Having some time over Easter to set up a large game, one of the ACW battles from the old V&B '90s scenario book seemed appropriate.
Stones River is of an appropriate size for the table and troop numbers, but even at that, is definitely designed for 4-5 players rather than two - mainly for the management of simple paperwork on the rosters - which can be time consuming with less players. The added advantage of many players also is that some may consider 'orders' as mere 'suggestions' bearing in mind that their division is about to collapse, which seems very in period.
First army to lose 3/4 (ish) of its divisions to exhaustion would lose here.
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| Confederate positions with the river to their back...not healthy at all! |
To review turn sequence:
Command Determination (check
which stands are in command)Movement (generous, but a turn is 1 hour)Rally (routed units in contact with corps/army commander - these are essential)Morale Checks (both sides in contact, or in 'close' range - artillery is the only element that enforces that here)Combat (firing/melee
resolved together; attacker chooses order – KEY, if shot at, the defender
shoots back – choose carefully).Exhaustion & Collapse
(division checks if over casualty threshold - these become very important and affect ability to charge and move) .jpg) |
| A successful union defence (albeit a very close run thing) in the centre |
To zone in on one of these this episode:
The rules state: 'combats take place sequentially' - granted defenders can fire back, but not if they do not survive the volleys against them; also - 'defending stands which were not attacked may fire defensively at any enemy stands...at close range'.
The beauty of this is that artillery ha a close range, though infantry rifle muskets and carbines do not - which makes choice of who to fire at, and which units to do it with, all the more interesting. This matters if your division needs to focus on a particular unit, or escape vector, and avoid being clobbered by stronger units before their half of the turn...gamey?, but it works well - especially so when divisions are on the verge of collapse, since your opponent will be playing exactly the same game.
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| the confederate right, where divisions would simply stare at each other for hours, waiting for a flank action to their right...which never really happened |
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| The Reb attack on their left flank |
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| Union stationary units give dense fire |
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| The centre, where each side tries to goad the other into attacking first...the Rebs buckle and attack, because they are forced to due to action on their left |
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| View from the Reb right - everything is happening on the left initially, though note the movement of Union reinforcements in the rear |
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| Union brigades defend well...at first, and yet do take a heavy toll on some of the Reb brigades |
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| It looks like somehow, the centre will be key |
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| Union assault on the centre - unsuccessful as Palmer's division is simply blown away! |
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| ...but they keep coming... |
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| The left becomes a trap for the Rebs, losing division after division, being forced to move troops from the precious centre...as well as corps commanders and Bragg himself |
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| Union troops move to reinforce the centre now |
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| ...as their right holds fast...just |
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| The Union have enough troops to plug the gaps - the Confederates...not so much. |
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| Another Union push in the centre - which will be pivotal this time, breaking the Reb centre |
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| 'Hang on boys!' |
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| View across the battlefield, from the Rebel right |
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| The Rebel left is cooked...and the Union are in little better shape |
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| All that is left of the Reb centre |
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| Rebs hold on the Union left, but crossing the river, with three divisions already exhausted elsewhere is too dangerous |
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| 'Watch the flank boys!' Too many gaps to cover now in the centre |
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| ...and now with pressure on the Rebel right |
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| In the end, 5 Reb divisions were exhausted - too much to come back from, as the Union troops could plug all the gaps, but a great game! |
Stones River a great scenario
ReplyDeleteIt's marvellous as a proto-typical ACW battle. So much can be got out of it at every level!
DeleteGreat looking stands! Great looking game!
ReplyDeleteNeil
Thanks Neil. It's another strength of the V&B 3x3 massed infantry stand - my cheap plastic painting (the plastics or the painting - not sure which is cheaper :) ) is protected from handling by the large stand, and it still gives a large army feel. Love these rules and systems.
DeleteThat old V&B scenario book is fabulous, I've done Stones River a few times (albeit with my own rules). It is a real slogging match.
ReplyDeleteThat's what we were expecting Martin yes - but my Rebs were a little over zealous - yeehaw - and got their asses handed to 'em.
DeleteGeneral Cheapskate rides again! Another example of how a few plastic figures arranged on a single base can look superb.
ReplyDeleteThank you sir..I prefer the term 'Emperor of the cheapness' or 'cheap b*stard'.
DeleteStaggered basing, photographing at favourable angles, massing bases together to make 'em look more dense - I know all the tricks ;)
So , when I bought those plastics, they were about 6 quid for 50 figures - so figures about 12p each, the mdf was free ;), add for the little dice squares and foliage - I reckon each base of troops is about a quid. You can't even buy a single 25mm lead figure for that now!
Brilliant!
DeleteLove that in Volley and Bayonet you focus on the battle and not on the rules! A true General's game!
ReplyDeleteAlso, the table looks great, Darren!
Thank you Steve. Yes indeed, when the rules are ironed out and they start to flow with players, you start to think like a general. V&B is designed for big group games - I can just imagine the fights among generals on the same side when a division was ordered forward, when the division was close to collapse, but they did not want to let the other side know LOL
DeleteGreat looking layout, Darren! I have fought over this ground a handful of times both in miniature and in hex-and-counter. Very interesting battle especially with a Rebel flanking attack to start the ball rolling.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks Jon - yes, it's an interesting match-up as always...this time of course, I tried to do something different...and it went pear-shaped :)
DeleteSuper game and a really entertaining report. Drama at every stage!
ReplyDeleteYou'll get a laugh out of this, I am sure. I scrolled through the photos before looking 'properly' and did a double-take at the fifth last as I thought that Napoleon had made a cameo. Cheatham would be chuffed.
Best wishes, James