One more time… this is the last
Eutaw Springs game and the last Loose Files game for this year. The game ended
in a complete surprise to me but I much prefer this version of the rules. I
used Andy Callan’s “Paperboys Peninsular War Rules” to determine who fights in
combat and how multiple unit combats are divided up. I junked the vague reference
to orders a while back. Last, I tried the card activation method from the
Paperboys rules. Each side has three cards in the deck, 3 red (for the British)
and 3 black for the Yanks. Your first card is when you fire, the second card is
when your cavalry moves, the third card is when your infantry and artillery move.
Leaders can move on any card. Combat is resolved at the end of each movement phase.
Retreats and routs are done immediately
after combat. After all cards are done, both sides rally. It works well. I suggest yellow markers to show a unit can't move for a turn and red for routs.
Lee’s Legion will fall back, about face and move back a little. If you pull troops out of the line to reorganize, take them all the way out. Taught myself a lesson. Pickens and Malmedy both were disorganized by musket fire and decide to fall back through the regulars.
The Maryland Continentals moved forward to cover the militia and were met by a blast of fire. They about-faced and started to move off. The British wanted to charge but could not fire and move in the same turn.
But on the next turn the British infantry move card came up first. The 3rd Foot could not fire since Williams had moved out of range, but the movement dice allowed them to charge and hit the badly disorganized Marylanders in the rear. Ouch.
On the American right, the 64th Foot charged and caught Lee’s Legion Foot reorganizing, facing the wrong way. As stated earlier, they should have fallen back further to rally. Instead they were routed. In these rules, good units routing cause infectious disorder and desertion among friends within 6”. Almost everyone who wasn’t within 6” of the Maryland rout were within 6” of Lee’s Legion. It was over. The army was a wreck.
It took about 90 minutes to play
5 turns. American losses were extremely high, 21 stands of infantry and 3 of cavalry,
about 414. Many of these were either prisoners or troops who bolted due to
panic. British losses? One stand of infantry in the first fight with Lee’s
legion Foot. Taking into account the 400 British foragers snapped up before the battle, both sides
were even but the repulse was humiliating.
In spite of this I was quite pleased with the way the rules worked. The card system removes any possible problems arising from simultaneous movement. If you’ve played such in the past, you know; “if you do this then I do that”. I recall some dreadful rows about such things. This is way better. Your card comes up, put up or shut up. Having the cavalry move on their own card makes coordination much harder. I might steal one more thing from the Paperboys rules: troops are only affected by the retreat of their own arms. So, infantry think nothing of cavalry clattering past to the rear and vice versa. But when your own sort gives way, look out.