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THE BATTLE OF MONTE CASSINO

One tough gut.

The Germans held back the Allied advance in Italy for almost 5 months in the mountainous surroundings of Monte Cassino. The once beautiful area was reduced to ruins and a lunar landscape

Following the Allied landings in North Africa it was clear that the Allies would need far more resources to invade northern France. The British Prime Minister Churchill advocated an invasion of Italy as the soft underbelly of the Axis.

The Allied invasion of Sicily, Operation Husky, in July 1943 was successful and led to the fall of the regime in Italy. The Germans were quick to respond and occupied Italy. Italy was now under German occupation and the war would continue. The Allies landed in Italy in September at Salerno. The optimistic Allied commanders estimated that Rome would fall by October 1943.



British troops examine a knocked-out German StuG III assault gun near Cassino, Italy, 18 May 1944. Photo: Loughlin No 2 Army and film and Photographic unit.

The Allies found that fighting in Italy, in its rugged and challenging terrain along with the skillful defence of the Germans, was nothing like a soft underbelly. The American General Mark Clark, later called it “One tough gut.” And Monte Cassino was one of the toughest. It took the Allied armies more than 4 months to fight the 150 km from Salerno to Monte Cassino. Here the Germans had set up a fortified line, the Winter Line. With heavily fortified mountain defences and difficult river crossing, Cassino formed a linchpin of the Winter Line.



StuG III excelled in defending against attacking armor.

The initial Allied assaults took heavy casualties for no gain. The Germans held up in entrenched positions with excellent fields of fire while the Allied troops were exposed in difficult terrain. The Allied forces were subject to accurate artillery fire and their commanders began to suspect that the Germans had an observation post in the Monte Cassino Abbey. The abbey was reduced to rubble in a series of air raids. Ironically the Germans did not have an observation post in the abbey as they had respected the protected historic zone. After the bombings the Germans however occupied the ruins and established defensive positions there.



The ruined Abbey of Monte Cassino after the German surrender. USAAF Photo 232-6. Photographer unknown.

To break the line the Allies landed at Anzio, north of Cassino. This was an improvised affair. The landings had to be made right away as the landing craft was about to be transferred to England for the D-Day landings. The initial landings were unopposed with a recon patrol making it as far as the outskirts of Rome. The US commander, John P. Lucas, rather than capitalize on this, decided to consolidate and entrench his landing area. This gave the Germans time to bring in forces and fortify the area surrounding the landing zone and any chance of a quick victory was lost. This led Churchill to comment "I had hoped we were hurling a wildcat into the shore, but all we got was a stranded whale". After a month Lucas was relieved and Major general Lucian Truscott took over command.



The 133rd Ironman and 142nd Infantry Regiments fought together in the hard fighting near Monte Cassino.



Germans directed accurate artillery against the Allied attacks.

The fighting at Cassion and Anzio continued against a determined German defence until May 1944 when a massive twenty-division assault against the defensive line, spearheaded by the Polish II Corps and the 1st Canadian Infantry Division finally broke the line. For the Allies it was a pyrrhic victory with 55.000 casualties against 20.000 German casualties. This was further confounded when Truscott, who was leading his forces to trap the retreating Germans received new orders to take Rome instead. The Germans managed to escape to the Gothic Line where they held back the Allied advance for almost half a year.



Polish soldiers inside the ruined Monte Cassino monastery. Photographer unknown.

The Allies captured Rome on 4 June 1944. This victory was quickly overshadowed by the Normandy landings two days later.

Monte Cassino Abbey was rebuilt after the war and rededicated by Pope Paul VI in 1964.



Romans welcome US troops as they enter the city. Photographer unknown.

Victory in Europe Day

Happy VE Day!

On this day, 8 May 1945, eighty years ago, the Allies of World War II accepted Germany’s unconditional surrender. It was at 23:01 Central European Summer Time, and this was 00:01 9 May, Moscow time making it the 9 May for the Soviet Union. It became Victory in Europe Day!

So ended the deadliest war in Europe and celebrations erupted throughout the Western World, especially in the United Kingdom, France, Netherlands, in North America and in the USSR. The long night of war was over.



VE Day celebrations in Toronto 8 May 1945. Photo: John H. Boyd.

People celebrated in a state of euphoria. Celebrating the end of the war and constant danger.

Rebuilding was ahead in Europe and World War II was still raging in the Pacific. But for the Europeans peace had come!



We at 1939 Games wish you a happy Victory in Europe Day celebration.



Avro Lancaster performing a food drop over Ypenburg during Operation Manna. Allied bomber crews completed 11.000 tonnes of food drops to the starving population of the Netherlands. Making it the friendliest air drop by any bombers. Photo: Unknown.



49th Reconnaissance Regiment at the liberation of the Netherlands. They adopted the Polar Bear logo when they were garrisoned in Iceland 1940-1942. Photo: Unknown.

The winner of the second 2025 expansion tournament is Radish!

Dear KARDS players, friends, and WWII enthusiasts,

We saw some hard fighting this weekend and these are the top three players in the second 2025 expansion tournament!

First place, earning 1500 USD is

RADISH



Second place, earning 1000 USD is

TWI DCARGO



Third place, earning 500 USD is

ESZEMTESZEM



After each expansion and release we at KARDS hold an eSport Tournament to give you a chance to see the best players fight it out.

There is a lot to be learned, deck builds and game play. Lessons you can take to heart when building your decks and improving your play.

So make the most of it and stay tuned as we bring you more articles on how to use this new intel!

We at 1939 Games, salute the winners!

The Battle of the Reichstag

Eighty years ago on 30 April 1945 was the climatic end of World War II in Europe.

It was a symbol for the victory over Germany. Stalin had issued an order that the symbolic building should be captured before the International Workers’ Day on the 1 May.



The iconic “Raising a flag over the Reichstag”photo by Yevgeny Khaldei.

The Reichstag itself was of little value as it had not been repaired since the great fire in 1933. Yet its symbolic value was unquestionable. The Germans gathered some of their best units they still had while the Red Army amassed a force for the final assault. The War Council of the 3rd Shock Army had ordered Red Banner flags for nine divisions to carry into battle and raise over the Reichstag.



Iosef Stalin II tank - also nicknamed the "Tank of Victory”

The day before, the Soviet 3rd Shock Army crossed the Moltke Bridge. The defending Germans had fortified the nearby government buildings and Kroll Opera house. These buildings had to be cleared room by room before the Reichstag could be assaulted. The first two assaults were attempted in daylight with horrendous losses from fire from the German entrenchments and support from 12.8 cm FlaK 40 guns on the roof of the Zoo flak tower. To make matters worse General-polkovnik Vasily Shatilov, commander of the 79 Corps had erroneously announced that a red flag had been hoisted on the Reichstag and this had carried up the chain of command. The Reichstag had to be captured before the first of May.



The Zoo flak tower and German soldiers during the battle of Berlin.

Since the previous attacks had failed they waited for night time to mitigate the fire of German heavy machine-guns. This time the attackers breached the Reichstag and fierce room-to-room fighting and the staircase battles were some of the hardest that day but before the end the day the Soviet flag had been hoisted on the roof. Fighting continued in the building until 2 May.

The famous photograph was taken 2 May 1945 by Yevgeny Khaldei. It was a staged photoshoot that captured the final victory over Germany.



Soviet soldiers writing graffiti inside the Reichstag after they had captured the building.

SECOND 2025 EXPANSION TOURNAMENT AHEAD!

Attention KARDS players!

LIVE BROADCAST AHEAD!

April 26th & 27th - Round of 8 Finals @ 11:00 GMT

Tune in to watch the 8 finalists battle it out to see who is the winner of the United Front Expansion Tournament, earning the lion’s share of the 3000 USD prize pool.

This is the second of four Expansion Tournaments held this year, which are tied to expansions and major releases throughout the year. The tournament year culminates in the EPIC KARDS World Championship held in November.

Contestants in Expansion Tournaments are selected from the top players of the Officer Club (24) and tournament leaderboard (8) from the months leading up to each tournament. These 32 then go through Swiss rounds until only the top 8 are left standing!

The 8 finalists this KARDS tournament are:

1. Luo Bo

2. Top Chef

3. Cirno

4. Eszemteszem

5. Nuf

6. Twi Dcargo

7. SIE_

8. YiFang



Our top 8 contenders will battle until there is only one. This is a single elimination bracket, where all games will be a best of 5. All contenders bring 4 of their best decks with one deck ban. In order to succeed, players must prove their skill and versatility with each of their decks.

You don’t want to miss this EPIC broadcast event! Join us on Twitch. Make sure to tune in so you don’t miss any of the top level plays made by our expert players. You can learn a lot from the deck selection to the gameplay.

Deck codes will be available on the stream which you can grab and try out yourself!

TUNE IN ON TWITCH

TUNE IN ON BILIBILI