alot
the thing that occurred on DDay was one of the very invasions on Omaha beach, Utah beach, Sword beach it involved the U.S army invading the beaches and the British a Lot of men died
on the 6/6/1944 the greatest beach landing in the history of warfare occured on a few beaches like ''gold'' and ''sword''. but the biggest kill zone was in ohama beach. 3 hours of blood lust, more than 5,000 deaths for 200m of ground.
My father was in the 149th combat engineer battalion. They landed on DDay on Omaha Beach. Their boat hit a mine coming in and several men were injured or killed. My father was injured, but able to go on.
five beaches at Normany, France....omaha, utah, gold, sword and juno on 6 June 1944..................
They landed on Normandy beach.. and were pressing inwards into Europe to take down the Nazi regime
They were held up because most of their tanks sank. They beach was better defended than most and it was almost impossible to advance to the sea wall.
Approximately 10,000 soldiers died.The liberation of France.
Yes, they did not anticipate where the invasion would take place, not enough land was covered by their troops. They also thought that Dday would be postponed due to weather.
D-Day occurred on the beaches of Normandy, France during World War 2 while the Nazi/Germany occupied France. The United States military forces, joined with other nations approached the beach from the ocean while the Nazis defended the beach. The Nazi's were eventually overwhelmed after a massive loss of life on both sides, which was the turning point of the war leading to the defeat of the Germans.
The Canadians were the first allied forces to take a beach on dday and had moved further inland then any other force and Juno Beach was one of the most heavily defended beaches as well.
Hitler had invaded France, so we fought over the control of France from Hitler. DDAY was a landing on a French beach. When the allies came into an area the French people were liberated from the German occupation.
For Skirmish Dday you have to call. I assume it is the same for Oklahoma and other big dday games also.