Thursday, 2 April 2015

Battle Report: Elves vs Orcs

Now that the Easter holidays have arrived I have been able to get the boys together for another Battle Companies skirmish in the new den. Alex chose to be Elves, and used his own painted figures, whilst Nick used some of the orcs that I got for him cheaply off Ebay.

After the Easterlings were defeated at the ford a few weeks previously, news spread amongst the forces of evil of the reduced garrison of Rohan troops in the area. A local orc chieftain took it upon himself to investigate in the hope of eating some man-flesh. Unfortunately he was rather shocked upon arrival at the ford, as the humans had moved out to be replaced by a warband of hated Elves.

Turn 1 - Elf Priority
The elves had got wind of the advance of a small party of orcs and raced to the ford to defend the important river crossing. However, with a sneaky move on behalf of the orc leader, a couple of archers had hidden themselves amongst the trees of the small copse by the barn.

This was Nick being a bit naughty. We had set up the board a few hours earlier in anticipation of playing the game later, but Nick had snuck into the games room whilst we weren't looking and moved a couple of his orcs.


The elves and orcs advanced upon the barn, neither aware of the other's presence.

Turn 2 - Elf Priority
The elf commander ordered his two archers to take the hill and lay down suppressing fire if needed whilst the rest of his warband advanced through the copse in the hope of ambushing the advancing orc warparty.

Meanwhile, the orcs had crossed the ford and were headed to their rendezvous with the advance guard archers when they heard the twang of the orc bows. The skill of the orc archers was not up to much and the two shafts alerted the elf wariors to the presence of their hated enemy.
Turn 3 - Elf Priority
The elven warriors advanced towards the orc ambushers with the intent of killing the archers as quickly as possible. The two elven bowmen made it to the top of the hill in time to see the orc archers loose two more ineffective shafts at their leader.

The orc main party advanced around and over the fallen idol, set there to spiritually guard the ford, towards their kin in order to aid them against the elven threat. The two archers shot at the elves again but still failed to find their marks; the trees were obviously protecting them.
Turn 4 - Elf Priority
The elven warriors moved rapidly towards their foe and began to flush the orcs out of cover. The elven sharpshooters on the hill saw their opportunity and were able to bring down one of the orc archers - first blood to the elves.

Swan-feather fletched shafts alerted the orc leader of the counter-attack and he sped up his advance towards his archers, who now retreated from the oncoming elven force. The last remaining archer let loose his arrow but even though it hit, it failed to penetrate the thick elven armour.
Turn 5 - Elf Priority
Sensing a swift victory, the elven warriors rushed into the clearing beyond the glade and formed up to take on the orc threat. The elven archers spotted the orc leader advancing through the woodland but their shafts were to miss him.

The sight of the hated elves spurred the orc leader to advance his wariors into combat with them - they had numbers on their side to overcome the natural fear of their foes. Spurred on by the arrival of his fellows, the lone orc archer tried to pick off an elf at the edge of the encroaching combat - although the dart flew true, the thick elven armour saved the warrior.
Turn 6 - Elf Priority
Now that the elven archers had a bearing on their enemy, they loosed more shafts into the small copse. Their aim was true, but the orc armour turned their points.

A fearsome melee erupted by the river, with each side trading blows, but the superior numbers of the orcs began to tell. One of the heavily armoured elven spearmen was cut-off from his brethren and surrounded by four orcs; he was cut down in his tracks.

Turn 7 - Elf priority
The two warband leaders faced off in the ensuing fearsome melee but neither managed to land a telling blow. Their troops fared better as an elf and an orc fell to the others' blades.
Turn 8 - Elf Priority
Elven superiorty in hand-to-hand combat began to tell, as another orc warrior was cut down in the raging fight. The orc archer, after seeing one of his nearby comrades being chopped down, decided to shoot into the melee to incapacitate one of the elf warriors and thus save his own stinking hide. Fortunately for his fellow warrior orc armour can be quite effective at stopping shafts.
Turn 9 - Elf Priority
Sensing victory, the elven commander hurled himself back into the combat and was able to land a killing blow upon the orc leader. Luckily for the orc commander the Fates smiled upon him this day and the blow that would ordinarily have felled an ox glanced from his armour causing nothing more than a few bruises.

Turn 10 - Orc Priority
The wild toing and froing of the melee meant that blades flashed in upon the two remaining elf warriors. The orc leader managed to land a killing blow upon the elf leader, but the Fates were also on his side today as the blow glanced harmlessly from his shield. The two elven archers on the hill watched in dismay as their leader rocked upon his heels under the force of the last blow, but their groans turned to cheers as their leader's spear gutted the orc leader whilst he gloated over his stumbling adversary.

As the point of the spear exited from the orc leader's back, the rest of the orc warband turned tail and fled the scene.


Summary - A Draw

The elves lost two warriors to the orcs' leader and three warriors. Neither side was broken, so a result could not be called.

This was initially going to be a battle to the bitter end. However, as the orcs were beginning to fall quite rapidly to the elves towards the end and Alex was beginning to get a little frustrated as I was helping Nick a little, I decided to cut it short at turn 10 (when we were at Turn 7). This turned out to be quite fortuitous as the results of the melee in that particular round gave a natural break-point to the game - the death of the orc leader.

Even though the elves probably won the moral victory (killed the orc leader and killed more points worth of enemy), the next turn would most likely have seen the elves swamped again and Nick's rolls could have been better - he had had atrocious runs of low numbers (especially with Priority - only winning one roll in nine) but the combats were due to end with the elves surrounded and therefore classed as Trapped. I decided to call this game a draw due to the tears on one side and the spectre of teenage grumpiness on the other.

After the game had been cleared away, both boys cheered up a little and said they wanted to play again soon, but Nick wants to be elves next time.

Thursday, 12 March 2015

A Sad Day - Terry Pratchett dies - aged 66

After his bitter fight with Alzheimer's (a terrible disease that has affected my family) the genius that was Terry Pratchett died today.


Long may he live on in our memory ...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-31858156


Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Plastic Scenery: Basecoated

This post is a couple of days later than anticipated, but the bulk of the basecoating has been done on the plastic scenery I have been working on. I also managed to find a few more items (Lord of the Rings ruins, Renedra tents) lurking in an old cardboard box to add to the pile.

The wooden buildings and fencing etc. have all had a quick spray of Games Workshop's Rhinox Brown. It is a nice dark brown that I will be using as a basecoat for many of my minis (especially the orcs) as it will do the best part of some of the painting for me - all I will need to do is add a few highlights and Bob's your aunty's husband.

Here is a quick view of the basecoated and newly undercoated scenic items in my collection so far...


The second picture shows the subtle difference between the black undercoat and the brown base coat. From the top picture you can also see the tents and barrels from my small selection of Renedra generic scenic items, as well as just about make out the LotR ruins.

I will be giving the tents and latest barrels a brown base coat to bring them up to speed with the rest of the collection, but the stone tower and LotR ruins pieces will need a grey base coat. I was thinking that I may make up some small piles of barrels glued together to give larger scenery items for figures to hide behind, as well as the originals being singly deployed for more scatter. I am also thinking of plonking some green stuff into the tops of a few to represent open barrels of produce - apples etc.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

Battle Report: Rohan vs Easterlings (07/03/15)

Now that we have a new gaming room, I got my two boys together this afternoon for a rumble somewhere on the borders of Rohan. Nick played Rohan and Alex played the Easterling raiders (the only two armies for which I have painted minis). I sorted them out a Battle Company each and let them go at it.

I am very rusty with the rules at the moment, so a few things were missed and a couple of things were done in the wrong order during a turn or two, but these may not have made any difference anyway as Nick's dice-rolls were a typical little kid's and newbie's rolls - he always rolled what he required when he needed it except in the first couple of turns.

I began to photograph the game, but the camera battery died on me after a couple of turns. I recharged it and took a picture of the battlefield after the fifth and final turn!

Nick set up on the left hand side of the board in a small mass of troops. Alex, as he was on the right hand side of the board and therefore partially cut off by the river, he decided to set up as close to the ford as possible.

Turn 1 - Rohan priority

Nick and Alex both advanced their troops. Nick moved towards the barn and Alex made his way across the ford.

Turn 2 - Easterling priority
Alex advanced but Nick was a bit more canny and after advancing his warriors, he used his archers to shoot from a distance - both missed.


Turn 3 - Easterling priority
Alex advanced more and Nick did the same - again both archers missed.

Turn 4 - Rohan priority
Nick advanced into combat but used his throwing spears on the way in, killing the Easterling leader. This caused an immediate morale check which caused an Easterling archer to flee off the table and one of the spearmen to retreat - the rest held their nerve.
Alex was able to retaliate in his turn, with the remaining archer shooting into the Rohan ranks (but missed) and his heavily armed troops despatched a Rohan warrior.

Turn 5 - Rohan priority
This is where it completely fell apart for Alex.
Nick advanced his men back into combat, but the throwing spears missed. He then proceeded to win every combat. The first combat between the Rohan leader and one of his men and a single Easterling led to the Easterling being despatched. The other two combats resulted in no wounds being scored. This is where we got it in the wrong order. We had missed Nick's Shoot Phase for his archers, so we ran it now - they killed another Easterling warrior!


Alex ran a further Morale check on his troops as they had dropped below 50%, but only one failed. He decided to run with the combat as his armour was better than the Rohan warriors' and he fancied his chances, but he lost both of the fights and his warriors were both killed. The last remaining member of the Easterling Battle Company fled the table.


Summary - A Rohan Victory

Rohan lost 1 warrior to the Easterlings' 5 warriors.

I am not sure what would have happened if Alex had attempted to use his Fate point for his leader, but the way Nick was rolling the result was inevitable anyway.

Nick really enjoyed his victory, but was very upset when he lost his single warrior. Alex took it on the chin and chalked this experience up to Nick having beginner's luck and the usual knack for six year olds to roll whatever die score that is required (never play Nick at Frustration - he never loses!).

Both boys said that they would love to play again next weekend, with Alex using his own figures - his High Elves. I will continue to play Battle Companies with them but not use the promotion tables etc. yet. When we are all familiar with the rules again and can cope with larger amounts of minis, I may push the points limit up from approximately 50 or so to 250. This will allow the boys to field a couple of warbands with proper captains/leaders and maybe even named heroes.

Plastic Scenery: Undercoated

The weather forecast was correct, and the sun shone all day. Temperatures hit the mid-teens and there was no sign of rain. This gave me the opportunity I was looking for to undercoat the plastic scenery I constructed yesterday.

As I have never really given a step-by-step guide for anything I have painted so far on this blog, I will start from now on with these pieces of battlefield scenery. They were started off yesterday by being glued and left to dry overnight, and today they gained a black undercoat. Here they are in their full undercoated glory...







Whilst I was working on these and tidying the new games room further, I found I still have three or four large cardboard boxes full of gaming stuff that needs to be gone through. In these boxes I found a few more scenery items.

First up is a Grand Manner Roman Watchtower...


This is a hard resin building that comes in three pieces. I managed to clean most of it up but the veranda/walk-way has a lot of excess resin between the crossed-beams. I managed to clean out a few of the gaps but the resin between the bars is so thick that I ran the risk of breaking the building in order to clean it up. I decided to call a halt on cleaning those spaces up and have settled on the back story that hides have been hung between the slats to stop stray arrows from passing through the gaps.

Next up was a bunch of Games Workshop Lord of the Rings Ruins...



I undercoated some fallen pillars on their sprue and glued up some ruined walls (these will be undercoated tomorrow weather permitting). I also found a couple more sprues of Renedra barrels to add to those I already have. I will definitely make some of these up into solid stacks of barrels to add some interest to the battle board. This will mean if the gaming table is knocked, I wont have to hunt around for dozens of individual pieces under furniture where they have rolled.

Tomorrow I will hopefully undercoat the pieces not already undercoated and then base coat those that have been.