Pages of History (June): The Beaches of Normandy!

In Pages of History this month, you will find yourself at the center of events that took place in various theaters of war. From Normandy and Karelia, Libya and Lithuania: participate in battles while using vehicles linked to these historic battles and get some prizes!

From June 1st until June 30th, you will be able to participate in 8 tasks consecutively. Completing each task will grant you a trophy with a reward, completing all of the tasks will earn you a unique profile background!

Profile background: Landing zone: Normandy

Germany prepared the beaches of Normandy for a potential Allied landing, constructing pillboxes, batteries, barbed wire, tank traps and minefields. Despite this, by the evening of June 6th 1944, all five beaches where Allied forces had landed had been captured and held. The heroism and bravery of the soldiers who fought on D-Day paved the way for the liberation of Western Europe and the swift end of the Second World War.

You can purchase this profile background for Golden Eagles until July 3rd (11:30 GMT) without completing tasks. To find it, go to your Nickname → Achievements → Pages of History.

Trophy reward for each task

Completing each individual task will give you a trophy with one of the following rewards:

  • 20-50% RP booster for 3-10 battles
  • 20-50% SL booster for 3-10 battles
  • 3-5 universal backups
  • Premium account for 1 day
  • A random ground vehicle camouflage (out of those that can currently be unlocked or purchased with Golden Eagles)

Other terms

  • Tasks are available from 11:00 GMT until 11:30 GMT on the final day of each task.
  • Tasks can be completed in random battles except for “Assault” mode.

You can read a detailed description of which task is for which day and your overall progress by going to your Nickname → Achievements → Pages of History.


Calendar

June 1st — June 5th

Battle of Midway

The decisive naval battle in the Pacific theater of the Second World War took place from June 4th to 7th 1942. American cryptographic experts deciphered Japanese plans, allowing US forces to prepare for battle and catch the Japanese off guard. Japan lost four heavy aircraft carriers, one heavy cruiser, approximately 250 aircraft, and many well-trained pilots in the battle.

June 5th — June 9th

D-Day (Operation Overlord)

D-Day, the Allied strategic operation which included the massive Normandy landings and the liberation of Paris, began on June 6th 1944. Simultaneously, Soviet forces conducted Operation Bagration on the Eastern Front, while Allied forces continued their advance through Italy, forcing Germany to widely disperse its resources.

June 9th — June 12th

Karelian Offensive

On June 10th 1944, the Red Army launched a large-scale offensive against Finnish positions in two directions: Vyborg and Petrozavodsk. By the end of the summer, the USSR had consolidated control of Karelia and forced Finland to enter into negotiations; on September 19th, Finland signed a peace treaty with the USSR and sided with the Allies in the war.

June 12th — June 15th

Battle of Villers-Bocage

On June 13th 1944, during the Battle of Normandy, the British 7th Armored Division attempted to outflank Caen from the southwest, but was suddenly fired upon by German Tiger tanks in the town of Villers-Bocage. Street fighting ensued, ending by evening when the British, fearing encirclement, retreated, losing several dozen vehicles.

June 15th — June 18th

Operation Battleaxe

The British offensive from Egypt into Libya to relieve the siege of Tobruk proceeded on three fronts, but only one was successful. On June 15th 1941, the British captured Fort Capuzzo. However, due to the failure of the coastal and desert offensives, the fort became encircled by Axis forces, forcing the Allies to retreat on June 17th.

June 19th — June 23rd

Battle of the Philippine Sea

On June 19th-20th 1944, the last major aircraft carrier battle took place between the US and Japanese fleets. Due to poor coordination of Japanese forces and the American superiority in tactics, pilot training, and air defense, the battle ended in a complete defeat for Japan, from which it never recovered for the rest of the war.

June 23rd — June 27th

Battle of Raseiniai

At the beginning of Germany’s invasion of the USSR in 1941, one of the most brutal tank battles took place near Raseiniai in Lithuania. Soviet forces were disorganized and poorly coordinated, leading to their complete defeat. However, there was also room for individual heroism: a single disabled KV tank stopped German armored movement for over a day, knocking out a number of vehicles and anti-tank guns.

June 27th — June 30th

Case Blue

On June 28th 1942, the Wehrmacht launched a strategic operation in the southern USSR on two fronts: one part of Army Group South advanced on Stalingrad, the other on the Caucasus. Rostov-on-Don fell on July 24th, and on August 21st, a group of German Jägers made a demonstration march to the summit of Mount Elbrus. However, by the end of August, the advance on both fronts had stalled. Due to severely stretched communications and fuel shortages, the Wehrmacht failed to achieve its objectives and ultimately became bogged down at Stalingrad, where it ultimately lost the strategic initiative.

11 Likes

Nice

I guess its almost time to watch my favorite Sean Connery film again

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Wasn’t this one supposed to have a vehicle or was that a different event?

finally a background that goes hard

1 Like

You are confusing Pages of History with other events.

1 Like

But ma vehicles

This looks cool!

Any plans to add this as a loading screen as well?

4 Likes

AFAIK no.

Any chance we can get an augmented vehicle roster for the Battle of Midway event?

Every year up to now, the following vehicles which participated in combat had been missing:

WT Battle of Midway

  • VMF-221 of the US Marine Corps operated a mix of F4F-3 Wildcats and F2A-3 Buffalos off Midway Island and were scrambled against the first Japanese raid on the island on June 4th 1942, resulting in the loss of 13 out of 20 F2A-3s and 4 out of 6 F4F-3s. This particular dogfight cemented the ‘dysmal’ reputation of the Buffalo in US minds, the aircraft frequently being called ‘the worst fighter of WWII’ as a result despite its stellar performance in Finnish hands. VMF-221 did receive a Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Midway. For the F2A-3, it would be the only action which makes it viable for an appearance in the entire Pages of History series.

  • VMSB-241 of the US Marine Corps operated the SB2U-3 Vindicator off Midway Island, and participated in the attack on the IJN Mikuma on June 5th 1942. For that attack, Captain Richard E. Fleming (posthumously) received the Medal of Honor. For the SB2U-3 Vindicator it would be one of only two actions that might get it into the Pages of History series; they were also present at Pearl Harbor during the attack (their contribution being limited to 'being blown to smithereens while on the ground at Ewa Field).

  • The 22nd and 38th Bomb Group of the USAAF dispatched a total of five B-26 Marauders to Midway Island, four of which flew a torpedo mission against the Japanese fleet on June 4th 1942, resulting in 2 aircraft being lost and the other two being written off.

  • The 31st, 72th and 431th Bomb Group of the USAAF dispatched a total of 17 B-17E Flying Fortresses to Midway, which participated in a number of attacks on the Japanese forces, dropping the first bombs on June 3rd (on Tanaka’s transport group) before participating in the first strike on the main carrier group on June 4th.

  • VT-8 of the US Navy debuted the TBF-1 Avenger at Midway, with 6 aircraft operating out of Midway Island after the group missed its rendez-vous with the USS Hornet. They drew the type’s first blood on June 4th, which proved a costly affair with five out of six Avengers being lost during their strike against the carrier group, and the sixth being damaged beyond repair and returning with two injured crew and a dead gunner.

  • No less than four squadrons of PBY-5 and PBY-5A Catalinas were based at Midway, for a total of 31 aircraft. A PBY scored the only successful hit of an air-launched torpedo at Midway, when the Akebono Maru was hit and damaged during the night of June 3rd-4th.

Source: Battle of Midway order of battle - Wikipedia

4 Likes

I love it

Thats a shame, I love moments like this for laoding screens. It what makes the ww1 loading screen my favourite

AI slop lol

Atleast it looks nice.
But stuff like this is taking all of our RAM.

Screenshot 2026-05-28 9.47.04 AM.png

It was the same for the operation Vulcan mission a couple of months back. The only allied vehicles you could use to complete it were some US tanks. There were no UK tanks, and no US or UK planes.
https://community.gaijin.net/issues/p/warthunder/i/Hcrvfg3ZMHjH

Operation Vulcan was also the banner you could earn from that whole pages of history, with that banner showing American P-40 planes, and British Churchill III and Crusader III.

It is also famously the battle where the Tiger 131 were disabled by a Churchill tank.

Generally, probably a lot of the individual pages of history mission, might need a look through so that they are up to date with the relevant vehicles that are currently available in the game.

5fa23b04-24df-40ad-bcab-ab3b7e4fa0d9 (2)

Lol a big part of my family lives there, my great grandma had her house on the place Jeanne d’Arc where Wittman almost died

If only I knew the entire list of vehicles for every task in advance, I could go and have a quick check if some vehicles are missing. The problem is that they only show on the in-game tasks, not in the devblogs.

I have screen grabs of most of them;
WT VillersBocage 44

I’ve been thinking about some way of publishing them, that isn’t a ton of data entry…

1 Like