Whilst taking advantage of my better half being out on Saturday morning, Surjit and I got together via Zoom for a mid 18th century clash between Austrian and French forces. This was entirely an entirely fictional engagement.
I've been working on army lists to use with Koenig Krieg (Hex Version) based loosely on those in Age of Reason rules. For this encounter, both Surjit and I constructed 20 point armies.
| The armies deployed. |
Surjit played the French, while I commanded the Austrians.
| Both of us adopted fairly standard deployments with cavalry on the wings. Each holding a cavalry brigade in reserve. |
The Austrians quickly threw their cavalry wings forward. Perhaps trusting in their superior weight and morale.
| The southern flank saw the first big cavalry clash. One of the Austrian cuirassiers had taken a lot of fire from French infantry and artillery. |
| Nonetheless, the French horsemen were forced to retire. Unfortunately for the Austrian heavies, they had only inflicted light casualties on their Gallic counterparts and would be back. |
| Meanwhile, on the northern flank, the Austrian cavalry commander had been too impetuous and left an exposed flank which the French dragoons were all too happy to fall upon. |
| Sweeping away one cuirassier unit, the dragoons then ploughed into the next. |
| Within moments the cream of Austrian horsemanship had been dispersed. However, the successes of the dragoons left them out of control in the pursuit. |
| Just a photo to show the battle lines. In the centre, Croats and Chasseurs a Pied contested the ground. All the while both lines slowly crept forward while exchanging artillery fire. |
| In the north (Austrian right), reserve cavalry from both sides swiftly crossed the field in a fierce charge. |
Result
With both flanks in danger, we ran out of time and called a halt. We were happy to call this a draw.
Afterthoughts
This was a thoroughly entertaining couple of hours. A lot of fun. Koenig Krieg remains my personal "go to" rules. for the 18th century.
This was a thoroughly entertaining couple of hours. A lot of fun. Koenig Krieg remains my personal "go to" rules. for the 18th century.
This was a narrower table than I would usually use. However, it had the virtue of getting us into action from the start - no cautious manoeuvring for ages before any contact.
As for the army lists - so far, so good.
Really nice looking game sir!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Michal.
DeleteI agree with Michal! Table looks great. How is the KK translation to hexes working out for you? Any issues?
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jonathan. The rules are working well. Need to apply a couple of tweaks - mostly for play on a narrower table.
DeleteI need a couple more playtests for the rules and for the army lists.
An interesting game, I am still looking through various rules set for this period and may now look at KK, may also give it a go with hexes. Great stuff, cracking way to pass a couple of hours that's for sure.
ReplyDeleteThanks Donnie. Not everyone likes them, but I find they play well and feel right for the period. I really like the optional deployment phase which allows great fog of war. Let me know if you try them with hexes and I'll send my adaptations.
DeleteThe table may have been narrow, but there was certainly enough room for manoeuvre on the flanks which made for an entertaining game. a great-looking table there Richard.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lawrence. There was certainly a lot going on on the flanks. I under reported the activities of the Croats and Chasseurs in the centre. I think that it was Kolin (someone correct me!) where the Croats did a lot to harass the Prussians - something similar happened here.
DeleteYou picked the correct battle! It was Kolin where the Grenz harassed and disrupted the Prussian oblique maneuver forcing them to deploy too early and launch frontal attacks.
DeleteThank you, Jonathan.
DeleteLooks a good game Rich. Looking forward to giving it a go myself.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ray. I look forward to that too.
Deletethat looked a good game, were they 6mm scale figures?
ReplyDeleteYou have got me interested in Koenig Krieg also, I may see if I can track down a copy to add to my already-too-large rules selection!
Thanks, David. Yes they are 6mm figures. Baccus miniatures. I use the 2nd edition rules.
DeleteWell this all seemed to work out really well and certainly hexes are perfect for remote games:).
ReplyDeleteIt was a very good game. If I was playing this face to face then it would be hex-free. But for remote games, the hexes take the strain.
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