With January and the start of a New Year we are also reigniting our storage and sorting solutions project, run together with Cube4Me. After very successful Black Friday, we do not stop and present another batch of new sets for many of your favorites titles. It gives us a great pleasure to create those and your feedback really helps us to improve them all the time.
Here you can find all the wargaming tray sets (shipment world-wide), nicely sorted per company or time when they were designed and added to the webpage:
And now let us jump to details for some of recently added products – enjoy!
Carrier Battle: Philippine Sea by Compass Games
A pretty counter-intensive set, with a lot of components and a limited space in the box. This is exactly Carrier Battle: Philippine Sea – great title from Compass Games. Here two trays allows us to nicely sort and store hundreds, if not thousands, of counters for this position. This of course requires a careful management of the pieces as well as proper lid close (which Cube4Me of course provides) to keep everything intact.
Make sure to check the details:
Stalingrad ’42: Southern Russia, June-December, 1942 by GMT Games
Stalingrad ‘42 is a division-level game on the Axis 1942 summer offensive towards Stalingrad and the Caucasus. It uses the so called ZOC Bond system created by Mark Simonitch and present in a series of his wargames. It combines traditional “zone of control” (ZOC) with a “bond” (Bond) extending along the hex spines.
This is our headline title this month – could not be differently! All in all, most of the wargames are hex & counter titles and the Cube4Me solutions are simply perfect for such type of games. That set perfectly sorts and stores the Soviet & German (+Minor Allies) tokens.
I am not sure guys if you are aware, but we did a whole article about the sets for Mark Simonitch games. see here: Cube4Me storage solutions for Mark Simonitch’s series.
Below the link to the full set for Stalingrad – enjoy!
300: Earth & Water from Nuts! Publishing
I am constantly astonished and surprised how beautiful games Nuts! Publishing is publishing (French guys have natural talent for elegance!). This is no difference with 300: Earth & Water – a slick, neat game about Greco-Persian wars. That one does not require an elaborate set but rather a special, two-compartment card tray allowing to keep both sides components separately. Enjoy!
More details on the set here:
ARCS from Leder Games
ARCS was one of the great discoveries of 2024 for me – a brutal, merciless competition in the space. It has various types of components and the best solution we could think of (and design) was using card-holder trays. They separate each player pieces, dices, resources as well – of course – cards.
More details here:
A Gest of Robin Hood from GMT Games
A Gest of Robin Hood is an incredibly beautiful and elegant COIN-adjacent game. It allows players to get into that great world without the usual overhead of the system. So it also needed a proper, dedicated and tailor made storage and sorting solution. The cards will be kept in Tarot-sized trays, each player will have their components separately plus we use Euro small card holder for money.
More details here:
The Longest Trench from UGG
The Longest Trench proved to be a very enjoyable, strategic take on the World War I. The copy I was working on had also mini-expansion so the proposed set accommodates the additional components too.
Each side will have its main army cards stored separately; however, that is not everything – the Bonus and Special cards will also get their own shallow trays – only few of them are used in each game so does not make sense to mix with the rest. On top of it, we provide the small Euro card holder for the wooden pieces.
More here:
Conclusion
It is really fun to get back to this project after the Christmas and New Year break. It gives me a lot of fun and pleasure to plan those sets and store the stuff properly in the boxes. Glad to see how the Cube4Me develops and how new types of trays are being added.
As always, should you have any suggestions, comments, critique or simply words of appreciation do not hesitate to share the. Thank you!












