Sunday, 9 July 2017

Mouse class Gun-drone

After Thurday nights game I decided that my victorious Space Rangers needed a little something-  Troop and Heavy Support options are easy enough to put together but there was nothing obvious that I could think of to fill a fast attack slot.  So I went into my bog box of bits (aka the Shed) and had a rummage and found a cheap and nasty computer mouse. I'd intended to make a hover car with it, but never got round to it, and it occurred to me it might make a good Landspeeder!

 I added bunch of other scraps from the bits box, and some bits of plasticard- the turret if from a Matchbox toy tank.
 Then all it needed was paint!
 The Mouse class Gun-drone ready for action! Despite the edict against any form of AI, the robust and versatile Mouse class and its variants can still be found in service with numerous mercenary and PDF units across the galaxy, and other organisations that simply didn't get the memo, and don't mind risking the wrath of the Adepts of Mars.


Part 2:

Of course having built one I found I just couldnt stop! Luckily I had the parts for two more lying around....

 So now I have three of these little gunships! Theyre not quite identical , but I'm very pleased with the results.
 Oh, and here is the whole of the Space Rangers force-  Captain Coruscant's Cataphracts:



Thanks for reading!

Friday, 7 July 2017

Space Rangers Lead the Way! 8th ed 40k.

Chris has been very excited about the release of 8th ed 40k. I was less so- the novelty wears a little thin after you've seen the first few editions. But he wanted a game, and I was keen to let my sci-fi scenery get an airing and to actually use my Space Ranger army, as I'd never before commanded it in battle!  Chris declared we would play to 70 power levels.  This is a simplified points system for people who can't be bothered adding up the cost of every bolt pistol and frag grenade. In our case 70 PLs appeared to equal about 1300 points.  He would of course bring his Khornate Loonies...I decided to bring my Space Rangers!  

These hadn't been out since the Raid on Research Station 217 and I'd umpired that. On toting them up I found the two squads and a tank only came to about 30 odd Power Levels, so I put in an order to EM4 for more!  This added another 2 tactical squads, and I used two spare Sergeants to make a bodyguard for the Captain. I then remembered I had some Mechs in the loft in a box from Em4 as well, and wondered if I could find a use for them. Scanning the Marine List on BattleScribe I found something called a Centurian- Slow but tough and with lots of weapons I felt this was a close enough fit- I added a pile of spare flamers from the Bits Box and called them Sentry Robots! This little lot was painted in the two days before the game!

Also for this game I managed to paint a few Sci-fi Civilians whom you'll see in the following photos- these are the metal magic figure now made by Moonraker miniatures. old school, detailed and characterful. I'll try and get the rest finished soon. 


A space thug and a pilot waiting for the pub to open.

Technician and Barber-Surgeon.

Another Techy chap.

The scratch built tractor.


The local plod!

So, on to the game:  
I took the following Patrol force.
Captain Coruscant- Thunderhammer, plasma pistol
Bodyguard of 2 veterans with Plasma pistols and Power Axes.
3 Tactical Squads with Flamer, Heavy Bolter, Sergeants with a mix of Plasma Pistols and various swords
Devastator Squad with 4 plasma cannons.
Sentry Robot Squad of 3 , all with flamers and mining lasers, and one with hurricane bolters,
Vindicator tank with hunter killer missile.

Chris took a Battalion consisting of
Kharn!
A daemon Prince
some Harpies/furies
about 20 berserkers in 3 squads
A Rhino, and  a Landraider with all havoc launchers.

We used the basic scenario and ended up with one objective- the Grox and Firkin Pub!  Clearly it was getting on for Beer O'clock!
I split one squad into combat squads but kept the rest together. 

My Deployment- Vindicator, one Tac squad, one combat squad, HQ and Robots
behind the pub.  Tac squad, Combat squad2, and Dev. Squad on left.


My plan was to shove the Tac Squad into the path of the enemy attack
as a speed bump, and then counter attack with HQ and Robots...

...While everyone else gives covering fire! These chaps on my left easily dealt with the
Furies, and a stray Khornate combat squad, and pummelled the Landraider.
 
1st Wave of Khorne hits my flank- the Tac squad goes in to slow
them down a bit. Everyone else gets ready to pile in. Vindicator Scratched
the Landraider. 

Tac Squad was overrun in short order- HQ led the countercharge-
Captain felled the Prince with his Thunderhammer, Robots and combat Squad1
chewed up and spat out Kharn and his loonies. Landraider is being ground down by overcharged plasma
cannon volleys into its flanks, and Demolisher cannon from the front.
Devastators and Tac squads keep up the covering fire from the flank- Landraider gets desperate and
tried to run over Captain Coruscant- unfortunately it skewered itself on his Hammer!


Rhino tries to outflank my position again, containing the last Khornate combat squad, and
runs into trouble. At this point I found out that Granades have no effect in melee! Arrgh!
Oh well,the Thunderhammer worked just fine!

The Berserkers within came out fighting, and thanks to some awful dice on
my part managed to take down two Robots!  However the last one wasn't having any
of that nonsense from some squishy emotional types and pulled their arms off!


Khornate forces were utterly annihilated for the loss of the Vindicator, 2 Robots, and about 11 Rangers.

So, how did I feel about the rules ?  Not bad-  Certainly a lot more Streamlined than they used to be ( as point of reference here I last played during 5th ed!) which will make big games easier. Leaving aside the fact this was our first time playing and we hadn't read the rules it didn't take long to get to grips, and nothing really seemed to bog the game down.  Interesting that some things form 2nd ed, like save modifiers and wound multipliers are back, but I feel it lacks some of the Character of 2nd.

On balance I'd say there's nothing revolutionary here at all, and not a huge amount to get overly excited by- its only doing what practically every other ruleset out there already does! But with all the dead weight gone you can now easily put all your figures on the table and have at it without having to book a week off work first! You don't have to worry about micro-managing so much, which is all good for a big game, so we'll probably be trying it again!

Thanks for reading!

Monday, 3 July 2017

Gauntlet17 - The Anglo-Zulu War, Battles of Qhedini and Fort Thesiger


A couple of months ago I got a message from Rick-  
"we've been signed up to do a game for Gauntlet" says he. 
"Oh aye", Says I, "Didn't think anyone had shown an interest in doing anything this year." 
We batted a few ideas back and forth for a bit- 
ECW? Napoleonics?  
Dragon Rampant? How about Commando? 
What the hell is Commando? 
Flames of War? No!  
How about something with Zulus? YES!

And that's how I got roped into painting 400 Zulus in just a few short weeks.  I'd already got 100 or so ready, and as you may have seen from my previous posts I've been rather enjoying games of the The Men Who Would be King recently. And I had a small amount of themed scenery.  We put the idea out to see how it fared amongst the group- the group liked it and some volunteers stepped forward to play it at Gauntlet. Now the question was- how many could we paint?  Rick stepped forward and insisted he would provide around 100 or so- and he'd started ordering them already. 

Thus enthused, and unhindered by children, I decided we would need a total of around 600 or so, and that I would paint the rest, and build some scenery to go with it.  In addition I would come up with a scenario and umpire it. Which suited me fine, because there has been one scenario that I've wanted to run since forever:

The combined Battles of Isandlwana and Rorkes Drift!

There has always been a bit of a problem with fighting these two battles on the gaming table- they are rather recognisable to anyone who has watched the films, and they can both get dull very fast if you just treat it as a "line 'em up and Charge!/Shoot 'em!" affair. I mean, surely everyone knows how the British "ought" to have deployed at Isandlewana- Form square or Laager and the thing just becomes a turkey shoot- the tactical considerations that affected decisions on the day go straight out the window! 

 But there's a way around that; by disguising the Scenario as something else! And so, inspired a little by events at the very end of the war I reworked the events of the 1st invasion of Zululand to take pace around the Capture of Cetsewayo, the Zulu King. and thus I came  up with this Scenario:

The Battles of Qhedini and Fort Thesiger!

The Premise was simple- in the last days of the Anglo Zulu war King Cetsewayo is in hiding , his cities burn, and his armies are scattered.  The British are hunting for him and pacifying any Zulu still showing some fight. As the hunters close in on their prey weary bands of zulu's gather, rallying to their king, in defiance of his order to disperse, for one final attempt to drive out the Imperial invader.


To this end I gave the two sides a variety of objectives and misinformation- The British were given only very vague information over the position and strength of the Zulus, and were told to Capture the King, burn the Village of Qhedini where he was hiding, and round up any cattle to be taken as War Reparations.  The Zulus were given slightly better intelligence about the nature of the threat facing them but weren't told where the King was hiding. They were tasked with the destruction of all Imperial forces, and taking the Camp and the Fort. 

The rules we used were The Men who Would Be King by Dan Mersey, one of my favourites. Some folk said a game with those rules of this size wouldn't work. They were wrong.  We did modify it a little though- I Preset all the stats, and we abandoned the idea of each unit having a leader. Instead I created certain Personalities (based on real people) who could be attached to a unit. These personalties were given various abilities that could be used to bolster their unit, or other units around them. There were 9 altogether , including Cetsewayo.  Some of them are a little more whimsical than historical!

Cetsewayo Kamapande
King of the Zulu

When discovered Cetsewayo will join the nearest British unit. If attacked roll to see if he is killed as normal. If that unit is destroyed he will join the nearest unit. He will not fight and reduces the unit SP to 6.

Major General Stroudly-Adams
officer commanding No.3 Column

Must be attached to one Regular unit. Allows any regular unit within 12” to reroll a failed order per turn. Once per game every Regular unit within 12” may make a Free Move.
Colonel Benford
officer commanding No.5 Column

Grants +1 discipline to any Auxiliary unit within 12”
At the start of his turn he may order any or all of the Mounted units within 12" to send their horses to the rear. They immediately dismount and may not remount . He is always the last model of his unit to be removed.
Captain Dorien Fellows
80th Foot.

Utterly Professional and Fearless, Captain Fellows may join any Regular unit . The unit may reroll any failed Pinning or Rally tests.



Mehlokazulu
The eyes of the Zulu.

Is always the last of his unit to be removed . Any zulu unit within 12” may reroll failed tests to Rally.
Prince Dabulamanzi

 His unit gains Range 18” and hits on 5+ when shooting, except the Prince who its on 4+
Izinyanga Mpashana
Bullets shall turn to Water

Must join any Zulu unit. Any time the unit takes casualties from Shooting roll a d6. On a 6 ignore one casualty.



Inkosi Mkhosana

Joins a zulu unit, and gives it +1 discipline. Any unit within 12' that rallies may still attempt to receive an order, though even free moves will need to be tested for. Is killed on any score of a double rather than just 12.

Induna Tishayo
Wielder of the Black Knobkerrie.

Said to be as old as the world, made from the hardest of wood the wielder of the Black Knobkerrie is unstoppable in melee. Tishayo may join any Zulu unit and gives the unit +1 to hit in melee.

 Also we used casualty dials rather than removing casualties because the thought of trying to reunite hundreds of zulus with their correct units after the game didn't exactly fill me with pleasure!


The British would start on the table- No. 3 Column, consisting of 6 companies of Regulars, a gatling gun, and a 7pdr, and a unit of NNC.  would be in and around the camp.  No. 5 column, consisting of 3 units of Cavalry and 4 of Native infantry , and rocket battery, would be marching from the River to the camp .  A single rifle company guarded the Fort, and another was in reserve.  The zulus all started off table apart from two units of local scouts, with about 16 units in each of the chest, and the two horns. The British would therefore have the table to themselves for three turns before the first of the Zulus arrived, giving them chance to round up cattle, reach the village and capture the king before burning it. That was the idea at least.  The Zulus would arrive in 6 waves at three separate points over 9 turns, in part to keep the British guessing, but partly to give them chance to thin the horde a a little before the next wave arrived.

But before we could play the game I had to actually build it!


Firstly we would need Zulus!  Luckily during this period Warlord games did a couple of their Sprue sales so I grabbed a pile of zulus through that. Then I hunted Ebay and local model shops and gaming events for cheap Zulus, ending up with two of the Zulu Starter Armies and a large number of other boxes and loose Zulus.  Think I bought 500 in total, but was only able to paint 400 in time for Gauntlet. All the Zulus bar two are Warlord/Empress. Those two are from Northstars Africa! range- the King Lubengula figures converted slightly to become Cetswayo and Mehlokazulu!  A large number of movement trays were bought from Supplies for Wargamers.

The British only lacked for their Auxiliaries as I had a large number of Redcoats.  I added two extra units of cavalry- the Frontier Light Horse converted from ACW cavalry, and the Empress Native Horse. Dismounted versions were provided for both. I painted up an additional 3 units of NNC for the British as well.

Image may contain: outdoor

Total number of figures painted for this project was about 480 in three months

I also needed Terrain!  Hills were made using the "Expanding foam in a can " method, and a few items were bought like wagons, piles of mealie bags and other supplies, ammunition boxes etc, and a rather nice resin pontoon bridge. A small fort was built with foam board sheet to represent Fort Thesiger, standing in for Rorkes Drift!
Fort Thesiger!

Dongas!  Its not Zululand without dried up river beds.
Just bits of hardboardfrom the back of an old
 wardrobe covered in pebbles and gravel!

And Bushes!  Actually just clumps of  wirewool,
heavily spray painted, and then flocked!
And then we were ready for battle!  Michael took command of No.5 Column, Phil, who we met on the day and didn't have a game , took command of No.3 Column.  Geoff, Rick, Chris and the Two Bens took joint command of the Zulus!  After I'd laid out the terrain, lamenting that I didn't appear to have made enough large hills, and explained the scenario to both teams, helped them identify their commands, and then explained the scenario again to Rick who hadn't been paying attention the first time all that was left was to actually play! I wont bore you too much with a blow by blow and it would be impossible anyway, but here are some pictures.
An overview of the battlefield from the Zulu end.
The village of Qhedini on the left
is where Cetsewayo awaits his fate.

The British camp and wagon park as the British regulars move out.
No.5 column just appearing over the nek.
View from the Natal side of the river. All quiet here
with No.5 column in the distance.



View from behind the Zulu Chest. The left horn can
be seen just arriving. The Regulars actually moved out to
 meet the left horn, whilst the irregulars of  No.5 column 
moved onto the British left to oppose the Chest. 
The British struggling to maintain a firing line along the dongas. They 
held back the left horn and part of the chest here for a long while.



Major Benford leads the Natal Natives against the Zulu chest ,
supported by a Gatling gun!

View from behind the left horn, stalled at the dongas.

Fort Thesigers lookouts spot something in the distance!

The British Right gives ground

And so does the British left!

The Irregular Horse and the Natal Volunteers, having spent a
 pleasant few hours collecting stray 
cattle are surprised by the arrival of the Right Horn!

The British are forced back against the hill, where they try to form
 Square.  The right horn can just be seen coming over the nek into the
rear of the camp.


The British form an oblong, but there are too many targets!

A rifle company of the Helpmekaar relief column has arrived to contest
the river crossing, and cover the retreat of the last of the 
Frontier Light Horse. Part of the Right Horn has broken away
 and is invading Natal, intent on looting the supplies at the Fort,
 but are driven back across the river.

The last men standing! The final pocket of
resistance in camp as the Zulus close in!
With almost all of no.3 and no.5 column wiped out, and only a few survivors clinging on the Zulu side of the River it was clearly a Zulu victory. Time , and the two companies of Redcoats on the Natal side of the river didn't allow for a full bloodied assault on Fort Thesiger- Zulu forces there were too weak to try it alone and their nearest reinforcements were a fair distance away.

It was interesting to see where the game diverged from the actual events at Isandlwana.  Here it was the regulars of no.3 column rather than the Natives and Cavalry of no.5 column that went out to hold the left horn back, taking up a strong position amongst the Dongas and pinning it down for a long time. Obviously in real life this move was undertaken by Durnford to find the zulus, whereas here it was done to Find and Capture Cetsewayo! And as it was done by the infantry getting there and back took a lot longer!  In any case this move somewhat over extended the British firing line, and meant the NNC were still having to hold large areas without support. When they fell it allowed the Zulus to get at the British from all sides.  Of course this is pretty much how resistance actually collapsed at Isandlwana, though there it was the British right that was enveloped, and here it was the left.

By the time the right Horn arrived in camp there wasn't a lot left to do except mop up!  It should be remembered though that casualties in the Left horn and Chest were massive! They started with a total of around 32 units- they probably had half that by the end! The Right horn was largely untouched, chasing fugitives on the Trail back to the river, though there attempt to invade Natal was blunted.

The Zulu army did look very imposing though; when the chest and left horn showed up in strength a ripple of despair went through the British ranks, which was exactly as intended! The British put up a very determined fight, and were always looking for a way to turn the odds, making every shot count, and trying to position themselves to be able to fight their way clear.  Unfortunately the British couldn't afford to make any mistakes in the face of such an overwhelming enemy, and to my mind they made a rather clear one right at the start, by putting their three units of cavalry right at the back. With their speed they should have been in front , ready to ride through camp, on down to Qhedini, find the King, burn the village and be back in camp before the Zulu's have had breakfast! They would then have been free to escort the king back to Natal or Dismount (I gave them special rules to allow them to send their horses to the rear for this game) and join the firing line, which could have been calmly getting into a good strong position around the camp. Instead Michael had them rounding up cattle, a job better left to the NNC! Michael, was perhaps a little unclear as to the actual strengths and abilities of the Cavalry , apparently preferring the NNC in the firing line. The commander of  no.5 column had a variety of abilities that he could impart on his troops, but it did rely on them being close by, and they ended up spread out all over the place. That perhaps is my fault for not being clearer.

I would change a couple of minor details regarding allocation of victory points etc if I was to run this again, but my only real amendment would be to have a few more British reserves available to throw the Zulus a bit of a late game Curve ball- after all, what might have happened if Chelmsfords forces had put in an appearance?

Well that about wraps it up for Gauntlet 17. I really enjoyed the game , I hope the players did too, and don't much mind me making them dance like puppets for my amusement !

Thanks for reading!