Since 1961, Commando has told tales of bravery and conflict in all major fields of warfare – on land, on sea, and in the air. Find out more about those sea-faring adventures!
We present a further exclusive selection of Commando artist Jeff Bevan's never-before-published naval drawings!
Match your deadliest weapons - that's your wits, recruit! - against the Commando Quizmaster. It'll take all your skill and not just a little luck. The mission will not be easy and many of you may not make it through to the end...
Read the specifications on the Italian Bolanzo Heavy cruiser, and the British Cumberland heavy Cruiser in this free download.
Show
High above the arid deserts of Egypt during the First World War, two Royal Flying Corps officers in their RE8 biplane were carrying out vital reconnaissance missions over the positions of their Turkish enemies...
Commando's Deputy Editor introduces the latest classic to be awarded a place in the Silver Collection.
BEACON OF DOOM! Without warning the periscope of a U-boat broke the surface. It turned and focussed on the Locksea Lighthouse. Then, slowly, the glistening, black hull of the submarine came up from the depths...
Ghosts don't exist, everybody knows that. And definitely not the ghost of a solid steel Nazi U-Boat or her phantom skipper. No, you can't expect anybody to believe that sort of nonsense...
Deputy Editor Scott Montgomery sets the scene for this tale of Pacific conflict.
Weekend sailors they called them, the officers of the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve. They had to work twice as hard and be twice as good to be accepted by the regulars of the Royal Navy...
Calum Laird, Commando Editor, introduces a re-issue of an early sea-faring adventure.
The Arctic ice cap - freezing, windswept, and inhospitable. In the period when East and West faced each other in a tense nuclear stand-off, many things were concealed on and below its wasted landscape...
They were the crew of one of the last Catalinas out of Singapore as it fell to the Japs - and the target of every enemy fighter around it...
Lieutenant Alec Paton was not a happy man when he was put in charge of a Royal Navy gun crew on an armed Dutch freighter. It was skippered by Captain Paul Grootemann who seethed with bitter hatred for the Germans who had killed his son...
Click on your choice – then VOTE!