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Outdoor Adventures presents Frozen Chosin 2 July 19th
Frozen Chosin 2
Our 39th Scenario Game • Sunday, July 19, 2009
IMPORTANT: Frozen Chosin 2 will be held at OA's newest facility
at Chesapeake City, not at our Bowie field.
Utilizing the format that has made our scenarios so successful, we have added even more missions and props, as well as a larger prize package. Prizes will be drawn and awarded all day long, but we will give-away at least $500 in prizes at the beginning of the safety briefing.
Smoke, paint grenades, missile launchers, tanks, aircraft, special effects and more make these events non-stop fun and excitement for everyone from beginners to seasoned scenario players.
Storyline
“All of my mis-directions have succeeded, general!” General Kim Chee stood at attention before the desk of North Korea’s “Dear Leader” Kim Jong Il, the officer’s face betraying no emotion.
Dear Leader continued: “The Americans and their Japanese lackeys are obsessed with my nuclear weapons program. They have totally overlooked my plan to destroy the West’s agriculture! We are nearly ready to launch dozens of non-nuclear missiles on Japan and the western part of the United States that will devastate their food crops.” General Chee found it hard to suppress a smile. Finally, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea will be taken seriously and not simply dismissed as a “rogue” state.
The two breakthroughs by North Korea’s scientists were remarkable – no, incredible, thought General Chee. The missiles could miss by hundreds of miles and still be effective. With no nuclear “signature” and seemingly way off target, the Americans would disregard the incoming threat. Even if the imperialists tried to stop them, enough of the missiles would get through to explode in the atmosphere, many miles in the sky, turning the summer weather conditions over millions of acres of crops into a temporary winter of blizzards and snow storms. It would take only a few days for trillions of bushels rice, wheat, corn and other crops to be killed. Then the winter conditions would disappear as quickly as they arrived.
“Are you listening?” Dear Leader’s question snapped General Chee’s attention back to earth’s most cunning dictator. “The Americans may try something,…” Jong continued. “And I will defend the secret missile launch area with my life,” General Chee interrupted. “And with you family’s lives,” Jong reminded him. “So I authorize Operation Zhombee to be implemented.”
General Chee could not stifle a shudder as he heard Dear Leader’s words. This was the other amazing invention he had witnessed. Thousands of North Koreans died every year due to starvation and execution. Those who were “harvested” before they decayed too much were frozen and could be reanimated. Tests proved that these undead could perform simple tasks such as operate weapons, but they could only be used in very cold weather and would start to decay again in a few days. Now hundreds of these frightening creatures would be released. But where?
“Code what?” Marine Colonel Harley Hartasp asked his communication officer aboard the Navy amphibious assault ship U.S.S. Kabul. Hartasp, the last of a long line of military Hartasps, was commander of a Marine quick-response expeditionary force attached to the U.S. Navy’s 7th Fleet. His last mission saved Taiwan from mainland China’s infamous Yellow Scorpion. Now an emergency executive order was sending his unit of Marines into a remote area of North Korea.
“My grandfather fought here,” Hartasp said to himself as the assault helicopters approached the Chosin Reservoir. That was in November and December of 1950 during the Korean War. The Marines fought their way out of “Frozen Chosin” – a trap set by 150,000 soldiers of the Red Chinese Army – and into immortality. Now it was July 2009, the height of summer.
Suddenly, a shock wave rocked the choppers from an explosion high above them, and then it began to snow. “Colonel, those guys down there are moving kinda strange,” Hartasp’s second in command called over the mic. Hartasp knew that Jong’s elite guard protected the missile base, but who were these strange extra troops? And what’s with the weather?
The maximum number of players for this event will be limited to 600. We will close admission when 600 players have registered, so register online early! (We turned away players at Battle of the Bulge in December.)
COST: $35 at field, or $25 online (save $10) – includes admission and all day air
Registration begins promptly 7:30 AM with the game starting at 10:00 AM (see schedule below). Call 410... if you have questions.
EVENT PAINT ONLY!
As a bonus for on line registration you can now pre-order your event paint at a $10 a case discount.
to register online go to oapaintball.com !!!
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