
This way, at least, we had a presence again upon the waves. Their wartime production had left them with too many ships to realistically keep in active service, and we were able to purchase a few destroyers from the Royal Navy, and even an aircraft carrier. Hardly enough to patrol local waters, never mind protecting our interest overseas.įortunately for us, the neighboring British had a different problem altogether. All we had left were a few submarines, minesweepers and a sloop or two. What few, outdated light cruisers we had, foundered.

The Royal Netherlands Navy was devastated, a mere shadow of what it once was. The war was won, our people liberated from under the yoke of occupation, but at great cost. I was worried Chobi was going to go all ham on this commission, but he looks like he was able to keep things reasonably tame.Īlright, Lert, please give us a rundown of this ship's history! This is because I made you wear that sunhat that one time, isn't it? At least it's just this chibi-avatar. I know one particular, box-bound black cat that definitely deserves to come out to the fore in this review, and totally not because I'm deliberately forgetting or putting off anything of any import.įrom Premium Ship Review #105 - HMCS Haida. I was absolutely beside myself with joy when the first Canadian ship got added, so it's really exciting to see the first Dutch ship.


Please be aware that her statistics may change in the future.įriesland's inclusion into World of Warships is reason to celebrate. This is the release version of the vessel, with all statistics discussed in this article current as of patch 0.8.10. She has been provided to me by Wargaming for review purposes. The following is a review of Friesland, the tier IX Dutch destroyer serving in World of Warships under the Pan European flag.
