After deployment, I rolled D12s for army die and command quality for each side’s command group leaders. The Gallic army came off best with a D12 army die and sequence deck. The Romans got a D10 army die and deck. Leadership rolls were very average for both sides.
Next I totted up the unit integrity of both armies. The Gallic army mustered only 100 unit integrity points. The combined Roman armies mustered a whopping 150 unit integrity. This disparity is largely due to the larger units making up the Gallic army – larger units gain a smaller number of unit integrity in relation to their size than ‘standard’ sized units.
Dividing the unit integrity value by 12 gave the number of army characterisation cards that each army would receive: Gallic 8. Roman 12.
Note that the pictured sequence cards are not the ones published with the rules in Miniature Wargames (which are quite plain), these are my personal decks (for my own use) that feature pictures downloaded from google images. Covering my arse, I think they might not be all available under copyright permissions – but who knows?
The Romans got 61 army morale chips and three characterisation sequence cards – Like Hail, Deft Cavalry, and By Saturn!!
The game is now set to go. I’ll leave you with a few extra close up shots.
10 comments:
Absolutely beautiful! Great stuff, James.
Love your graphic sense and presentation. Also your armies look a lot bigger than the numbersgiven in the previous post!
James,
Cant wait to see the outcome. Love the rules! Any chance you could create a file to download your card graphics?
Respectfully,
Gunny
Mouth watering as always
Hi Gunny H, email me off list.
Very very impressed!
Very nice!!
May you explain the basing system you use? It looks interesting.
James,
Any chance your considering a Punic Wars campaign or perhaps Caesar vs. the Celts? Using your campaign rules of course.....
Respectfully,
Gunny
When does the "clash" start!?
Cheers
Paul
Hi Paul and all, unfortunately my camera memory stick thing, with the pics of the first nights play, was deleted before I downloaded - for reasons beyond belief but including the fact I'm an idiot. We will have to run the game again sometime.
However, the game was much closer than expected until the Gauls finally collapsed and slaughter ensued.
Next week Peter and I will be playing the board game "Hannibal" with a view to using it as the basis of a 2nd Punic War campaign.
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