Thursday, 5 October 2023

This week is a Petaudia campaign week and I managed to be more organised and have a game, all be it a small one, but it proved to be a lot of fun. I have decided to make more of an effort at an evolving campaign but with smaller actions where practical.

So, to set the scene, the year is 704 N.S. and it is over seventy years since the last major conflict on the continent (the War of the Brothers). The Sorceress (the evil power behind all misfortune in Petaudia) has begun to stir up the trouble in the north-west of the continent by encouraging the Kedarian Horse Tribes (think Huns/Avars/Mongols etc. for an Earth parallel) to attack the neighbouring states of the Duchy of Lamria and the West March. The first target is a caravan of goods heading along the Great West Road from Dagun in the West March to Gossypia in Lamria. The Great West Road passes along the south-west edge of the steppe which the Kedarian Horse Tribes inhabit, so is within easy range of a raiding force.


The map shows the north-west corner of Petaudia. The red arrow is the Kedarian Horse Tribes approach, the X is approximately where the caravan was attacked. Castle Gonfalon is to the south, St. Menno's Priory just to the north (the crossed diamond).

The scenario has the caravan and their Leucadian mercenary escort moving across the table with the aim of getting from one side to the other with minimal loss of baggage mules and men, while the Kedarian Horse Tribes have to capture as many baggage mules as possible with minimal loss in men. However, although the attackers start with a significant advantage, the caravan has help on the way, subject to dice rolls – men from the nearby Lamrian Castle Gonfalon and Priory of Saint Menno – which should even up the numbers. 

Here are the basic rules for the scenario: 

a) Terrain – the main road across the centre of the table from left to right; the rest of board dotted with a few trees; one low hill on the lower side of the table.

b) The Horse Tribes enter on the lower edge, cavalry on the wings, infantry in the centre; the caravan sets up on the road, its rear at the left edge of the table.

c) Any Horse Tribe unit which moves into contact with a baggage mule automatically captures it. However, even if in contact with more than one baggage mule, it may only capture one baggage mule at a time. The Horse Tribe unit must then retire to the lower edge of the table to secure its capture before it can return to the action.

d) On Turn 3, roll 1D6. If a 4, 5 or 6, then re-roll the die: odds = the Lamrian force arrives on road left edge of the table; evens = Ferrex force arrives on road on the right edge of the table. These will aid the caravan. Continue to roll each turn thereafter until the reinforcements have all arrived or the game ends.

e) The caravan moves on 6+ on 2D6 at 6” per turn along the road. However, on each turn after Turn 2, roll 1D6. If a 5, the baggage mules refuse to move that turn; if a 6, they are spooked, so roll another 1D6, and that number is the number of baggage mules who set off at 6” in a random direction (use a direction die).  They will continue in their new direction unless they pass their normal move test (6+); if they pass, they head back to the main road to reform with the original caravan group.

f) The game ends when either all the baggage mules have been captured and exited from the lower edge of the table by the Horse Tribes, or the baggage mules (or those not captured yet) have been moved by the Caravan Defenders off the right hand edge by the road.

g) Victory Points:

            Horse Tribes:

            10 VP per baggage mule captured

            1 VP per enemy figure killed

            50VP bonus if all the baggage mules are captured

            Caravan Defenders:

            10 VP per baggage mule exited off the road on the west edge of the table

            1 VP per enemy figure killed

h) Opposing Forces:

            Kedarian Horse Tribes

            Light Cavalry  Cavalry           6 x figures       Light Riders    6 Points           2 units*

            Bows               Infantry           12 x figures     Light Missiles 4 Points           1 unit

            Spears             Infantry           12 x figures     Light Foot       4 Points           2 units

                        *One unit includes the Horse Tribes’ general. 

            Leucadian Mercenaries

            Hobilars          Cavalry           6 x figures       Medium Riders           4 Points     1 unit

            Crossbows      Infantry           12 x figures     Heavy Missiles           4 Points      1 unit

            + six baggage mules 

            Lamrian Troops

                        (from Castle Gonfalon)

            Men-at-arms   Cavalry           6 x figures       Medium Riders           6 Points     1 unit*

            Longbows       Infantry           12 x figures     Light Missiles             4 Points     1 unit

                        *Includes the Caravan Defenders’ general.

                        (from the Priory of Saint Menno)

            Mixed Foot     Infantry           12 x figures     Heavy Foot                 6 Points       1 unit 

I played the game solo until a result was achieved, which actually took 15 turns, although many turns were quickly completed. It turned out to be a close game, although not at first! The caravan and its defenders were easy enough to play – just keep going and fend off all attackers. I played the latter on the basis that it was the baggage mules they wanted and were going to avoid close combat, although in the end that did not quite work. 

The rules were Dragon Rampant, as written without any local amendments. Each side had 24 points as recommended for a basic game, although obviously the Caravan Defenders only reached that figure if they all got onto the table. The Horse Tribes also have the advantage of their general on the table from the start of the game; that of the Caravan Defenders only arrives with the Lamrian men-at-arms. In this game, I rolled for the commander’s ‘Trait’ as it is called in the rules and both turned out to be a ‘Goader’, which means one unit within 12” of the general’s unit can automatically move without having to test. 

The figures are Essex Miniatures 25mm metals (the Leucadians and Lamrians), Old Glory 25mm metals (Lamrians) and Gripping Beast 28mm hard plastic Arabs and Fireforge 28mm hard plastic Mongols/Steppe Warriors (Kedarian Horse Tribes). For my continent, states and organisations have different heraldic colours. In this case, the Leucadian mercenaries are painted black and white, the Lamrians from Castle Gonfalon are green and white and those from the Priory of Saint Menno are purple and white. The Kedarian Horse Tribes wear black and red as their colours. 

Here are some pictures, with captions appended below, which show the battle progressing to its conclusion. I really enjoyed the game and its size. I am planning another one already, an attack on a Lamrian village by the Kedarian Horse Tribes. Hopefully this will appear here soon!



















































 

Tuesday, 26 September 2023

Last week was an Avrupan campaign week and I finally gave the Fast and Dirty rules a go with a small game with just infantry figures, attacker against a dug-in defender, table being 3 feet by 4 feet. After three turns I gave up with the new rules and went back to my own set. There were some features of F.A.D. I liked and which I will incorporate into my rules, I found the Firing too slow and the Quality checking to do things slowed everything up as well.

So I restarted the game using my rules, which are based on WW2 Crossfire, and played it out successfully. However, it was one of those Crossfire games where the attacker barely lost the initiative and ran rings round the defence, who barely got a look in! A convincing win for the attackers, although they did use a lot of off-board artillery support as well.

I played it solo - Future Wars/Sci-fi is not something my regular opponents are interested in at all - and allocated the defence to bunkers/trenches randomly, decided the attackers would advance in three main groups, and gave them the option of bringing in armour if the going got difficult. The idea was that the attack is trying to break through border defences and thus open the way for a further advance by mobile forces.

The defence had 18 figures in two sections of three squads of 3 figures each.

The attack had three sections of three squads of 3 figures each, plus an attached HQ section with three squads of support weapons (LMG, AT, Flame) and an engineer section of 3 figures.

The hamlet - all homemade from plastic items - air fresheners, dessert pot, bottle lid and bottle corks. The foliage is made from plastic fish tank plants. The road is by S&A Scenics.
Overview of the battlefield before the defences are put on, with a major road, gully, dunes,
rock formations and other foliage areas/items.


The battlefield with the defences added - wire obstacles, trenches, bunkers, dragon's teeth, and minefields - the latter are the brighter yellow rectangles.
The rock formation - made from that polystyrene packing stuff.

Homemade bunker from a small plastic box, plus some commercially made sandbags.

Trenches made from the same sandbags, plus a bunker from a bottle top.
Another homemade bunker.
A defensive point bought years ago - it has an AT gun and AA missile pod.


The attack had a pre-planned bombardment - they hit the bunkers. The explosion markers are homemade from pipe cleaners, an idea I got from a WW2 enthusiast at my local club.

The off board artillery support for the attack - two Old Crow missile launchers.
The dice are used to record fire missions - they have a maximum of nine each.
The attackers move forward. All figures are Denizen 25mm.

The black counter is used to show a hidden unit, which means it has gone 
to ground and cannot be seen or fired upon.
Smoke screen to conceal the infantry squad as it moves up to cut the wire obstacle.
More incoming artillery fire, plus smoke, as the attackers move to assault the bunker.
Bunker captured easily - the defenders had already been destroyed by the artillery fire!
Moving around the defenders' left flank. The blue counter shows the unit in the trench is pinned down.





More artillery support called down - the red counter shows the unit in the bunker is suppressed.
HQ squad with AT weapon - suppressed by fire from the defence.

A trench is assaulted - two squads can combine in close combat.
Another close combat - I put the defenders on the table to make things easier when
working out the results of the fighting.



Game's end, with the defenders in the central bunker surrendering - the white counter - all the rest having been destroyed. The arrows show the lines of advance by the attackers.
I also managed to do some painting of models for Avrupan. This is a 1/72nd scale modern artillery piece made by A to Z Build and Play in plastic which I got at my local garden centre. I cut down the long barrel and am going to use it as an assault gun instead.

Two armoured personnel carriers which I bought years ago at a show from Antenocitis, now sadly closed down I heard, which I finally got round to painting.



The APC is much bigger in scale than the assault gun, more designed for 28mm figures than 25 mm.
Last of all, an Old Crow lorry, painted up for the logistics sections of my Avrupan forces.