Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Another new project
Another new project…..
Pretty busy in many real-life involvments, last night I took from the shelves “The Campaign for the Liberation of Saxony, 1758” by Alistar Brabant, translated by Alistar Sharman and Neil Cogswell, LTR-Verlag 1998 (two volumes, the second filled by maps, drawings and OOB).
There are no full-scale battles between the ReichsArmee and the Prussian Army of Prince Henry, the most important actions being at Sebastienberg and Eilenburg. The only noticeable encounter was indeed Hochkirch between the old lions Fritz and Daun.
Nevertheless the campaign narrative leaves open the possibility of many interesting scenarios, as the -aborted- joint Austrian-Imperial attack on Dresden.
Accordingly, since I have a full ReichsArmee and enough Austrian, Prussian and Saxons to play a full-scale campaign, I would like to design a campaign scenario, starting from the late summer positions. The description, besides Brabant, can be found schematically on Kronoskaf.
I have to choose the time and space scale: in my mind the map would be a point-to-point one, with a degree of detail greater than the WOR campaign. At this time there are two boardgames with a point-to-point map of Saxony, both dedicated to the Napoleon campaign of 1813:
Napoleon’s Leipzig Campaign, Omega Games, 1994 (this is indeed the map from the Cyberboard module designed by Rafael Pardo Almundi):
Jours de Gloire Campaign IV: Allemagne 1813, de Lützen à Leipzig, Hexasim 2011:
My idea is not to use these maps, which are tailored on a Napoleonic time and movement scale, but rather to use them as an inspiration for a brand new map which will be based on a map 26 given in by Neil Cogswell in Volume II:
Yet to decide rules and all that stuff. Stay tuned!
Etichette:
Austrian army,
Mini-campaign,
Prussian army,
Reichsarmee
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Danish Infantry at Helsinborg. Part II
The last five regiments of Danish
infantry are finally completed.
The Drottingens Regiment (a.k.a. The
Queen Regiment), unique in its red coat which will become the standard uniform
color after 1716. The grenadier is based on the drawing from the Snorrasson article,
which actually represents a grenadier NCO:
the Fynske Regiment, with its
unique red collars (but it seems that is an error and that probably it was a
necklace: anyway I liked it….)
the Jyllandske (Jutland) Regiment:
the grenadier cap is based on an illustration taken from Snorranson.
Two milita units, the Vestsajellandske
and the Ostsajellandske Landsmilitia: the sources states that the Landsmilitia
flag was the simple “Danneborg”, the white maltese cross on red field.
In the last picture the Danish
army in its OoB at Helsinborg, 1710:
Etichette:
Danish Army,
Helsinborg,
Plastic Soldiers
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Great Northern War Notables for Maurice
The rule Maurice allows for the use of "Notables" which represents subordinate officers or characters which are attached to a specific unit which is granted some benefices specified in the Notable Card. They are fictional and introduce some chrome. However nobody prohibits to design your own Notable based on an Historical character.
Accordingly I designed some Notable cards for the Great Northern War with the battle of Poltava in mind. They were first drawn in Power Point and then converted in jpeg. This allowed me to use some nice portraits of the most important general officers which fought at Poltava.
The Swedish bunch:
The Russian gang:
Since I draw them from scratch I don think there will be copyright issue: in any case, if somebody notices copyright infringement, please let me know and I'll remove these cards from the blog.
Saturday, October 15, 2016
More Danish Infantry, step by step.
This is my Danish Army thus far: all the cavalry, 9 bases, 7 Infantry
regiments on 12 and 2 guns on 3.
The long waited box of Mars GNW Saxon Infantry is finally arrived.
When I opened the box, I get a pleasant surprise: the plastic is a nice medium grey,
not the abysmal bottle green of the first production (see the review at PSR for
a full appreciation of the original color).
This time I’ll spend some time to describe the process of painting I
use. First of all, after washing the miniatures in lukewarm water with dish
soap, I spray a coat of cheap hobbyst matt white, brushing some spots with
acrylic white (I generally use LC01 Matt White by Lifecolor). Then I mount the
figures with white tack on ice sticks, three each, already organized by bases.
A liberal wash with GW Devlan Mud (which now is called Agrax
Earthshade!) and they are ready for the “mass painting”step.
First of all two passages of dry-brushed white, for all but the Drottingen
regiment which is instead coated with Vallejo Scarlet 70817.
Then face and hands with GW Kislev Flesh and Vallejo Chocolate Brown
70872 for hair, gun, poles, partisans etc. (notice that my soldiers, aside for
an handful of Officiers, all has dark brown hair. The belts and any leather
detail are painted with Vallejo Desert Yellow 72073. Finally, black tricorne,
scabbards, hair tie and cartridge/grenade pouches.
All these parts are washed with GW Gryphone Sepia. The mass production
stops here: at this point I take any single unit (6 miniatures) and finish it
before proceeding to the next one.
I begin with Fynska regiment, that with green facings and uniquely, a
red collar: for the green I use GW Warpstone Glow (sic!) whereas the red is the
same as before. First the facing colors: cuffs, breeches, gaiters/socks, waistcoat
and only in this case the collar.
After this passage I correct all the mistakes done in the previous
phases with white, used also to highlits the shirt around the hands and the
neckcloth. The hat lace and the shoes are painted at this stage, as well as the
base which is painted in the color of the unit base (I paint most of my unit bases
dark brown: I choosed to leave those of the Danish of the natural color of the
stone texture to add some variety).
The metals: gunmetal, silver and brass. The flag is done completely at
this stage (I draw and paint with brown ink the parts which are then painted
with brass and highlighted with gold): having no idea at all of the flagpole
color, I paint it in a contrasting color, in this case red. Some final finishing
touches (for instance Gryphone Sepia on the neckcloth which, according to
Snorrasson, was also used as a towel…..) and details and the unit is ready to
be mounted on the bases, made with thick cardboard and painted with the same
sand as the miniatures base.
The terrain is made with the Vallejo Stone Texture “Brown Earth 26219”,
unpainted and liberally sprinkled with hamster litter. The bases are then sprayed with a matt
transparent varnish.
The next step will be to wait 24 hours and add some static grass; the
following day the grass in excess shall be removed and then we shall be finished. It the next
post I’ll present all the regiments which completes the Danish Army at
Helsinborg.
Etichette:
Danish Army,
Helsinborg,
Maurice,
Plastic Soldiers,
Volley and Bayonet
Monday, October 10, 2016
Markers for Maurice
In the two refight I did I used makeshift markers to count
the Disr level and in Kolin, using two rectangular bases to represent an unit,
I needed also Column markers.
I did them in a nicer way for the next refights,
The Disr marker have an image of a wounded or distressed XVIIIth century
soldier, which were taken from the Knotel Uniformkunde prints.
For the Column markers I used instead pictures of flats, which are intended to depict generic infantry and cavalry rather the specific Austrian, Prussian and French units they actually represent.
These files are in jpeg and can be downloaded if you like
them; they must be reduced according to your BW.
Friday, October 7, 2016
Kolin. The refight with Maurice: Part III, the analysis.
To analize the replay, in order
to compare the same battle played with three different rules (Maurice, Volley
and Bayonet and DB-Hx), I’ll try to answer to these questions:
1) How many “3”x1.5” bases the
scenario needs?
2) The replay replicated a global
situation in some sense comparable to the real battle, or developed in a total
different way? The final result
was a plausible one with respect of the historical data?
3) There are some parts of the
scenario (troop numbers and quality, terrain, special rules) which are too
heavy and drive too much the final result?
4) There was in the replay any unlikely
or awkward situation generated by the rules or by the scenario itself?
5) The playing area was adequate? Too
small with crammed troops or too big allowing for unlikely maneuvers.
6) With this Rule the scenario
replay playing went smooth?
7) With this Rule the scenario
was funny to play?
As you’ll notice, I never
mentioned “historicity”: I already said that this argument is out of discussion
whenever we move models on a table. I prefer to deal with the matter as pointed
out in question 2).
A typical after-battle discussion
Going into the specific, when the
battle of Kolin is played with Maurice we can observe that:
1) Austrians 41 bases, Prussians 27
bases. 1,51 Ratio.
2) Yes. I decided to follow the
historical pattern for the Prussian attack, and the following situations were
similar to the historical ones. The Cavalry battle was inconclusive. The
Prussian attacked gaining local successes but hammering to the pulp their
infantry. The Prussian committed two main errors, the first was to lose too much
time with the cavalry battle and the second was that the infantry attack was not
supported by any kind of reserves. The Prussian right and the Austrian left remained
unengaged. The global historical results with, of course, local difference in
the battle development.
3) No, the special rules and the
National Advantages are not intrusive. The only thing I noticed is that the
Austrian superiority could make the difference if in the final phases of the
battle the morale are close to the breaking point for both armies.
4) No. In fact there were a
couple of lulls in the development of
the battle and I noticed also that the most diffucult thing to achieve
was to maintain the attack momentum, two things that appears “realistic” and
ask to the player a good deal of planning.
5) The playing area was 150 cm x
112.5 cm, not cluttered with towns or too much difficult terrain. There was
room to maneuver and no terrain represented an insormontable barrier. The
scenario represented adequately the area were the battle was fought, given the
scale and the nature of the rules. To measure the “clutterness” i take the
ratio between the area of the bases and the total area which, in this case, is approximately 10%.
6) The replay went smooth, with
no complicated bookeeping or nasty calculation. Even the die-roll procedure was
easy to deal with. In this sense the Rules are enough “intuitive” making the
game easy to deal with.
7) Yes, absolutely. I like these
Rules.
Monday, October 3, 2016
Kolin. The refight with Maurice: Part II, the Battle
An overwiev of the starting
positions with place names:
The Prussian moves the cavalry in
the plain to his left and attacks the Austrian right wing cavalry. This starts
a see-saw battle which runs for some turns.
In the following picture an
example of how a tipical Combat works: Prussian cavalry C engages Austrian cavalry
A. Prussian cavalry D engages Austrian cavalry A and artillery B. D is not
outnumbered because A is engaged also by C:
The Austrian response is
two-fold: move aggressively their left-wing to distract the Prussian and send
two cavalry units to the menaced wing.
The main Austrian problem appears at
this stage: the front is huge and to activate a force on the wings a lot of
activation points is needed. Five cards are very few. The Austrian has indeed a
real command crisis which requests a couple of Pass to be fixed.
In the meantime the Prussian
presses the cavalry attack which is unsupported by infantry: the volley fire
from the Croats garrisoning Kreckhorz disrupts most of the attack.
The leading cavalry unit panics
and retires backward, disrupting itself and another unit (the cunning Austrian
plays “Confusion!”). Behind their cavalry the Prussian columns move to wheel to
their right and aligns in echelon, whereas the Austrian cavalry reinforcements
with a back-breaking cavalcade arrives on the right wing, taking Disr in the
stream crossing.
The Austrian is forced to spend a
card to move Daun where the action is:
The final Prussian cavalry push
is confronted by the regular infantry unit which advances in front of its
cavalry to stop the Prussian. (A “Passage of line” card is welcomed for such a
move).
The subsequent volley fire take
an huge toll on the Prussian cavalry, whose remains, to make room for the
infantry attack, are retired by using a “Retrogade” card.
There is a lull, in which both
armies plays either Pass or an Event, to replenish the card pool for the
incoming main phase of the battle. The terrain, already wet, was reduce to a
quagmire by the repeated cavalry charges. At least this is the effect of the Austrian
plays of the most-dreaded Maurice card: “That’s not on the Map!” and in a very
Prague-like fashion the two elite infantry units find a big patch of very soft
and wet terrain in the direction of their planned advance.
Nevertheless, Frederick moves towards
the area and finally orders the whole infantry of the left and center to
advance towards the Austrian position. This is intended as the attack that will
break the Austrians: unfortunately, as we shall see, this attack shall broke
the Prussians.
This is the crisis of the battle,
but not that intended by the Prussian. In the ensuing firefight, the Krezchor
garrison and a regular infantry are destroyed but subsequently bad rolls and
cleverly played cards destroys two prussian units of the center. The leftmost
elite units wins their fights but remain stranded with the back to the swamp
and loaded with Disr results.
The cards are running fast from
both sides and the Morale becomes low: 3 for the Prussian and 5 for the
Austrians (the rule which make the morale loss impredictable worked very well
to bring both armies on the verge of exhaustion )
At such a point the Austrian
centre counterattacks “a là Torgau”, whereas the cavalry reinforcements on the
right wing awakens too and attack their Prussian counterparts (The austrian
played “Coordinated”). The heroic death in the heat of the charge of FML Graf
zu Wied inspires the Austrian soldiers in their attack. (the Prussian plays “Death
of an Hero” reduceing the Austrian morale to 4, but the Austrian plays “Rogues!
Do you want to live forever?” bringing it to 6): such a combined attack breaks
the Prussian morale.
The battle is lost, the Austrians
too tired to engage in pursuit, and the remains of Prussian army stream in some
kind of order towards Prague along the Kaiser Strasse, their right wing still
uncommitted. (All of this was obtained with only 1 Card Deck, which finished
exactly when the Prussians broke).
It was smooth and fast play, very
interesting and with only a modicum of book-keeping. In the next post I will
write my analysis of the refight with these Rules and some comments.
Etichette:
Austrian army,
Daun,
Frederick II,
Kolin,
Maurice,
Prussian army
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