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wargaming

Part 4: Fauxterre 1930 “A” division retreats

Sunrise

Narrative

The Corinovans are in retreat, “B” division has been destroyed holding the coastal city of Viana and now inland, “A” division is dangerously exposed to isolation by the rampant Gombardian forces.

Remnants of “B” division and elements of “C” division in retreat, continued to try and intercept Gombardian thrusts on “A” division’s eastern flank.

My previous Fauxterre post covered the strategic situation that lead to this action.

The game

Essentially this is an escalating engagement and I simply used the scenario from Neil Thomas’ “An introduction to wargaming”. His World War Two rules reflect his simple yet interesting approach you can find in his more popular books like one hour wargames, C19th Century European warfare or ancient and medieval warfare.

The rulebook offers four scenarios

Encounter

Frontal assault

Surprise assault

Escalating engagement

I opted for an escalating engagement action reflecting the chaos of a rapid advance experienced by both sides.

I took the real world unit lists in the book and came up with two slightly different lists for the Gombardians – plenty of armour like Germans while the Corinovans were more likely to field infantry like the French.

I used my own table for observation – everything had an observation rule to help cause friction that’s required for a solo game.

The scenario set victory conditions based on three shared objectives – the winner having two or all three at the end of the game. I had a count down variable tracker but this had not expired when one side patently had run out of forces.

The three objectives were the

Town

Sawmill

Orchard

Both sides quickly acquired either the sawmill or town.

It remained simply to fight it out for the orchard.

As the table was created first before selecting the scenario it was also the case that the opposing forces diced for arrival points.

Each side had 9 units and deployed 3 units to start but I also applied scenario requirements that all six remaining units arrived on an improving odds dice throw each turn.

Here is some of the key action.

The base cloth can use its grid but today I am using Neil Thomas rules with measured distances
Gombardians enter the town
The walled orchard – soon to be the centre of attention

The action now centres on the walled orchard

The battle moves toward a conclusion

The gombardians are now driven back to the town area
A few Corinovans hold the orchard and so have secured the “two objectives” orders. The gombardians have failed and decide to withdraw leaving the town in the possession of the Corinovans.

The Gombardians had arrived with armour which fits the scenario of a fluid front in the campaign situation. But they did not have enough infantry to take on the Corinovans in the congested orchard area.

The army lists therefore helped create an asymmetric game and the armour heavy force on this occasion lost.

Categories
miniatures painting

Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge 16

So AHPC16 is upon us – well the 21st December is storming towards me far too fast.

In previous years – well the last two to be exact – first year I started preparing on the 21st way too late and then last year did prepare one primed unit beforehand but held off having a plan before knowing about the themes which then derailed me with a sci fi bug.

I found I was doing stuff (deciding about theme models or simply digging out figures to clean and prime) but not actually painting colour – much before the January deadline loomed into view!

So this year I started my plan in November!

And I have primed some of the planned pieces.

And I decided to ignore the theme and just see what came along.

And lucky me this years three themed pieces have fallen nicely into place within my plan.

Declining Empire should see some planned 1848 Hungarians appear

Childhood toy memory fortunately gets the wild geese treatment from the 1700’s

And rebels hopefully will see some Covenanters appear before the various deadlines

Alas last years failed star of my show might fail to appear yet again. As its anniversary related this is a constant theme – I started my 28mm stoke field armies in 2015……still not much progress ten years on!

And now I have scenery options nudging their way into my plan.

I was hoping to get some more Fauxterre 1930 kit done.

Then there were the 1848 Hanoverians, 1848 Neapolitans, 1700 French Dragoons, 1848 Roman infantry all crying out to be on the plan – the list goes on and on.

Way too much of course for this painting snail, which having done a plan shows so well. It means the exercise has proved its worth already.

However real life is very very busy right now so I might fail on all fronts!

The optimistic wargamer marches onwards……

Categories
life miniatures painting

Irregular Loss

I have just discovered that Ron Kay of Irregular Miniatures has died at the age of 98. He was full time on the team until 93, casting figures for all us hobbyists. He carried on as a part time member of the team still handling the big and complex castings. “Hats off” as they say.

I did not know Ron personally but seem to remember him at the Irregular stand at wargames shows.

I can do best by sharing some of my Irregular Miniatures collection and sending my condolences to Ian Kay and the Irregular family.

Irregular have provided me with some great 20mm figures that helped me build my 1848 forces.

1848 Danish Infantry repurposed from Irregulars colonial range
1848 Duchy of Parma artillery
Duchy of Modena Dragoons which were Neapolitan Dragoons
1848 Rumanian infantry which were ww1 Austrians
1848 Roman Legion which were ww1 Austrians
Colonial British posing as 1848 Danes
1848 Garibaldeans in red and blue shirts
Neapolitans posing as 1848 French
1864 Dane’s which were ww1 Austrians
1850 Dane’s which were ww1 Austrians
Grand Duchy of Tuscany Infantry repurposed from the colonial range
Categories
wargaming

A Game Wow!

When I think about it this first half of 2025 has like 2024 been dominated by AHPC – analogue hobbies painting challenge. By contrast I managed only two shows yet one yielded one of the few games I have played.

That was a cowboy shootout using homemade rules…..

It’s was fun – quick and lethal
Sparse yet effective as were the rules!

Not surprisingly it was Hammerhead at Newark.

Then I had a game of “what a cowboy”. My opponent loved “what a tanker” and reasoned WAC should be as enjoyable. Well that proved not quite the case. We will play again but it has slipped down the list.

Actually there is no list and until today my gaming had been quite limited.

Then I had a spur of the moment, moment no doubt brought on by quite a bit of reading about battles fought.

In this case ACW – I am reading western theatre actions at the moment.

I also have been reading my Colorado purchase – a soft cover book of maps showing the whole ACW war.

In the book are some contemporary maps by a certain Robert Knox Sneeden. He was a Union mapmaker who not only spent time as a confederate prisoner but was also a watercolour artist. Clearly he had a good eye! And by good fortune his maps and diaries have survived.

https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Map_showing_a_battle_ground_at_Kelly%27s_Ford,_Virginia,_17_March_1863.jpg#mw-jump-to-license

So taken with his work was I that I simply made an entry for today’s game in his style.

I played using one hour Wargames book, rules and scenario plus solo options for set up. Figures were what I fancied fielding!

Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

The Painting Portrait 25k: AHPC15 leftovers

I just missed the end of AHPC15 with some 1848 era artillery.

Rather than park them like last year I decided to get these Properly finished.

Three types of artillery on show
I have added to my Danish artillery
Irregular miniatures bell shako British do good service as Dane’s of the 1840’s
Guns were different to the Russian 1850’s version.
Full complement with earlier model to fore.
These are 1848 Duchy of Parma
Same manufacturer as the Dane’s
Same guns as the Dane’s
B and B Miniatures provided these chaps posing as 1848 Schleswig Holstein rebels.
They are actually 1870 Prussians
One 4 pounder horse gun and one 6 pounder field gun both rifled breechloaders
But it’s hard work getting pickelhaubes for the 1840’s and the figures come with the guns – waste not want not. At three feet I can live with the difference.
Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

Painting Portrait 25e Danish Line Infantry 1848

My project Schleswig Holstein in 1/72 continues if a bit slowly.

This time this unit – piquet field of battle battalion, is offered up as my final entry in this winters paint what you got painting challenge https://wargamesculptorsblog.blogspot.com/2024/12/paint-what-you-got-painting-challenge.html?sc=1734736394728&m=1#c801656457305268158. It is run by Dave Stone.

Buildings are ceramic

The figures are hat Nassau Napoleonic infantry. 1/72 or 20mm plastics.

I picked them because they have the nearest shako look for the Dane’s bell shako.

I have started to use a furled flag approach as invariably my flag production does not match my figure painting!

I could do some head swops to get other sets in on the act but wanted to try a straight paint job here to see if I liked the result.

The basing is my standard 40mm square mdf with budgie grit pva then 3 colour brown, ochre and yellow/white highlights. As it’s nearly spring the grass is dead tufts from gamers grass over Javis sawdust green.

Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

The Painting Portrait 25d First War of Italian Independence

Quickly following on from breaking my duck in the analogue hobbies painting challenge I submitted these fine horsemen.

Now Modena was a small duchy in 1848 and the Dragoons were both mounted and a foot based part of the ducal army.

In fact the mounted arm stretched to just a few squadrons.

That was fine with me – I just had to have some sky blue cavalry in my collection.

The miniatures are Irregular (now based in Kingston upon Hull). They are easy to paint and have the detail I want for gaming.

My AHPC15 entry is here http://thepaintingchallenge.blogspot.com/2025/01/from-john-b-friday-crew-1848-modena.html?m=1

Back to the paint table as they say.

Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

The Painting Portrait 25b 1848 Bavarians 4th Line

Next up for my Painting Portrait is another Paint What You Got effort, this time it’s the 4th line who differ only from the 7th line in their facings – yellow for the 4th with white metal buttons while the 7th sport pink with yellow metal buttons.

Painting Portrait 25a details the scenery.

My mid nineteenth century units are four 40mm square bases coated with pva and budgie grit followed by a three colour paint job – burnt sienna then heavy dry brush yellow ochre finally light dry brush a yellow white to highlight.

Firing line

Peco railway scenic grass is the final addition. I tend to match the base greenery to the uniform colour accepting my armies are mixed based.

In column
March attack
Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

Slow work in progress

Well AHPC15 has started but I have been very slow out of the traps.

I have made a start with some irregular miniatures that arrived very promptly in the Christmas post.

An Irregular miniatures haul

They are Neapolitan Dragoons circa 1860, but I took a punt on them for my 1848 Tuscany Dragoons.

To roach or not to roach that is the question in the 1840’s (image from nypl vinkhuisen collection – public domain)

Ok so they have some incorrect details – I can live with that.

I did manage some model prep for AHPC15 as well. Not sure when/if they will make an appearance.

Hmmm what can this be?

For AHPC15 you need points on the board in January. The Tuscan dragoons will remain my focus.

Dave Stones “paint what you got” is all about clearing off what you have already. And that’s a rich vein for me.

All abandoned 2023/24 painting efforts! Queuing is no problem here.
Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

The Painting Pedestal 24i

Ralph Weavers’ book on the Hungarian Army of 1848/49 was my source for this unit or rather legion. They represent the Romanian or Rumanian legion who fought for the Hungarian side in the war for independence. The Austrians crushed the rebellion as they saw it but the empire was diminished.

The Romanian troops came from ethnically Romanian areas that ultimately became Hungarian ruled in the Transylvanian region after World War One ended the Austrian Empire.

Again I have used Austrian World War One infantry turning a blind eye to ammunition pouches etc.

The flag is homemade and again it suffered some bleeding when pva coated.

A trim of the peaked cap and a paint job gives me what I wanted. The fact is I bought these Austrians speculatively during lock down when I was in the hunt for capped infantry. The 1840’s is a difficult period to model as you often get the right hats with the wrong uniforms or vice versa!

World War One era figure ranges are useful if you ignore the equipment errors.

The uniform was a bluey purple so I tried contrast paints and was very happy with result.

Again I used Ralph’s text to help me decide on uniform details – the flag says Justice Fraternity.

This basically clears the decks for two painting challenges. AHPC15 started last Friday and “paint what you got” starts Boxing Day. They finish 21st March and 28th February respectively so will keep me occupied.

Merry Christmas and thanks for stopping by.