Friday 1 January 2021

1655 The Death of Prince Boguslaw - Polish Renaissance last game of the year!!!

As the Last game in the year, Bart wanted to play his 15mm Polish / Swedes collection using the By Fire & Sword rules set. I choose the Lithuanian Skirmish Force of Prince Bogusslaw Radzwill at Podlasie for 13 FSP, Rec 29 size 29). Bart got a Swedish Detachment in for FSP 11, Rec 15 and size 23. Due to the fact that my force was bigger (??), I had to accept that half of my half drunken nobles were panicky. I choose one flank attack of my pancerni unit and two double forced marches of the winged hussars and the clustered dragoon unit.

Bart outnumbered forces were made of a huge reiter unit and mostly veteran dragoons and musketeers, he had two guns as well. The aim of the game to get the hill in the middle (4pts) and or the two t-crossroads (each 1 pts).

I won the first initiative and advanced with my winged hussars and a giant dragoon force atop the said hill. My pancerni cluster was deep into the enemy flank. That was the height of my game and I would have won the battle if A) the time would have stopped there and B) I would have understood the hidden subtleties of the rules better...

Bart moved his shotte with the gun to the right and settled to barrage me. His Reiters were in front of my winged hussars and I daringly decided that my dragoon lump of massed cluster unit, just charged the few highly specialised veteran dragoons/musketeers in front next to the table edge. Good idea? No!

Apparently the dragoons are not made for dashing cavalry charges and these veteran (dismounted) dragoons (even when totally outnumbered) could make a quick step back before my cavalry hit AND at the same time execute a volley that stopped mine in track to failed precisely the charge. As I didn't know, Bart was so kind to show me that this can have the opposite effect, the whole dragoon unit got disrupted and picked apart in front of the savy shotte unable to get their act together. 

Next my winged hussars charged into the reiters and should have annihilated them easily, as we know Polish hussars a well known for that -  but not this time somehow for some reason my dices weren‘t up for and the reiter were exreeemly good -  that so they had to flee ... off table ...

Next the reiter followed the hussars and run into my reiter elite and pancerni elite. But because, I was outnumbered (my points must have all gotten into the booze of the drunken levy nobility units) these units were just picked apart one after each other.

Then I just decided to retreat my cluster beaten dragoons to the hill in a bet to win by retreat!!! (I will patent that move!!) And attack with my hero Boguslaw and the last pancerni cluster the veterans again ... BUT to no avail, unlike when I play Swedes, they can apparently easily fire off any cavalry charge and pick out the commanding unit. 

So I let good old Boguslaw die. Firstly because otherwise I wouldn't have won the combat (point and unit wise and I AM brutal to all my tin troopers regardless of creed)  and secondly because Bart didn‘t like him so, naturally as a guest player I obliged.

Then we ended the battle also as the nobility more ore less left the table. Point wise I wasn't given the hill points as Barts reiter were within 10cm and contested my dragoons. As Bart told me after he concluded the point score it was a draw. My units were annihilated and the rest I really didn‘t understand. BUT afterwards he mailed me that good old Boguslaw was fat 5 points in the victory which made this retrospectively a whopping defeat for the commonwealth.

As we played over House party all miniatures, scenery, set up as well as loveley miniatures and pictures taken were courtesy of Bart.



































8 comments:

  1. That was lovely game. Nobles, who did nothing, hussars beaten and escaping from the battlefield. All the best. I hope that with next games I will be better cameraman. I would love to play an opposite part, but before that I'll give you rules to read ;)

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    1. Aaah don't you dare! I would have to take responsibility ...;)

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    2. Eerrm, I can‘t read polish!

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  2. Great looking game Michael, so lovely cavalries!

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    1. Thank you Phil! Yes Thats Bart‘s 15mm Renaissance army - very lovely indeed!

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  3. From the sands of Greece to the undulating plains of Poland-Lithuania! A great looking game to finish the year. It seems that the dice gods were favouring shot over horse. Certainly not a day for the annals of the winged hussars!
    Regards, James

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    1. Thanks James! Yes, I cannot fathom what it is about the winged hussars ... so far, in my humble experience, they simply do not live up to their reputation. Maybe it is all just feathers and show? ;)

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