The Grumpy Gamer

Being the occasional postings of an old man who plays with toys

Recently Kieran and I played Panther Hunt for the second time. We are enjoying the game even more than we thought and we ar eplanning to play as much KGN as we can.

My British force is coming along well, with some 250 points almost ready to go. Cromwells, Achilles and infantry are all ready for basing and completion, with many “bits” are on the table ready to roll.

Our second game looked better than the first as well. Kieran is an accomplished modeller and his force looked awesome.

The table

10 seconds into turn 1!

 

A bad day for the armour – “Ah – THAT Tiger…”
The British infantry advance on the left…

 The game took an interesting turn from about turn 5 – when I drew an aircraft chit. Both Kieran and I smiled and turned to the appropriate section in the rules and started to read. At this point I was well behind.

The random roll produced a Spitfire, bummer as I had bought a Typhoon! Nevertheless Raffy dove in and removed two squads of infantry and the Pak40. Game over.

The one thing that we have found with the game is that good tactics are rewarded – skill also. On the whole fantastic value at £48!

Our next game will be in April – 250 points. I am frantically painting my Forward Air Observer and Radio truck!

 

 

 

SAGA produced rather a lot of publicity when it was first released. The guys at Tomahawk and Gripping Beast were clearly taken off-guard by the demand for this game. This caused a bit of negative press for a while.

Of course those of us who supported the venture by pre-ordering had no such issues. I received my rules and Saga dice – along with the advertised free figure – all well within the promised timeframes.

When the package arrived I did some quick math – £25 for the rules and a further £12 for the dice. Add to this the postage and I was out of pocket some £40-£50 give or take a penny or two.

Firstly I will say that when I opened the package my initial reaction was one of disappointment – £25 for a few pages, soft covered and stapled. Mmmnnn.

Once I opened the rules and proceeded to read through them though I realised that whilst the price was high, so were the production values and the contents.

This is a complete game. No supplements needed – just add figures and you are away.

I had a number of Wargames Factory Vikings in various stages of completion and proceeded to finish these for SAGA. I can safely say that whilst I felt that the rules were a little high on the price scale, the fact that I can put a complete army on the table for less than £20 more than compensated for this.

The gameplay is excellent – with the game being driven by some simple and yet very elegant mechanisms. The secret is to learn how to use your board. Allocating dice to this board will give your faction access to special skills and abilities. These are the true flavour of the game.

I have played a number of Saga games now – both as Viking and recently as Saxon. I like this game.

Reviews

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I have played and purchased so many different games over the years. Ancients, Napoleonics, WW2 and so many many more.

I am often asked my opinions of a set of rules by others who are trying to make an informed decision. I try to match my reply to the person asking – ie “You would love them because…” or “You should save your money because…”

For those interested I have begun a section on the blog just for reviews. These reviews will be in two parts – the facts (ie the rules say…) and my personal opinions (where I have them) and why I feel the way I do. I will not grade or score these reviews simply because I feel that to do so would give a false indication of value. Just because I like something does not mean it is good – and of course vice versa.

So far Jerome and I have given these rules two runouts at the local club (AWC – see here) and we have learned rather a lot. The second run was using the latest AOA2 to guide us through our Frankish and Viking armies. We learned we still have a lot to learn.

We did however have a lot of fun. The last battle (three on the first day and two on the second) was a real nail-biter with either army having a good shot at victory right up to the end.

Our first three games (December) were 1000 point affairs – although our third game that day was a “max it all up” game where we just added extra characters, weapons and other bolt ons to see how that went. Messy was the final word….

In January we had two fantastic games. My 1500 points looked almost exactly like my buffed up 1000 point army. Clearly Vikings need more points.

Initially we thought that 1500 points was ideal and would stop there and move onto other armies and projects. Erm – no. “Please sir – can I have some more?” It looks like 2000 points will be our standard.

No problems for my EIR – I have some 5000 points to paint there….. – but now those evil people at Warlord have gone and released (almost) some 28mm phalangites….. Sigh.

Jerome and I will be playing as often as we can – but with SAGA, Force on Force and Kampfgruppe Normany also demanding my time, work insisting I show up for most of my awake hours and my MEDBAG plans for 2012 it should be an interesting year!!

Well it has been a while since I got all enthusiastic about KGN – but I have not been stationary. My problem is that I have too many projects on the go and I want to do them all. KGN has suffered a little thanks to SAGA and WAB2.0.

I will be putting on a demo at my local club on Sunday 5 – a nice light little scenario straight out of the book – Panther Hunt (page 88). I have everything on hand except (ironically) a Panther. Ebay, Steve McKeemin Models, Buy-it-Now – job done. Postie don’t fail me now….

This is a nice scenario that will have people thinking about how to achieve results without disaster. It will be interesting to see if we have any new interest after the game.

The British are almost finished, only needing a Cromwell, a Firefly (I can drop in a 75 as a proxy), an Achilles and the 5 figure command to complete phase one.

The Germans are a work in progress – ie everything is still in boxes. So far I have assembled and undercoated the command group (6 figures). Everything else is present – but time is tight.

I will want to run through the scenario a few times before the day – I like to be able to answer all questions and also have a good idea of what might pop up.

After that I will be working with Kieran to go through the scenario list (a good way to “justify” those little acquisitions.

This game intrigued me when it first appeared on the Osprey website. After a little digging around I found the Ambush Alley site and downloaded the rules.

These are really good rules. There are a few little quirks that can take you a while to get your head around – such as your opponent firing first when it is your turn – but careful thought will help you see the logic in the way things are laid out.

A while ago I was reunited with an old wargaming buddy from the 90s, Jerome. As it turns out he is quite into these rules as well and is putting together a Kiwi force for our current involvement in Afghanistan.

Jerome's Kiwis

Whilst our forces are coming together we have been playing Afghans v Palestinians (what we had on hand) using both as regular forces to help us learn the rules.

Recently we had our first game of regulars v irregulars, complete with hotspots. What a massive difference they make to the game. It takes only a small force to have a great game – and when the irregulars just keep coming back it is really nail-biting stuff.

Needless to say I now have the hard-copy as well as the pdf and have already picked up the Vietnam supplement Ambush Valley.

Ambush Valley supplement from the prodigious Piers Brand

Much more to come in this!

 

Well as always I am tidying things up from the bottom. I have just completed (which to me means painted, based, nothing more to do) my first point of Vikings. 8 Warriors all from Wargames Factory.

I have based these on individual 20×20 bases for the later Warhammer expansion. I have them mounted in a movement tray with internal dimensions of 80×40. (Courtesy of Mark @ Dopey Dog)

The Boys From The Front

From the Rear

These were a lot more fun to do than other Wargames Factory figures. Some of the bits still need some work, but on the whole I do rather like them – and at $0.60 a figure (less than Essex 15mm) I like them rather a lot. The LBMS shield patterns have worked out rather well even though they were designed for other manufacturer’s shields.

Scenery. We all know we need it but for some reason we ignore it or use out of period stuff. Not for SAGA I won’t. Close enough will NOT be good enough here.

So I made a little list of all of the scenery needed for SAGA:

Item

Dimensions

Maximum

Notes

River

S-M across

1

Scenario 2
Hill

L

1

Steep/Rocky Hill

L

1

Buildings

M

2

Large Building

L

2

Baggage Items

3

Scenario 6
Woods

L

3

Brush and Crop Fields

L

2

Rocky Ground or Stone Circle

L

1

Marsh

M

1

I made a marsh for our first games (after reading Marren) but this is an L piece so I will need to make a smaller one.

In preparation for the project I picked up three buildings from Gripping Beast and some wicker fencing from Total Battle Miniatures.

Here is the first building:

 

From the Front

From the Lane

The Viking View.....

A Crow's Eye View

More later…..

DBA 3.0

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There has been much talk – and unfortunately even more noise) about the up and coming version of DBA. The lists have been in the public domain for quite some time now and for the most part remain unchanged. This is a good thing as it will allow people to pick up the new version and run with it quickly.

Recently I have moved away from 15mm – nothing wrong with the scale, I simply prefer the larger figures. 15mm is however the most popular scale by far for DBA. Fortunately I have a few Splintered Light Arthurians….

 

Simon and I both got very giggly when we saw this game announced. Until then we were looking around for a good skirmish game to cover Dark Age battles. Arguably that is exactly what Warhammer Ancient Battles is – and to be fair it is a good argument. Of course we wanted something with a financial outlay requiring something less than a remortgage…

Saga offers a fantastic game with as little as 17 figures. In 28mm the table size is 1200×900 (4′x3′) – the size of your average dining table.

I had purchased rather a large number of Vikings from Wargames Factory a while ago – perfect for this game and very inexpensive. I pre-ordered the rules and a set of Viking SAGA dice from GB (this came with a free figure):

Free SAGA Figure

Simon and I have had a few games now – and are completely hooked. Of course we both have Vikings – but that is the great thing about the Dark Ages – everybody played nicely with everybody else…

I am working on my 6 point Warband slowly – very slowly. For our opening games we have been fielding undercoated figures for the most part. My 6 points will be:

  • Warlord (D’Uh!)
  • Hearthguard x2 (8 figures)
  • Warriors x3 (24 figures)
  • Levy x1 (12 figures)
  • Optional Bersekers to replace one point of other troops

OK – enough talking…..