Miniature World War II scene with soldiers operating a field gun in a wooded area in a diorama setting

Bolt Action Plastics Sprues Expand US and British Firepower

Bolt Action’s plastic heavy weapon push is starting to feel like a real line shift. The German kit was not a one-off tease.

Instead, Warlord is now rolling the idea into US and British forces. For army builders, that means more options, more spare parts, and better table-ready support weapons. This is a summary of the community post found here.

New Gun Sprues Bring Flexible Allied Support

Gray plastic model kit sprue with wheels and assorted small parts for assembly laid out on a frame

The first focus is the British 6-pounder and US 57mm M1 gun. They look almost identical, and that is historically correct. The American version was essentially a license-built copy of the British gun. However, the boxes differ because the crews are different. The shared gun frame includes barrel variants with and without muzzle brakes. It also includes US and British wheel options, plus the folding airborne carriage. That is a nice touch for players building airborne forces or theater-specific platoons. Better yet, ammo boxes, shells, and spent cases give basing plenty of character.

Plastic sprue frame with various unassembled scale model parts and weapons laid out for assembly including arms backpacks and accessories on a grey frame

The US heavy weapons frame is the real hobby buffet. It includes two tripod types, a .30 cal Browning, and two .50 cal options. One is the standard M2 heavy barrel, while the other is the AN/M2 aircraft gun. That second gun was not usually tripod-mounted, but it is perfect conversion fuel.

Sprue frame of a grey plastic model kit with rifles hands and gear for an unassembled action figure
Plastic model sprue with numerous small gray parts for assembling a wargame miniature arms rifles gear and torso pieces attached to a rectangular frame

Also, the kit includes an 81mm mortar, four 60mm bases, and 12 crew. Depending on choices, players can build several combinations of MMGs, HMGs, and mortars. However, the best part is the pile of spare weapons. Warlord notes you can stretch the box into up to six teams with spare infantry.

Gray plastic model kit sprue holding numerous small unassembled action figure partstorsos limbs helmets and weapons connected by a frame
Gray plastic sprue with multiple miniature soldiers and gear numbered runners for a tabletop wargame kit

The British frame follows the same generous philosophy. It includes a Vickers MMG with two barrel styles, ammunition boxes, water-cooling kit, and mortar options.

Gray plastic miniature sprue with multiple unassembled British heavy weapons crew parts on a rectangular frame including torsos limbs heads weapons and accessories
Gray plastic model sprue with multiple armed soldier miniatures and weapons on a frame unassembled

The 3-inch medium mortar is there, but the 4.2-inch heavy mortar is the standout. In Bolt Action terms, that brings a 3-inch template and +3 PEN. So, infantry and light armor both need to respect it. Meanwhile, both crew sprues include useful poses and infantry compatibility.

author avatar
Sam
The resident Flames of War, Historical, and narrative gaming expert. I have been playing tabletop games for 20 years with armies for 40k, Warhammer Fantasy, Horus Heresy, Age of Sigmar, Flames of War, Legions Imperialis, Battlefleet Gothic, and even Titanicus. I love narrative campaigns above all and dabble in customs missions too.

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