Zveno-paria 【RECOMMENDED】

: A popular matched play format in 10th Edition that uses a deck of cards to generate missions, secondary objectives, and environmental rules (Gambits).

The project was the brainchild of Vladimir Vakhmistrov, a pioneering Soviet engineer who understood that early 1930s fighters had limited fuel and range, while bombers had range but lacked defensive firepower against fast interceptors. Zveno-Paria

To understand the name, one must first look at the (Russian for "Link" or "Chain"), a 1930s Soviet aviation experiment. It involved a "mothership" heavy bomber (usually a Tupolev TB-1 or TB-3) carrying several smaller fighter planes. These fighters would detach to defend the bomber or perform independent strikes, then sometimes reattach mid-air. This concept of a "composite" or "parasite" system is the foundational imagery for the term. "Zveno-Paria" in Modern Gaming : A popular matched play format in 10th

If the system was so effective, why did it vanish by 1942? It involved a "mothership" heavy bomber (usually a

The show follows a handful of survivors in the Nephilim Sector:

Upon nearing a hostile fighter patrol, the I-16s would detach. The enemy, expecting a slow, lumbering bomber formation, would suddenly face a swarm of agile monoplane fighters dropping out of the sky, fully fueled and ready for a dogfight.