New National Guard Rules Give Team Yankee Americans a Grittier, Meaner Reserve Force

If you are tired of every American list starting with top-shelf tanks, this article is easy to like. Battlefront is clearly aiming at players who want a rougher reserve-force feel.

Instead of leaning on Abrams glamour, the piece pushes older Pattons and practical support. As a result, the whole force sounds like an underdog American formation with real table personality.

What the article is really selling

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The article’s main pitch is simple: add M48s to American forces and get more hulls on the table. Battlefront’s own public snippet even frames it as Americans getting more numbers through cheaper armour. That already tells you what kind of force this is. Rather than feeling like a polished first-line formation, it comes across like National Guard units thrown into a very bad week. The M48 Patton is an older machine by Team Yankee standards, especially beside M60s and Abrams. However, older does not mean harmless, because extra tanks still clog lanes and punish lighter targets. The supporting shape also sounds familiar, since public references to the article mention M113 support and confirm the list is available in Forces for free.

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That suggests a classic American combined-arms shell, just with the technology dial turned backward a notch. So, you are likely trading some finesse and raw survivability for better numbers and a broader table footprint. In practice, that is a fun identity. Instead of a sleek modern spearhead, this feels like reserve crews rumbling forward in Pattons while M113-based support keeps the formation functional. If you already enjoy American lists but want something less glossy, this looks like a great change of pace. It has a real Cold War emergency vibe, like somebody opened the old motor pool and said, “you are up.”

Summary

Overall, this reads like Battlefront giving US players a cheaper, more characterful armour option instead of another premium tank build. Also, because the list is on the Community site and in Forces for free, it looks easy to test without a big rules buy-in.

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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