You can almost imagine this rail convoy rolling across the treeless snow covered steppe at night, the glow of a Russian-held town ahead.

Break out your winter gear.

Get ready for one hex movement per turn.

I have been binge-playing John Tiller Panzer Campaigns lately as the "Gold" version upgrades of their Eastern Front titles are rolled out. I have fought to cross the Dvina river in struggled to penetrate the Russian defenses with mused over bias in unit quality and this morning I have struggled with snow and learned all about rail movement withTo date, I had avoided the Panzer Campaigns winter scenarios. Even with the Stalingrad Gold title that I own, I have only played the fall scenarios detailing the 6th Army and 4th Panzer Army advance into the Don River basin. Kharkov 43 then has been a rude awakening for me to winter-fighting on the Eastern Front.Having been involved some with the creation of the Panzer Battles demo , I can tell you JTS and WDS put quite a bit of thought into showcasing the capabilities of a game and the presentation of it to players for the first time.The "Getting Started" scenarios in the various Panzer Campaigns titles then are the game designers' way of breaking you into their creations and previewing the battles to come.In, the 9-turn Getting Started scenario "Coup de main at Sinel'nikovo" previews two things that were new to me: rail movement and snow.First, rail movement, which is a big part of this scenario, is pretty wild. Aside from the larger operational games like "" and "", I can't think of a game where rail movement is modeled and is as important as it is here. A unit utilizing rail movement mode has an extended range and can transcend the snow, which is very likely going to make the rail roads that crisscross the snow covered terrain around Kharkov vitally important.Second, and perhaps more obvious, you cannot move in the snow. You just can't. If you are on a road, you can move a hex or maybe two, but you will not have the freedom of movement with your non-motorized units that you have likely grown accustomed to in the other titles. Which brings me back to those rail roads, you are going to need them in this game.Check out the screenshot below of Kharkov and it's place within the MASSIVE "Jump Dialog" to the right of it. That's hundreds of square kilometers of battlefield to contest, all of it snow-covered. Railroads crisscross the landscape and the control of them, is going to be critical I suspect.So there you are,is coming online very soon (possibly this week) and if like me you haven't played a Panzer Campaigns title with winter weather and/or utilized rail movement, don't skip the "Getting Started" scenario included within the game. Play it!