Last Sunday be played a big Napoleonic battle. There were nine players, four French divisions against two Prussian, one Bavarian and a British division, at some point a Russian force joined the Coalition forces. By my count there were 49 infantry battalions, 10 cavalry regiments and 9 batteries on the Coalition side. I assume that there were roughly the same on the French side - I was on the Coalition side and didn't see their order of battle.
The objective was the control of the roads exiting the French side of the table.
Above and below, the Prussian masses form for the attack |
The British division |
The full length of the table |
The Prussian cavalry prepare to attack |
In the centre the Prussian attack is building up a head of steam (above and below) |
The British form up |
The Prussian cavalry charge |
And the infantry presses home the attack |
A view of the French lines |
The British end of the field |
After initial success the Prussian central attack has stalled |
To their left the other Prussian force is struggling to make headway |
Here come the landwher... |
The French prepare for the onslaught (above and below) |
A view along the table mid-action |
The Bavarians arrive... |
...and set the farm on fire! |
What a wonderful table!
ReplyDeleteThanks Norm. It was a nicd set up...not too crowded and plenty of space to manoeuvre.
DeleteA spectacular looking game Mark. How were the forces composed? Is there a points system to ensure some sort of parity? Nice work by the Bavarians in setting the farmhouse on fire. One of the gamers in our group does that whenever there is a building anywhere near him, and it is very annoying.
ReplyDeleteThe forces were set up by the organiser. He had set it up with basic forces, then there were reinforcements that were diced for at three points during the game. It was Barry who set the place on fire...a lucky artillery shot...and it forced the French out!
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