Destroy Gunners SP is a thrilling 3D action game where you take over a giant robot on its mission to destroy any and all enemies that cross its path. Set within the realm of the Destroy Gunners saga, this is the fourth episode within that storyline.

Controls in Destroy Gunners SP are simple -- but don't be misled, its action sequences throughout each match will require you muster all your strength to win. Navigating the control center, on your left you'll find a virtual cross pad to move freely around each level as well as a peephole towards the center. That's not all, though. In Destroy Gunners SP, you'll also get to switch up your equipment and swap out weapons; move your viewpoint freely from left to right and vice versa with the remaining buttons. Not to mention the accelerator -- a vital feature to pull off more than one death-defying escape.


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Game missions demand you annihilate each robot you see, and you'll also come across stages where it's up to you to defend your base from enemy onslaught. All things said the best part is that your Mecha is completely customizable, allowing you to add on any pieces of equipment you pick up as you roam about. This feature adds a good amount of novelty when it comes to replaying, given that you can accumulate armor, weapons and much more to become increasingly powerful as you play.

Destroy Gunners SP is a fun action title shot in a 3rd person vantage point, that anyone who's a true giant robot fan is sure to enjoy. All in all this video game is much like classic Gundam titles and other titles within this genre.

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Destroy Gunners Z - this is the continuation of the cult game series "Destroy Gunners". The game is very popular. You have missions and destroy hordes of monsters. These missions you can perform yourself or team up with friends. Moreover, each mission has a boss that you don't always manage to get through the first approach. So addictive gameplay and complexity become apparent advantages of this game and will challenge every player is a fighter! You can also try your luck and skills!

 To play you need an Internet connection!

In the early-morning hours of June 6, 1944, Cpl. Ed Gilleran was stationed as a gunner aboard LST 375, a transport ship lumbering through the 5-foot swells of the Baie de la Seine off the northern coast of Normandy.

"I was assigned to a bunk on the top level of the ship where I could man a 40mm anti-aircraft gun," Gilleran recalls. "I remember I was with an older British seaman on the ship who said, 'Sonny, if we need to use these, I'll do it, but you can be there.'"

"I saw ... wall-to-wall ships, including six battleships, 20 cruisers, 68 destroyers, 255 minesweepers, six Coast Guard personnel rescue boats, six PT boats, 3,955 of the legendary Higgins landing craft, and at least two-dozen Rhino Ferries," Gilleran wrote.

The Allied ships had to avoid running aground, going off course, or worse. The Nazis had fortified the waters off Normandy's beaches with mines, massive tetrahedral obstacles, steel hedgehogs and other ship-mangling devices.

Weeks later, Gilleran learned how it was done when his commanding officer instructed him to destroy a stack of top-secret maps. Curious as he was, Gilleran flipped through the maps before sending them to the incinerator. A 14x17 inch map of Utah Beach-South was particularly interesting.

The other side, some two years in the making, gave the specific locations and details of the coastal fortifications of what Germany called the Atlantic Wall. The map showed pilots where to drop their bombs to clear the way.

"I couldn't destroy this map," Gilleran says. "I knew right away that this was an important piece of history." He stashed the map in his rain gear and eventually smuggled it back to the USA, his most prized memento from the war.

Upon returning to New York in 1946, Gilleran earned his degree at Fordham University. He met his future wife, Lois Glineski of Helena, when Lois was visiting her cousin, one of Gilleran's Fordham classmates. They marrried in 1948 and had two kids, Richard and Michael.

Ed, who enjoyed a successful career as an ad copywriter and freelance writer, retired from the international advertising firm Ogilvy & Mather in 1989. He and Lois moved from New York City to Helena, where Ed continues to live today. Lois died in 2013 at age 88.

As a wireless operator I landed with Fox Troop of 318 Battery 92nd LAA Regt RA.on Sword Beach on D-Day. The troop consisted of six self-propelled Bofors guns and were to deploy round Benouville area to protect what are now known as Pegasus and Horsa Bridges from air attack. Our progress from the beach was slow and at one point were tangled up with the glider borne reinforcements landing across the St Aubin Darquenay - Benouville Road. On arriving at Le Port just north of Benouville we were attacked from the church tower by a sniper, one of our guns soon dealt with him.The guns were in position early in the morning of D+1 and were immediately in action. Foe five days the Germans made many concentrated attacks to destroy the bridges and cut off our left flank.but each attack was met with accurate fire from the Bofors which during that time the Luftwaffe lost 17 confirmed attackers. The Germans couldn't sustain such losses and gave up low level bombing. 

The rest of the regiment should have landed on D+1 but the Liberty Ship The Sambut was hit in the Dover Straits on D-Day by the heavy guns at Calais and sunk. Fortunately with the minimum of casualties. Fox Troop managed without reinforcements to set an all time record and saved the bridges from destruction which would have undone Major Howard's glider force's brilliant work in capturing and holding the bridges.

Our Troop Leader Captain Reid was awarded the MC.

Hello Researcher 249840.

It may interest you to know that my Brother-in-Law was a gun sergeant on Bofors in the same area at the same time unfortunately his gun received a direct hit destroying the complete detachment. He was fortunate in as much that they had a land line and the phone rang, he jumped into the ditch to answer it and was the only survivor. A question which you may be able to answer is; were your guns fitted with power control?.and did they use it? I landed on Gold beach leading a Subsection of three guns, from previous bitter experience in Sicily the Battery was divided between six ships. The battery wasn't particularly busy in the Bayeux area so it appears you got more than your fair share.

Regards John Absolon


Hello John

Sorry to hear about your brother-in law. One of our six guns was hit by mortar fire and set alight but the sergeant very bravely removed the ammunition and put the fire out There were no fatal casualties and the gun was able to carry on.

Our guns were very much manual, I was not aware there was such a thing as a power controlled 40mm Bofors. There are pictures of the guns complete with regimental history on www.geocities.com/lightackack/ prepared by the son of one of the gunners on the gun that got hit.

As a wireless operator it was part of my job to lay and repair landlines to each gun.


Andrew

Thanks for your interest. May I refer you to a website generated by the son of one of the gunners who took part in the D-Day landings www.geocities.com/lightackack/.

It contains the complete history of the regiment so I suggest you start at the paragraph headed Sword Beach. There are a number of photographs as well.

Plaease let me know if you want any further details.

Regards

Jim Holder_vale


Andrew

Thank you for your interest. I presume you are referring to the loss of two privates of the Loyals Regt killed on the coast near Scarborough by a sea mine on 5 April 1941. I shall take a look at cwgc and see what it has to say and get back to you. certainly looks interesting. I shall also be contacting the author of the Regt's history website.

Regards

Jim


Andrew

I apologise for the delay in getting back to you but am pleased to confirm that Pvte Hewitt was one of the two soldiers killed by the sea mine. I passed on to Tom McMarthy the Regt'd historian, the details and he was delighted to receive them. He had spent some time trying to identify the two privates with no luck. Like me he is puzzled as to how you were able to find Pvte Hewitt on cwgc without a name. However I shall do as you suggest and try some research myself. Once again my sincere thanks for your interest and kind help.

Jim Holder-Vale

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