Sunday, September 18, 2016

The Men Who Would be Kings - The opening volley.

Wednesday night saw the first run through of The Men Who Would be Kings Rules and what a close run thing it was.

A typical 24 Point British Force.
We opted for Scenario H "A sigh of Relief"
A classic scenario suited to the Zulu wars which see's the British holding the camp as the Zulu's deployed on the table edge looking to over run them before reinforcements come on to drive them away.


On the face of it, it could have been all over in a couple of moves, the Zulu's filled the table edge and the limited defenders stood and waited as the range markers went out. They needed to hang on long enough for the relief to arrive.


Was this enough to hold the line?


The Zulu's advanced forward in a clasic formation with the horn's looking to encircle the the British, with a free activation to move they looked unstoppable. In a rare moment of bravery The Natal Native Contingent charge into the Zulu left wing, but are badly beaten and forced back.


Turn 2 the British let off a ragged volley which kills few but does pin a Zulu unit, but those damn Zulu's are getting rather close.


Turn 4 British Reinforcements start to make their way onto the table as the right horn moves forward to slow their advance. Menawhile the chest makes it's move on the camp.


Turn 5 in the British Centre a poor command roll leaves the British unable to form close order and  open to a charge by the Zulu Impi which forces the British back due some rather good Zulu dice.





Turn 6 With the British now falling back through the camp the Zulu's push for victory. But do you think I could shift the last of the British despite being down to two figures the Officer and his trusty Colour Sargeant they hold the line and defeat the next zulu attack, the Zulu's are pinned attempt to rally and fall back.... Good old British cold steel...


Turn 7 The British Player gaining experience hits upon a tactic that was to ultimately win him the game. Concentrating his volley fire on a single unit, he empties its ranks of warriors, shooting down it's leader, pins it  and then sends in the cavalry.


Turn 8 The Zulu's morale starts to falter as units are shot to pieces and are ultimately destroyed, the Zulu line on observing this halts, units become pinned and start to fall backwards, just as I felt they had won the day and were ready to press home their advantage.


Turn 9 The Zulu right wing finally comes into action having ditched the idea of moving at the double and simply taking it's free activation to move, it charges into the British line and scores well reducing another British unit down to a single Officer.


Turn 10 The number of casualties on the Zulu side starts to take it's toll and units are pinned across the battlefield and every failed rally checks forces them backwards. The Zulu's had lost a number leaders which was making the recovery of units and issuing of order really hard. 
The Cavalry picking their moments continue to drive the battered units backwards charging into pinned units before they can recover.


By the skin of their teeth the Brits hold on to win the day, the Zulu's unable to get to formed units to stand infront of the camp for a turn are forced from the table. The only significant Zulu unit left has no leader and every rally check failed will only force them backwards away from the objective.

The rules have a very satisfactory feel to them and the result a fair relection of the troops available, the NNC were rubbish and the Red Line held firm, The figure removal can occasionaly make the table look a little thin with 2 figure units still running around but that could be put down to good dice rolls.

The rules are not overly complicated and the don't have endless charts to refer to which means turns flow quickly allowing you to get through game turns fast, really important during an evenings gaming as they allow you to get to a an outcome rather than the "what if's" when we just run out of time.
An hour in and we knew the required scores and orders without the need to refer to the rule book.

In terms of in house tweaks we considered altering the rules on Volley Fire, within the rules thay have an 180 degree arc which we considered limiting this to only frontally and perhaps introducing a CinC to step in with one extra test espically if you have a bunch of Officers who are pretty bad...

We missed out the additional Officers Characteristic's but will bring these in next time as they look like they will add an interesting touch to the games.

Tonight the Boxer Rebellion...

17 comments:

  1. Thanks for this Stu. I will be ordering these soon so a timely report:). I have also ordered some books on Victoria's Colonial Wars for some background reading, but most likely will go for India and the Big Game, given that I have the miniatures. Hopefully they will also get used with Sharp Practice 2

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    1. Steve in my view Sharp Practice is great for a more leisurely game if you have 4 Hors to spare - TMWWBK gives good outcome in 2 Hours and you can feed bigger units and games...
      You pays your money you takes your choice:-)
      Cheers
      Stu

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  2. Nice blog post, and got to say it looked a nice looking game.
    I love that first photo with the camp, odd soldier and range markers.

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    1. Roy those odds and sods you oaint and never get to use :-)

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  3. Well done Stuart! I need to get my hands on my copy now, not to mention paint yet more Zulus!

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    1. That it the risk Michael, the units just seem to keep creeping up.
      Regards
      Stuart

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  4. Cheers for this, I want to do the Apache Wars as I already have some figures done.

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    1. That would be good for smaller units you could revert to the point counts rather than taking the figures off.
      Cheers
      Stu

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  5. An interesting Battle Stuart- very close result which could have went to the Zulus. I built Rorke's Drift in 1/72nd Scale back in 1985 -holding the position with 100 British and attacking with 400 Zulus - using WRG Rules - the result was as per the real incident. Perhaps you could consider a simular British defence for future Battles. All the best. KEV.

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    1. That sound slike Fun KEv although I don;t want to distract you from yet another periond :-)
      Regards
      Stuart

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  6. A good read and photos Stu 😉.
    Regards Gav .

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  7. Thanks for the AAR Stu very interesting.
    Good looking set up as well.
    Would these rules be good for skirmish actions in say the Franco Prussian War 1870 or Russo Turkish War 1877? Basically First Line country vs First Line country?

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    1. I think they would Captain, you would really need to get your troops into cover, we played a BOxer Rebellion outing last week and poor quality troops and poor leaders simply could not get close to regulars, so regular on regular could be very bloody.
      Cheers
      Stu

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  8. Great game. I need to check that rules one day with our Sudan collections.

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