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Mar 20 14 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/ Russian companies are creating 'patriotic' board games based on the Ukraine war, such as a version of Monopoly where the squares are Ukrainian targets instead of streets, or a game where players hold cards representing the forces of "good" (Russia) and "darkness" (NATO). ⬇️ Image
2/ The Russian online store Wildberries is selling a number of board games with themes referencing the war in Ukraine, such as 'Special Operation on the Outskirts'. The game is based on Monopoly, with the usual streets replaced by 8 cities and 14 strategic locations in Ukraine. Image
3/ These include Donetsk, Luhansk, Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Odesa, as well as strategic targets such as the Crimean Bridge, the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, and the Kakhovka Dam. According to the manufacturers:
4/ "The game immerses you in a world where the eastern cities welcome the liberators, and the central and western cities have succumbed to enemy propaganda, which makes their liberation a real challenge. Each of your decisions is a step towards victory or defeat."
5/ It requires the player to "manage a single currency, build bridges, restore infrastructure and supply battalions with resources" and comes with banknotes depicting Vladimir Putin, General Sergey Surovikin and Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov.
6/ 'Dobble Z' is a version of the popular British picture-matching card game Dobble, themed around patriotic Russian symbols. The player has to match symbols on the cards (such as the Kremlin, tank, AK-47, map of Crimea, etc). Image
7/ The manufacturer says: "This patriotic game has everything that is close to Russian people - birch trees, traditions, great people, sights and more." It recommends the game for "a noisy group, a birthday, Russia Day and any other holiday."
8/ 'I Serve The Fatherland' appears to be based on the Hasbro game Guess Who? – it operates similarly, with players asking questions to identify which cards the other players are holding. These are divided into "forces of good" (Russian) and "forces of darkness" (America/NATO). Image
Image
9/ Video game developers are also getting in on the act. The Moscow-based Studio SPN is developing 'Squad 22: ZOV', a tactical action game produced with the aid of the Main Military-Political Directorate of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. Image
10/ The GVPU VS RF is the organisation within the Russian Ministry of Defence that is responsible for instilling ideological loyalty to the regime within the military. It directs the work of the armed forces' political officers (zampolits) to politically indoctrinate servicemen.
11/ The game offers players the opportunity to play through four scenarios: "Battle for Mariupol", "Donbass Spring", "Repulse of the Ukrainian Counteroffensive" and "Battle for Avdiivka".
12/ It was "created in active cooperation with active fighters, veterans and heroes of the Special Military Operation, including visiting the sites of real events and reconstructing battles." It portrays Russian soldiers, rather inaccurately, as heroic defenders of civilians. Image
13/ It remains to be seen whether these games will be any more commercially successful than Russian movies about the war, which have been dismally unpopular. The 2023 film 'Witness' was a huge flop, costing 70-200 million rubles but making only 15 million at the box office. /end Image

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Mar 22
1/ Russia's shortage of armoured vehicles and lack of an analogue for the M113 APC or M2A2 Bradley IFV has led soldiers to weld troop-carrying 'booths' onto rusting Soviet-era MT-LB armoured fighting vehicles. It highlights the Russian defence industry's failure to adapt. ⬇️ Image
2/ The MT-LB, built in Ukraine, Bulgaria and Poland from the early 1970s, is designed to carry 11 men in addition to a driver and gunner. However, like other Soviet-era APCs, it suffers from low headroom and narrow exit doors which slow down disembarcation from the vehicle. Image
3/ This has often been a problem for Russian forces in Ukraine, as it leaves disembarking troops highly vulnerable to enemy fire. In one incident recorded by the Ukrainians, an entire Russian assault squad was wiped out in seconds as it exited its MT-LB.
Read 20 tweets
Mar 21
1/ Ivan Popov, the former general who commanded the 58th Guards Combined Arms Army until July 2023, has written an 'appeal to the Tsar' asking Vladimir Putin to release him from detention so that he can "to continue to crush the enemy in accordance with the oath I took." ⬇️ Image
2/ Popov commanded the 58th Army until he was dismissed in July 2023 after a furious argument with the head of Russia's armed forces, General Valery Gerasimov, over the Russian army's poor performance in Ukraine.
3/ Popov was arrested on 17 May 2024 on fraud charges. Unlike the arrests of many other senior officers, Popov's arrest has been controversial, as he was a popular and well-regarded commander. His cause has been championed by a number of Russian warbloggers.
Read 15 tweets
Mar 19
1/ A Russian warblogger who administered the 'Management Speaks' Telegram channel is reported to have died in an assault. A few weeks before he died, he described a day in the (short) life of a Russian stormtrooper. ⬇️ Image
2/ 'Management Speaks' was run by a Russian in his 50s called Konstantin (callsign 'Donetsk'). On 7 March, another administrator on the channel wrote:
3/ "Hello everyone! I ask you to support Donetsk, a man of extraordinary destiny, this old man will outlive all of us young, luck is clearly on his side🫡"

Apparently not.

On 14 February, 'Donetsk' wrote an account of his first-hand experiences as a stormtrooper.
Read 27 tweets
Mar 18
1/ Bureaucracy and perverse incentives in the Russian army make it easier for an officer to shoot a troublesome soldier, tie him to a tree, or send him to his death as a punishment, than to go through formal disciplinary procedures, according to a Russian commentary. ⬇️
2/ A Russian soldier (likely an officer) writes to the 'Philosopher in ambush' Telegram channel to explain why commanders deliberately send their men to their deaths as a punishment:
3/ "What tools do junior commanders have? In the event of a disciplinary offence, the commander is obliged to conduct an investigation (where to find the time?), approve it with a lawyer and a political officer, who will find fault not only with a comma,...
Read 7 tweets
Mar 18
1/ Public donations to the Russian war effort have recently collapsed, according to unhappy Russian warbloggers. They blame this development on the current talks between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump, which seems to have convinced many Russians that peace is imminent. ⬇️ Image
2/ The warblogger 'Thirteenth' writes: "In view of the empty talk about the allegedly upcoming truces, all this has had a significant impact on aid to the front, the collection has noticeably fallen. In fact, for each necessary position we have to find funds with difficulty."
3/ "I ask you all, do not relax, the war continues and our men today need a lot for stable, combat work.

Do not remain indifferent."
Read 8 tweets
Mar 18
1/ The Russian army is illegally sending soldiers infected with HIV and hepatitis to fight on the front line in Ukraine, where they are unable to get treatment or life-saving drugs. The men's relatives say they are 'slowly dying' and putting other wounded men at risk. ⬇️ Image
2/ Radio Free Europe reports that despite the legal prohibition on allowing men with communicable diseases to serve in the Russian armed forces, the Russian army's insatiable demand for manpower means that it is illegally forcing infected men to fight.
3/ In many cases, the infections are the result of poor hygiene by the army's own medical services, which has resulted in HIV and hepatitis being transmitted between wounded men. Instead of being discharged and treated, they are being forced to go back to the front lines.
Read 21 tweets

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