Sunday 31 December 2017

618 - Happy New Year!

For those of you who still swing by, 

THANK YOU!

...and 

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

My parting shot of 2017 (although not my last game, as it happens) will be this: I actually got to play X-Wing again last week, for the first time in a looooong time. Yay! - a double session of seeing the new film, 'The Last Jedi,' with my old adversary then blowing the dust off the old toys. 

I got absolutely thrashed, but it was really good fun. 

So long 2017; here's to a better 2018, eh?

TTFN,

- Chris. 

Friday 29 December 2017

617 - New Mini Lightbox: WOWEE!

Season's Greetings!

Well, as ever the title says it all* - for six quid on eBay I recently bought myself a portable mini lightbox, and with Mrs Drax out I thought I'd take it for a spin:
HOLY COW!

Even with my cruddy phone camera, this is astonishing!

The rest are my trial pics, but seriously, GET ONE OF THESE!
(I know I should really crop the pics,  but I was just too excited!)

HappyYear, everyone!

- Drax.

* It would've been nice if this post could've been something a wee bit Barnes Wallace-y, maybe...

Saturday 23 December 2017

616 - Bolt Action 15mm Epic Tank War!

Hullo All,

I'll keep this one super-brief: a new club(!) and a fun tank-wars in 15mm scale with Germans squaring off against Russians and allied Brits - about 5500 points. Ish. 

We blagged rules adjustments for activating the tanks in squadrons which _mostly_ worked and just got stuck in for a bit of fun, changing all movement and weapon ranges from inches to centimetres*.
The 8'x6' table pre-deployment. Brits in foreground
with Russians to the left; Germans across the way.
The Germans form a gunline whilst the Allies (somehow
lacking both superior numbers and their traditional
arty bombardment) surge forward. And get slaughtered.
On the right flank, the Sherman/Firefly squadrons edge
around and through the wooded stream.
The Sherman Squadrons continue to edge forward, and
also help to support the T34s.
On the left flank, my Firefly edges up and starts to snipe
at the Puma Zug...
...and draws first blood!
Next, our flanking units arrive on the left...worryingly
followed by a Panther Zug. 
Things are getting very sticky for the Russians on the
right, but the Shermans are solid. Well, the Fireflies
at least!
A surprise victory on the right: the veteran Panthers are
absolutely useless. but the recce vehicles who snuck on
behind them somehow manage to grind them down with
pins and hits from three HMGs and a light AT gun!
And on the right, the Russians continue to get taken apart
whilst the Germans panic themselves about the two
Fireflies! One of them rolls only 1s; the other destroys the
last Hetzer and a bloomin' terrifying Ferdinand!
In the end, it was a draw on order dice killed, but the umpire awarded the [moral] victory to the Allies, mostly because they bravely took the fight to the baddies! The Germans were indecisive and (with their Panthers at least) unlucky, and it cost them dearly in this engagement.

We'd played something like seven turns, and at the end the Allies absolutely owned the left flank, but would have serious trouble shifting the StuGs and PzIVs on their right. Pretty much all of the Allies' work had been done by the three stalwart Fireflies and the surprisingly lucky outflanking light recce unit, but a shout-out ought also to go to the last German Puma, who fought very well indeed.

A very friendly club to have been invited to, and a thoroughly enjoyable game. It was silly at times, fast-paced eventually, and a joy to look upon. Hooray!

Merry Christmas,

- Chris.

*My maths isn't great, but as a proportionate scaling option, inches-cm didn't quite seem to work. There are 2.54cm in an inch, making it significantly less than half, whereas 15mm (1:100) is over half of 28mm (1:56). To this end, maybe it'd be better just to halve distances when playing in the smaller scale in future...Either way, it doesn't really matter too much!

Sunday 17 December 2017

615 - Gaming Review - Osprey's 'Black Ops'

...And now for something Completely Different.
I had the singular pleasure, a fortnight ago, of trying out a ruleset completely alien to me: 'Black Ops', published by Osprey. This is more of a batrep than a review - not least because I didn't actually do more than flick through the rulebook: instead, I was taken through a game by none other than its designer, Guy! 

To that end, if you just want my thoughts on the game, feel free to scroll through and just read the text in yellow [or possibly some other colours at the end, as blogger's being weird again...] and the summary at the end. 

The Game:
Somewhere Sandy. North is at the bottom from this perspective.
I knew that my Target was in one of the buildings with a card
on it, but not which one
. My entry point was top-centre.
Guy's very used to giving intro games, so once I'd set up my interpretation of a compound somewhere out in Sandy Places, he breezed straight into it. We'd rolled up an extraction mission, and my job was simple: I had to get in and grab a local fellow who'd decided to defect to the Security Forces but was being guarded by the local warlord, who was suspicious of his intent. 
Their mission was a man. This man. Splitter.
It was a short-notice mission, so there was no top-cover, no heavy support, and no chance of waiting 'til dark. 

My team comprised the following: 
--   My 'Leader' (assault rifle)
--   Two Soldiers (assault rifles)
--   One Specialist (medic; assault rifle)
--   One Heavy (sniper: automated sniper rifle)
      ...and that's it.
My team. Jeez.
Facing me, I had something in the region of twenty locals armed variously with AKs and a few bolt action rifles. They were led by quite a tough Leader, and had a heavy machine-gun emplaced on one of the buildings in the compound. Ouch.

However, on my side I also had the element of surprise, for the locals weren't expecting me, their Leader was resting, and I could enter the board wherever I liked! One problem: I didn't know which building the Target was being held in. Damn.

Part 1:

At this point I started to work out how the activation works in this game: players draw shuffled playing cards. Leaders activated on Aces, Specialists on Queens, Troops on Jacks, and Heavies on Kings. There are two of each in black and two of each in red, and that's it. This means that each turn each type of unit gets two activations in a random order...so it soon became apparent that card-counting is a useful skill to bring to the table!

I got the first move and I got to 'delay' my specialist; that is, wait to take her action simultaneously with someone else's card...which I did, as the next card was my troops. They snuck in along the south wall of the compound and (much to my joy!) were able to not only sneak in, but also sneak up the compound wall and onto the first floor flat roof! Brilliantly, and much like a role-playing game, the facts that they were trained experts and working as a group of three meant that bonuses stacked for them to manage it. Genius
"Allez-Oop!" Human-pyramid time. 
"Phew! No-one saw us!"
[Note the HMG team on the roof]
The next bit was absolutely fantastic! With the delay of a couple of activations, I got the gang to rush up through the roof hatch and surprise the HMG team with an swift and deadly assault ("CQC") from behind. Wow - so much fun!
"They do not like it up 'em"
"But what," I hear you cry, "Were the locals doing during all this?" - An excellent question. Allow me to address it...

For the locals, their activations are - at least until the alarm is raised - randomly generated. And this is another work of genius: the chart itself is  simply and lovingly done: 
So far, with very little NOISE generated, the locals had
mostly yawned, bimbled around aimlessly and failed to
spot the intrusion.
As for their Leader? Well, in this scenario, he's only activated once there's enough NOISE to make him think something's afoot. What's NOISE? - In the early, sneaky stages of this game, every time anyone does something which causes noise (running, CQC, shooting, shouting etc.) they accumulate noise counters. The more noise counters there are, the higher the chance of the goodies being spotted or the baddies' Leader being roused to action. Again: the system is genius

Sadly for Sneaky-Beaky-Team-Alpha, one of the guards thought he saw something and shouted a warning. Luckily, no-one else reacted, but that particular guard did come back to haunt me...
THIS blasted guard saw my Leader still on the roof.
Probably because he's standing there waving at him!
Meanwhile - from afar - my sniper had snuck on and
taken up a commanding position. He tried to silence
the shouty guard, but missed. Twice. Crap sniper.
Part 2:

I can't remember quite what went wrong at this stage, but this is when it all started to kick off.

That blasted guard somehow rolled luckily and when the baddies roll high enough (or with enough bonus points from noise counters!) this means that their player can take control of them! Well, he did, and Guy did. And he posted him on overwatch looking at the door of the building I was in. Bugger.


This severely limited my options, and in the next round - sadly, I just had to act. So, deep breath, and the two Toms bulled open the door, stepped outside and one of them was immediately slotted. Buggery-bugger. His buddy returned fire and failed to kill shouty-guard, and then my specialist medic leapt to her fallen comrade only to discover there was sod-all she could do for him other than stabilise him and drag him off for a casevac. As she couldn't do this, she just dragged him back into the building. Strewth.

All this shooty-shooty, of course, had created a shed-load of noise, and - inevitably - this woke up the Boss. At this point, all bets are off, all of the noise counters disappear and the baddies all become directly controllable. Drat. 
There was a brief exchange of fire across the courtyard, and my medic slotted a fellow popping his head through the side door, but sadly my second soldier also got shot when he tried to close with the shouty guard. Aargh! My medic could, of course, had rushed to his aid, but she did a bit of quick triage from afar, realised that she could neither stabilise him in time nor medevac him in any way...and instead joined the Leader in order to try to get to their target. 

Things were not looking good, but at least, with the outpouring of all the baddies in the compound (two of the damned buildings were bloody empty!) my two surviving snatch-team members now knew which building their target was in. The one outside of the compound. Grrr...

But what about the sniper?!

Ah, well, every new turn, the baddies get to roll a d6. For each cumulative six points they get 10pts' worth of reserves arriving from a randomised table edge. Six points is enough for - say - four troops or maybe a leader with two troops...or apparently they can wait 'til they've accumulated twelve points and bring on some heavy support. Guy got lucky and by turn three he had 12 points. So he brought on a T72. That's right: a frickin' T72. And it drove straight on an blatted the crap out of my sniper's hiding place. So much for my heavy support. Git.
"Sniper down!" The T72 model had been on-table earlier,
which had confused me a little, but it was just an
oversight on Guy's part.

Part 3:

Well, with my sniper dead, a T72 rampaging around, the hornets' nest stirred and only two characters still active, I figured it was time to bug-out and grab the Target. Simple! Sheesh.

In good news, my Leader and Medic managed to shoot their way out of the compound, with the Leader slotting the baddies' Leader (he was pretty high on the SF 'Most Wanted' list anyway, right?) and darting out of the side door shortly after the T72 burst through the North side of the compound, crushing one of his own and spraying MG fire at my guys.
It was a simple sprint race after this point: I had to get to the outlying building and grab my man before either he pegged it off the board or everyone got crushed by the sodding tank. Knowing that Guy had rolled for more reserves and had two more troops and a new Leader entering frustratingly close by, I chose to use my activations to set up some classic fire-and-manoeuvre: the Medic went on overwatch whilst the Leader moved forward and then they swapped. A lovely mechanic!
My two guys - having pegged it from the door (left)
assault the baddies...
...as the stooges drag the Target almost off-table (right)
The Medic plugs his guards but hasn't enough activations
left to get to his side.

The new arrivals were eliminated, my guys closed with the Target and then - Aargh! - more reserves arrived just as the medic had managed to shoot the Target's two guards. In the dying stages of the game two more significant things happened: (1) my Leader got wounded and was ignored(!) by the Medic shortly before he was run over by the tank(!!) and (2) my Medic somehow managed to shoot the new new arrivals and finish off the (third) baddie leader in CQC. This meant that somehow - bafflingly - she could run him off the board and usher him straight into the waiting [and presumably T72-proof!] exfil chopper!
Endgame. Slaughter. Victory?
A victory...of sorts. A very costly one.

I had snatched the Target with my Medic and killed three local Leaders...but at the cost of two men killed outright, one almost certainly bled-out, and one stashed in a room, stabilised but doubtless about to be taken prisoner. If he's lucky.

Great fun.

The Review-y Bit:
Wow. What a great game that was: we told a great story and had fun doing so - just what I was hoping for! 

The gameplay - once I'd wrapped my head around it - was very clever indeed. It was obviously written by a gamer for gamers and the gentle humour seemed well-judged. 


The storytelling element really impressed me; not least the elements that felt like a good, solid nod to an RPG game. I absolutely loved the way that the random activations worked, and I loved the nature of the spotting checks and the superb noise counters mechanic too. Case in point: if I'd not assumed that Guy was double-bluffing me with his placement of the Target, I literally could have just snuck in, crept upto the outbuilding, looked through the window, seen he was in there, burst in, snatched him and bugged-out. 


Any criticisms?


- Yes, but they're minor.


Firstly, I thought that the sniper really ought to have been better at hitting things in broad daylight at a 27" range. 


Secondly, the T72. I know it was a bit of a giggle, but it just seemed too much, and maybe a bit too unlikely. I can only imagine that a Toyota with a heavy MMG or suchlike would've been more appropriate and more proportionate...and probably more usefully mobile. But then, that's neither here nor there in terms of the rules themselves.


Finally, there seemed to be an absence of quick reference charts at the back. I could be wrong, but if not, it's an easy fix if ever it gets a second edition. 

Oh, and do not judge this book by its cover. I should reiterate here that I'm judging the book having not read its contents, but still: the cover of this ruleset undoubtedly cheapens it. The futuristic setting it portrays is absolutely do-able with these rules, as are a whole variety of different scenarios, including other missions, maritime missions, all sorts. 

I urge you to get hold of this and give it a go. I had an absolute blast!


Cheers,

- D.

Wednesday 13 December 2017

614 - Britain Vs Japan - A Bolt Action Disaster!

Hullo, All.

A BatRep with a difference today: the difference being that I took an absolute spanking! Yup - I got thrashed. But more of that shortly...

I'll keep this reasonably short: I'll do most of it with pictures. 
Fig. 1: the battlefield. Why are the Shropshire boys fighting
the Japanese on the outskirts of a small French village?
- Good question.
About a month ago, I fixed up a date to play Colin at the club, as he'd been putting together his Japanese force and I'd mentioned that I'd be happy to throw-down. We agreed on 1500pts of whatever, and I put together a fun little list that was roughly my normal platoon from 4KSLI with a Cromwell CS in support, and for a change I took along a second platoon for a giggle: a recce screen comprising a small carrier section, my faithful Staghound and my Recce Stuart. As it happened, the carrier section was - in fact - crewed by my [then] new RAF Regiment troops.
I brought my Vickers MMG for a change. Waste of time!
My new Chaplain (left) played medic (uselessly). Oh, and I've
finally finished my medium mortar. I'd forgotten that.
There were three of these infantry sections, and that's the
Recce Stuart on the right.
In their first outing, the Rock Apes played 'Recce Section'...
...and the heavier stuff on the right. What could possibly go awry?
Against me I had something like two large veteran squads, a Chi-Ha tank, a Ho-Ro SPG, some spearmen, a couple of regular squads, some suicidal fellows, a flamethrower team in a small family car, an air observer, and a medium AT gun. Against the Imperial Japanese Army, I actually had more dice. And I still lost. 
Colin's Japanese were very pleasingly painted!
Here are the bulk of the pics; excuses follow!
The Japanese centre. I'd immobilised his car but not dented its
passengers. More-or-less my only success was destroying his AT
gun in turn 1. It had been here. My only real sucsess.
In this pic (from my side) you can already see the ruins of the
building on the crossroads which had previously housed 3 Sect.
The Ho-Ro (T-L) blew it and them sky high with one lucky shot.
Bugger.
In this pic, you can clearly see the (already pinned) Bren Carriers
(which I'd spread out in order to use their pintle-mounted Brens
as an AA screen. With the pins, and bad luck, they failed utterly.
Also here, you can see the smoldering remains of my Stuart Jalopy
and the hunk of uselessness that was my Cromwell CS.
In the centre, my surprisingly brave Rock Apes went to meet
the spearmen (who'd already poked my PIAT team to death
through a building's window!).
They did well, but sadly it wasn't enough.
Meanwhile, on the right, my stalwart Staghound had one task...: 
..."Slowly edge forward and use all ten shots each turn to easily
destroy those Japanese advancing in the open toward you"...
...Needless to say, it just couldn't hit them for toffee. *sigh* 
The Chi-Ha advances. Only AV 8. Can I damage it? - Can I Hell.
After the battle: the FOO and my new Medic (Chaplain) pose
for a photo with 1 Sect. They just couldn't whittle-down the
looming Japanese veterans!
After the battle: I liked this pic...
...and this one...
...now available in black-and-white!
Colin's very neat little Chi-Ha. Seriously: this thing should not
have survived.
And his gorgeous Ho-Ro. Easily the best unit for the Japanese.
I'd never properly faced a heavy howitzer before and now I'll
know always to steer clear of buildings when up against it!
Again, I simply could not draw a bead on it to pin it. Ridiculous.
Why did I lose?

Good question! It wasn't the nasty Japanese special rules (the sneaky set-up was negated by the mission - everyone started off-board), nor was it my tactical failings. Against an entirely unfamiliar foe, my 11AD chaps actually made some good decisions, as far as I was concerned. Nope. What led to my downfall was simply BAD LUCK. 

Dirty, rotten, stinking, baaaaaaaad luck. 

I've never considered myself either lucky or unlucky as a wargamer: I've always enjoyed a bit of both. In this game though, the dice gods utterly and comically deserted me. So it goes.

For his part, my opponent Colin played a good, solid game, and quite rightly capitalised appropriately on my idiotic dice rolls. He was - to quote (amongst others) Col Tim Collins, "magnanimous in victory." 

Here's to the Victor, eh?!

Cheers,

- D.