It was time again for a Big Sunday Game at the club, when me and John decided to go for a 28mm, Seven Years War game, totally fictional of course, with my collection of (mostly Crusader, Foundry and a few Frontrank guns) using my ruleset of "SevenYears", as most of the other suspects abandoned the ship for other amusements.
As John wanted to play the Austrians and serve her Majesty Maria Theresia, I obliged to take up the roll of the Prussians. I toned the Prussians a bit down and gave them the same command structure as their opponents. Everybody got roughly the same amount of troops, 2 horse brigades, three infantry and a fist full of guns. Huzzah, first fire for everybody, the Prussians had 1" more movement due to their drill, the Austrians had large units and had the better guns, which John did not exploited, but for that later.
To quicken the pace we both started in deployed lines, horses at the flanks the rest in the middle, nothing too avantgarde - BUT John started with 3 horse units at one side, which inspired me to some Frederizian Schabernack. ;)
Now it must be mentioned that John was a novice to the rules, but he took it like a fish to the water. His Grenadiers were massed at my right flank and pressured me the whole time and even proceeded to ruin my flank, totally and fully, it broke down. BUT I had withdrawn my tow horse units there and transported them via lots of staff officers and "forced marches" to my left flank, and it gave me the idea to turn the lines 90 degrees and leave him my right flank.
It took awhile to get my horses there, and inbetween it looked dire for me. My artillery was so abysmal, even John noticed it and left his softened up centre "unrallied" for two turns as he could "count on my bad dice rolls". And my right was losing infantry units now by turn!!
I wondered why, probably because he was a novice to the rules, he left his big (medium) 3 piece gun battery behind on a hill and due to distance could only lightly pepper my line.
Then finally my adhoc strategy had payed off, my complete cavalry arrived and I started the charges! One after the other of his cavalry units had to gave way and was beaten. Then I used my centre as a reserve and advance - only then he used his gun battery more against me, but now there were too many targets.
At last he conceded defeat, I had 8 vs 6 units/casualty advantage, the front line had turned 90 degree, but my right flank had just about halted his grenadiers ... many times Fortuna gave them just the pip they needed.
Had John more aggressively used his guns or worse moved them just a bit nearer, or got his grenadiers earlier into the fight, I would have lost the battle, so I was lucky at Glücksbach (lucky little river).
It was a thriller of a battle and could have gone both ways many times. So maybe we will do it again some Sunday!
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The initial set up |
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the Austrian left flank and the Savoyen dragoons |
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vs my Seidlitz hussars at the same spot |
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I move my guns off the hill |
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the Austrians keep suspiciously quiet |
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the lines drew closer |
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skirmish around Klein-Glücksbach |
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his grenadiers and dragoons advance ... OMG! |
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The Austrian oblique order |
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While he ankers his light right at the "Glücksbach". |
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my cavalry moves to my left I abandon my right flank |
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and kept a Prussian line just behind the road |
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Then the Austrian come nearer and the firefight begins |
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The Prussians blaze away before they can come nearer |
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in the hope that will stall them |
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Fine lines of white |
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and a silent gun battery |
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The firefight along all the battlefield |
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my shaken Jäger in Klein-Glücksbach won‘t just not accept defeat |
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The grenadiers come too near |
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the centre holds keeps quiet |
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My cavalry is ready ammassed |
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while my right flank is under heavy pressure |
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I withdraw shaken units, others retreat ... |
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one Prussian Infantry in the angle point of the Austrians ... blazes away |
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Now the centre of the Austrians advance too |
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But my cavalry has done the damage |
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the lines are turning to 90 degrees ... slowly |
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The grenadiers firing volley |
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after volley |
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but their centre gets shaken badly |
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The grenadier attack is halted |
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they fire away but don't advance |
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still my units crumble |
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one units grenadiers more or a charge ... |
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the shaken Savoy dragoons go!!! |
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The absolute rattled right of mine |
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The last Austrian dragoons to fight my cavalry hordes |
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Multiple times I send the Austrian Hussars off table |
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until they stop returning |
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The shattered Austrian right ... their gun battery unprotected |
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The casualty table with the final tally |
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The Prussian right still holds |
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The Austrian centre is now his right flank |
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some last turns ... |
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That just cemented my strategic position |
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at the end - the Austrians withdrew! |
I see that 12'x6' table becoming a standard size for Sunday games! I love it. Fantastic looking game.
ReplyDeleteOf course! Was there any other? :)
DeleteYes, it could be 20'x6' ;) I think that is the size of that mat.
DeleteThen definitively 20 next time! Hahah!
DeleteDamn good looking game. Almost makes me want to start over again in 28mm ;)
ReplyDeleteYeees, understandable it is a nice era to paint and collect.
DeleteMay I ask, what rules are you guys using? Is Angus Konstam & Dougie Trail's Die Kriegskunst still being used?
ReplyDeleteJust noticed that you're using your own rules... not sure how I missed that. Oops!
Delete