red and white poles either mounted on the trails of a gun or howitzer or on the side of an armoured vehicle. I wrote about the red and white posts a number of years ago on the old WWPD site and decided to dust it off and update after reading a recent Facebook post asking “what are those red and white poles for”? So many people were trying to be helpful to the person asking the question but at the same time being so completely wrong that I felt I had to do something about it. I served 18 years in the Royal Canadian Artillery, so I feel qualified to answer that question. I’ll be describing how the Commonwealth artillery would use them, but the procedures are almost the same for most other armies.

The short answer is that they are “aiming posts”.  The longer answer is that they are cleaning staves painted up to look like aiming posts. So, what exactly are aiming posts and what are they used for?  First of all aiming posts are only used for indirect fire weapons such as artillery guns and howitzers or mortars.

Tournament Report Team Yankee at WOLFKRIEG 2021

March 14th, 2021

By Howard West

Hard Knox Games located in Elizabethtown, KY hosted a Team Yankee Tournament on March 14th, 2021 as part of WOLFKRIEG 2021. This year due to the state of Kentucky’s COVID-19 event size restrictions WOLFKRIEG 2021 was been broken into two consecutive weekends. Weekend #1 for Wolfkrieg 2021 took place, March 13th, 2021 was Flames of War and March 14th was Team Yankee. This report covers the Team Yankee for weekend #1.

Hard Knox Games has been hosting small gaming tournaments during COVID based on the state of Kentucky’s COVID-19 guidelines that are in place at the time of the event. Chad and the team at Hard Knox have a great store and is like walking into the vendor area at a gaming convention. This is the 12th year that WOLFKRIEG has taken place.

Playing Bolt Action – Germans

By Kreighton Long

Grenadiers react to US Paratroopers attacking through a gap in the Normandy bocage.

I don’t remember where my interest in playing Germans in World War Two games came from but I do know that the first miniatures I painted after joining this hobby were Germans from Bolt Action Miniatures, before Warlord Games bought them. That five-man infantry squad still sits in my display case to this day. After painting and gaming Germans for over a decade it’s safe to say that the German army is my first-round-draft-pick when throwing dice with friends.

The German Wehrmacht, rebuilt after being disemboweled by The Treaty of Versailles following World War One, reentered the world stage in dramatic fashion with it’s blitzkrieg against Poland in 1939. What followed were six years of brutal campaigns across Europe, Africa, and Russia ending with the final defeat of the Third Reich in the streets of Berlin itself.