I have been agonizing for quite some time over the details of my planned Wagon Train game for Historicon, and this weekend I finally had the chance to work it all out and set it down on paper, along with a playtest.
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Landsturm: Ferdinand Mittwoch
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View from the opposite side of the valley - Achenfußus at the far left, Schpaz and the Arlberg are in the near middle, and the mountain top village of Hofbrau is is in the upper right.
The choke point - the Greißenberg mountains to the left, the village of Mittleschmertz at the bifurcation of the roadway, and the Zweibruk bridge over the Sebastienbach river.
The scenario is fictitious, but based upon many such situations during the revolt in the Tyrol, and the classic Wagon Train scenario by C.S. Grant. . The title is stolen from one of John Gill's chapters in his excellent "Withe Eagles to Glory". The rules used will be Field of Battle, 2nd edition, by Brent Oman.
"It is the Spring of 1809, and the Tirolese have risen in revolt against their Bavarian masters. The Rebels have cut off the garrison in the Fortress of Biersteinburg, and supplies are running low. A wagon train of much needed supplies, escorted by a detachment of Rheinbund troops have been dispatched to re-provision the fort. By now, the dangers of the Tirolese countryside are well know to the Bavarians and their allies. It is easy to get cut off and isolated in a land where the natives know the alpine byways almost from birth, and ambushes and man made avalanches are an ever present danger!"
Hand drawn map of the battlefield, as drawn by a survivor
All Rivers are impassable except at the bridges, which cannot be destroyed.
All buildings are Class II terrain. The fort is class II terrain.
All unoccupied buildings may be burned
by Allied troops in contact with them on a MELEE card, adding D4 - 1
Morale points to Rhine confederation pool, but also causes the Sturmglocken to ring *(Tirolese get a “Bell” token to play later), calling the
local populace to arms!
Bridges are class II
terrain for movement (only)
*** ALL Tirolese treat Mountains (Class
III, and also impassable to cavalry and artillery otherwise) as Class II
terrain for movement. In addition, while in Mountains, Tirolese never
count as outflanked or hit in rear for melee or fire. Tirolese in
Mountains may always expend a segment to change facing in lieu of
movement.
Roads do NOT grant any bonus for
movement, but Wagons cannot leave the roads.
Losing wagons or UI from Wagons does
not cost Allied Morale points, but wagons eliminated in melee with
Tirolese grant the Rebels a bonus Morale point each (2 points for the Beer
Wagon!)
Garrison of Biersteinburg: Only the
cavalry and Baden Infantry may leave the fort via the gate, and only
after the first Allied units come within 36” of the Fort.
Objective: Allies must get 2 points
worth of wagons into the fort by the end of the game. If the Tirolese eliminate sufficient wagons to make that impossible, they win The Bierwagen
counts as two points, all others as one. The game can also be won or lost if either side fails Army Morale.
The troops of the Rhine confederation set up first.
The troops of the Rhine confederation set up first.
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Tirolese
16 units total; 18 Morale points.
Average Sequence Deck
9 Schutzen:
All DD6, CD10, Down 2 in melee
2 UI each, Formations: Skirmish, Line
Rifle armed!
6 Landsturm:
All DD4, CD8; up 2 in melee
3 UI each, Formations: Column, Line
Landsturm do NOT suffer any oenalty
fioer not being in square when charged frontally.
** Special: If at the edge of any
Mountain terrain, Landsturm may launch prepared avalanches on ALL
enemy troops within 12” straight ahead (target units must have at
least1 full stand within the “Avalanche” area to be hit). Roll an
unmodified D8 vs defender DD. “Reload” on Artillery Firepower
card.
"Greencoat" brigade: Andreas Hofer LD 10, Up 2 for rallying. Hofer
is C-in-C
Schutzen: Anton Kerschbaum
Schutzen: Wolfgang Iselsberg
Schuitzen: Uwe HolzleitenLandsturm: Ferdinand Mittwoch
Landsturm: Karl Montag'
"Browncoat" brigade: Josef Speckbacher LD12
Schutzen: Otto Grießen
Schutzen: Ingo BrennerGünter Arlberg
Landsturm: Ludwig Sonntag
Landsturm: Johann Freitag
"Blackcoat" brigade: Joacjhim Haspinger LD8; Up 2 for combat for any
unit he is attached to.
Schutzen; Friedrich Ursprung.
Schutzen: Ernst Stripsenjoch
Schutzen: Dieter Pillersee
Landsturm: Franz Dienstag
Landsturm: Luis Donnerstag
Tirolese Wooden Gun: can be added to any one command
Light Artillery,:DD4, CD8,
Short range or less only. 1 UI
Possible Tirolese Starting positions:
(10; at least one unit MUST start in
each location)
Hofbrau
Brennersberg (must be over 12” from
starting positions of CoR)
Mittleschmertz
Greissenberg
Dreibruck
Zweibruck
Fierbruck
Arlberg
Schpaz
Achenfuss
Tirolese troops never count as being
out of Command solely because of distance from their Command Group
Leader.
Each Tirolese unit, if desired by the
controlling player, may be activated to move on a MOVE or Sneaky
Heathens card.
Die Sturmglocke:
Tyrolese start with 2 Bells. For each Tirolese settlement that is burned, they gain another Bell.
On any Leadership card, they may play one bell to ring the Sturmglocke.
This will either allow a destroyed Tirolese unit to be returned to
the game at ANY of the above starting locations as long as the terrain they
start in is more than 12” from any CoR troops (such new troops are
immediately visible), OR add 1 Morale point to their total
Sneaky “Heathens” (2 are added to
the CoR deck): acts as a free Move card for any Tirolese units.
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Rhine Confederation:
Start deployed in the area shown on Deployment Ma:
C-in-C, Tolle Wurst LD 12
19 units, 19 Morale points
Skilled Sequence deck, BUT replace One Move One Command card with a MOVE card, and add two "Sneaky Heathens" cards to their deck.
19 units, 19 Morale points
Skilled Sequence deck, BUT replace One Move One Command card with a MOVE card, and add two "Sneaky Heathens" cards to their deck.
1st Brigade: Maximilian Trunkenheit LD 10
1 Bavarian Light DD 8, CD 12
4 Bavarian Line DD 6, CD 10
2nd Brigade Friedrich Fehler LD 10
1 Baden Light DD 8, CD 12
3 Baden Line DD 6, CD 10
3rd Brigade: Karl Klopfen LD10
Bavarian Chevau-Legers DD 6, CD 10
Bavarian Artillery DD 6, CD 10
Wagon Train: Langsame Räder LD 8
Wagons. DD 6, CD 6 (no modifiers in combat)
2 UI each {MUST remain on the roads, move at Infantry speed)
2 UI each {MUST remain on the roads, move at Infantry speed)
At Bierstein Fortress
(* = cannot leave fortress, others can leave only once friends are spotted within 36")
Commander: Otto von Sitzmark LD 8
(* = cannot leave fortress, others can leave only once friends are spotted within 36")
Commander: Otto von Sitzmark LD 8
1 Wurzburg Line* DD 4, CDS 8
1 Baden Line DD 6, CD 10
1 Baden Artillery*
(deployed as 2 sections, one in each tower, measure fire from the entryway).
(deployed as 2 sections, one in each tower, measure fire from the entryway).
1 Baden Light Dragoons DD 6, CD 10
The table set up, with the Confederation of the Rhine troops deployed near the village of Rottenberg.
The table is 12 feet x 5 feet, the foot on the far left of the table is not used. The Brennerberg mountains overlook their deployment zone.
View from the opposite side of the valley - Achenfußus at the far left, Schpaz and the Arlberg are in the near middle, and the mountain top village of Hofbrau is is in the upper right.
The choke point - the Greißenberg mountains to the left, the village of Mittleschmertz at the bifurcation of the roadway, and the Zweibruk bridge over the Sebastienbach river.
Sounds like an interesting scenario and looks like a great (and unusual!) Table!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Hopefully it will be all of that. I have some scratch built Tirolese buildings in the works as well.
DeleteSounds great, most impressive mountains!
ReplyDeleteVery cool scenario and amazing terrain!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dean!
ReplyDeleteLooks like fun. Glad to see the mountains get used so dramatically.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Joe I am undecided about building up the insides of the "mountains", but may do so.
DeleteCool setup, Peter! Let's hope that Herr Freitag covers himself in glory or at least brats and beer.
ReplyDeleteWe will see; "It was the beer-st of times, it was the wurst of times.."
DeleteUgh. Almost painful to read...
DeleteYou obviously haven't met my freind Dr. Tim C. from the UK, LOL!
DeleteGood luck with your game. The supplies have quite a way to travel looking at the photo taken from the far end of the tabletop.
ReplyDeleteThe playtest made it seem likely the game will end due to Army Morale failure by one side or the other. but it still needs the wagons to drive the narrative and gameplay.
DeleteLooks great! And that reminds me...
ReplyDeleteThat looks great, and I really like the innovative way you have done those mountains.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lawrence!
DeletePeter, when attendees see how unusual a scenario this is, and hear how much fun it was, you will have to run two games a day.
ReplyDeleteI hope it is that successful! I have had this one in mind for many years, but fleshing out the details has been a real challenge!
DeleteLooking very nice Peter.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Carlo!
DeleteAh Tyrol! Will be interesting to see how this one goes :)
ReplyDeleteHopefully I will be able to post a short report about the play test game tonight.
DeleteGreat outline and a good gag .... worthy of being in the PEL (if it isn't already!
ReplyDeleteThe game is in the PEL, although the listing is much less punny!
Delete