Categories
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
wargaming

Spring Clean or Spring Board?

I suppose participation in the annual analogue hobbies painting challenge (No15 has just finished) has affected my normal year end musings.

AHPC15 started in December and finished in March. It meant I was heads down painting for that time – so no looking in the rear view mirror let alone out through the front wargamers truck windscreen at the turn of the year.

This maybe explains why I suddenly had the need to look at my plans for 2025.

Out of the blue I created a sharp pencil production tool.

A sensible flow

Really it’s a funnelling idea with the visual aim to get to the point!

Of course I have two versions already…..

Just chuck it all in

Of course the second image could be a virtual “log jam” with nothing getting through as they say……

Categories
wargaming

Beware Greeks bearing gifts

My recent painting blast over winter had dried up with the end of the Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge XIV. It broke my preoccupation with the mid 19th century.

The Danes and Germans are sat there in the various painting queues but making no progress.

Green-shoots anywhere?

something different maybe?

yes!

It is a case of returning to an old favorite. Ancients.

In fact two threads emerged from the languid waters I found my wargaming boat resting in. One followed the other.

The first, which I will cover in another post was partly prompted by Wargames, Soldiers and Strategy recent magazine running a Bronze Age theme: I have lots of Bronze Age figures for a long abandoned project.

But the impulse here was mainly due to Curt’s Trojan horse entry for the analogue hobbies painting challenge 14.

http://thepaintingchallenge.blogspot.com/2024/03/from-curt-last-post-of-challenge-xiv.html?m=1

Curts fantastic Trojan horse entry for AHPC14
These chaps have dwelt long in the deep halls of the plastic mountain- just maybe they will get some paint – finally – who knows?

The second concerns DBA. DBA got me back into the hobby after an almost 20 year break. It also propelled me into 15mm scale at the time – the late 1990’s. Those armies had since lain unused for years as 1/72 and 25/28mm tempted me back to bigger figures.

I dug them out – quite a mixed bag – could I run a campaign using the 1st or 2nd Editions 6 nation offering. I mulled this over before the figures went back into a slightly more accessible store and the unpainted ones joined the paint queue jostling with mid 19th century Danes and Germans.

And then I went to York one weekend for the annual open studios tour. Somehow somewhere I came away with the urge to craft. Note – not paint.

The next minute I was cutting card and with drawing pens to hand inking DBA bases. I had picked a campaign and lacking the right figures thought I would simply play empty bases. I have done this many a time and its a very enjoyable digression. And then I remembered all these 2mm armies currently in vogue plus that crafting itch had not been sated fully. And so out came some discarded HEAT board gaming counter sheets! minus the useful counters. Maybe I could use these “blocks” to suggest groups of soldiers?

A bit of crafting is invariably satisfying activity
I grabbed some thin card and used the DBA 15mm base width of 40mm then just played around with the game counter offcuts to get the look I wanted.
I went for a standard DBA campaign list which gave me six armies and I added in a Thracian army because I like them!
The magnificent seven! A day later glue dried, a take away container holds 7 dba armies

And there we have it instant 2mm armies for a 6 nation DBA Bronze Age campaign: The Thracian’s might make a guest appearance!

Categories
wargaming

Mountain Climbing or White Water Rafting? The Wargamers journey.

Never one to resist a metaphor or comparison my recent encounter with project hesitation prompted me to look for a parallel. For some reason my usual mountain climbing examples in my head sat a bit oddly. Oh yes I think many of us wargamers probably try and climb many Munros* at the same time. And fail to reach any summits – unless its those super wargamers with unlimited talent, production skills to match and boundless energy.

*munros are Scottish mountains in excess of thousand feet in height.

Then it came to me going downhill might be a better metaphor than ascending when it comes to the wargamers hobby.

So where have I been and where am I now?

In recent times (i.e. since Covid struck) – back in 2019 I was quite taken with Normans in the North and South. It remains a work in progress so you could say a meandering river then and an oxbow lake now is the order of the day.

And then I discovered the mid 19th century and a fair torrent of water cascaded down the wargamers hillside.

There have been the odd side flows such as my nearly mechanised 20th century warfare explorations – now also several oxbow lakes or should it simply be a mountain col?

And what of my recent diversions during Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge? I certainly think that was several small torrents which then ended in a hanging valley leading to a small lake with no apparent exit.

And right now where am I – well it feels like the wargaming is still in flow but very much winding through some extensive marshlands – languid.

Descriptions of water seem far more apt for my wargaming than my previous mountain climbing parallels.

The question is where will those languid waters lead me to next?

Categories
1/72 scale figures new additions wargaming

Plan A 2021

The beauty of a written plan is you can tear it up and then reflect later on whether things got better or worse as a result!

So here is plan A for 2021.

Whats in a Name

My wargames plan A for 2020 was about Normans in the South (NitS) and that plan “went south” which is in the negative. At least Plan B gave me plenty of wargames pleasure.

For 2021 I am in the nineteenth century and specifically it is the wars of Italian Unification which have me dazzled.

Abbreviations give me WoIU. Not very catchy. Or I could tweak it to get WotIU – Watteu.

hmmmmmm.

OK we will run with that WotIU.

WotIU in my plan runs from Napoleon to Nation State as Lucy Riall says on the cover of her book entitled “Risorgimento”. So I could go with “Risorgimento”. That feels a bit constricting though.

And low and behold Neil Thomas gives you a book – Wargaming Nineteenth Century Europe 1815-1878.

Excellent. Too Excellent as Neil Thomas offers you a myriad of armies to choose from. And it is anything but uniform in this period.

Skakos, coatees, knee gaiters, stovepipes, kittels, greatcoats, kepis, short gaiters, spikey helmets, zoaves, bersaglieri……….and red shirts.

So where do I begin?

Two armies around 1855 – looking a bit like

Austrian – kittels, trousers and small tapered shakos

Piedmont – kepi, trousers and frock coats or tunics

It seems the cavalry still resembled napoleonic styles but with trousers.

So I have made a start with some ACW Union Infantry being repurposed as Piedmontese Line Infantry.

Austrian artillery mix it with Piedmontese Bersaglieri

The aim will be to get some forces on the table.

So posts might be thin on the ground if I am painting well……..