Victory at Sea

Warlord Games

Ammunition Ship

£18.90

1As well as fuel, armies and navies need enormous amounts of ammunition in order to function. Ammunition ships were vital to the war effort, but also posed a severe risk to their own forces close by due to the explosive nature of their cargo.

Contains one resin & metal vessel with ship card. (Warlord Games Made to Order)

    Warlord Games

    Suzuya

    £22.50

    The heavy cruiser, Suzuya, is believed to be one of the deepest shipwrecks on record at (a yet) unconfirmed 27,600 feet. 

    • Out-of-Stock

    IJN Submarines & MTB sections

    £40.68

    The Imperial Japanese Navy fielded a number of variants on a standard torpedo boat design, differing mainly in machinery fit which affected displacement, giving the illusion of more variety than existed in practice. 238 boats were built within these designations, all armed with two 18-inch torpedoes and 25mm or 13.2mm guns.

      USS Idaho

      £24.30

      USS Idaho, the third of three ships of the New Mexico-class of Battleship, was the fourth vessel to bear the name. She was launched in June 1917 and commissioned in March 1919. She was armed with a battery of twelve 14” guns in four turrets and was protected with heavy armour plate (13.5” thick in the main belt).

        Royal Navy Aircraft

        £38.70

        The British air raid on the Italian port of Taranto demonstrated to the world the vulnerability of ships against attacks from the air. The planes of the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy proved a scourge to Axis forces throughout every theatre of the war.

          USS Yorktown

          £28.80

          The Yorktown-class of aircraft carrier were built in a series of three. Of those, only the USS Enterprise survived the war, with the USS Yorktown sunk during the Battle of Midway, and the USS Hornet during the Battle of Santa Cruz.

            Victory at Sea US Navy fleet

            £129.60

            Although the United States of America contains a vast area of land, almost all of its allies and trading partners are overseas, and those interests require a powerful navy to support them.

              Vittorio Veneto

              £24.30

              The Littorio class was the first new Italian battleship class for nearly a decade when design work began in 1930.

              • Out-of-Stock

              Akagi

              £28.80

              Originally laid down as an Amagi-class battlecruiser, the stipulations of the Washington Treaty resulted in her conversion to an aircraft carrier. As a result, Akagi (赤城, "Red Castle") was one of Japan’s first large aircraft carriers.

              • Out-of-Stock

              Kriegsmarine Aircraft

              £38.70

              With carriers planned but not built, Germany’s airpower was limited to launching from airfields far from open water. As such, they were mainly deployed against ships close to mainland Europe. Despite this, the Luftwaffe dive-bombers proved devastatingly effective against Allied ships.

                Bismarck

                £24.30
                SCALE: 1/1800TH
                1 VESSEL
                Warlord Resin Resin

                  Victory at Sea IJN fleet

                  £129.60

                  For centuries, Japan's policy of seclusion (sakoku) saw it concentrate on coastal defences in order to repel foreign vessels. However, with the advances other maritime nations were making, it eventually became obvious that no longer would Japan be able to ignore the rest of the world.