The show centres on a group of conscripts assigned to the Surplus Ordnance Department at Nether Hopping,
Staffordshire. Billeted in Hut 29, the men are determined to work little and have fun. Geoffrey Sumner played Major 'Piggy' Upshot-Bagley, the commanding officer, with William Hartnell as Company Sergeant Major (CSM) Percy Bullimore, the bane of Hut 29's army life. Michael Medwin was the
spiv-like Corporal Springer in charge of Hut 29, with the original conscripts consisting of Bernard Bresslaw's IQ deficient Private (Pre) Popplewell, Alfie Bass's Pte 'Excused Boots' Bisley, Charles Hawtrey's Pte 'Professor' Hatchett and Norman Rossington's Pte 'Cupcake' Cook. Later series saw Frank Williams as Captain T. R. Pockett take over the running of the camp, with Bill Fraser's Sgt Claude Snudge replacing Bullimore; although Sumner and Hartnell would return for the final series. Other popular characters included Harry Fowler's Cpl 'Flogger' Hoskins (a replacement for Medwin's Springer) and Ted Lune's Pte Leonard Bone, a sort of northern England variation on Bresslaw's Popplewell. Arguably the break-out character of the series was Bresslaw's Popplewell who would go on to be the lead of the film version,
I Only Arsked! (1958), which used his catch-phrase as its title. On the back of the series Bresslaw became a star of the late fifties and would also use the Popplewell characteristics for other roles of the period, such as the 1959 films
Too Many Crooks and
The Ugly Duckling. After Bresslaw left, Bass and Fraser's Bootsie and Snudge would become the most popular characters, and would get their own spin-off series,
Bootsie and Snudge, which aired in September 1960, whilst the final series of
The Army Game started. ==Episodes==