Last night I played host to Snicket and we played a game of the new osprey medieval rules, Lion Rampant.
Having managed to sort out some units of figures for us to choose from we went for the recommended 24 point retinues and ended up choosing identical sets consisting of a unit of mounted men at arms (containing our leaders), a unit of expert foot serjeants (halberds), a unit of normal foot serjeants (spear), a unit of crossbow and a unit of archers. The men at arms are six figures strong and all the rest are all 12 figures. Unlike warhammer there is no need to rank them up (which we kept doing out of habit!) unless they are using a formation like schiltron that serjeants can use. The units can move in blobs with figures all with 3" of a central figure.
We rolled for a scenario from the book and got 'Defending the Indefensible'. One retinue were defending and object (in this case a siege cannon) placed in the middle of the table and the other retinue were trying to smash it. All the attackers had to do was get a single figure in contact with the cannon and they win.
We rolled for attacker/defender and Snicket got to attack while I got to place up to 10 points of my force around the cannon and the rest at the table edge. Snicket set his retinue up at the opposite table edge.
but Snicket scored enough to kill my leader...
The game would be decided on whoever could activate their unit. Their followed a tense series of rolls where we both failed to get our units into action. My acrchers wouldn't move forward and risk being ridden down by the knights and Snickets horses were blown from all the charging around and needed convincing to make one last move.
We were both really impressed by the rules. Once we got in to the sing of things they were easy and characterful. The retinues are just the right size for a smart little force without having to spend months working on them and the activation system lends a level of tension as you try and get your troops to do what you want them to. The moral system works really well, once a unit is down to half strength then their effectiveness is drastically affected. The game is a lot less bloody than things like warhammer meaning that casualties tend to be more of a trickle than a flood and this has the effect of keeping the units effective for longer but also gradually wearing units down rather than simply disappearing in a puff of smoke. We both agreed that we'd be playing it again. It seems to be really customisable so would suit lots of different games. A really neat little set of rules that work well for a really pretty reasonable price. Who'd have thunk it?
I've heard good things about Lion Rampant from other internetz gamers as well. Fortunately, I'll be able to get a retinue together at the same time as my Bret army slowly grows and then I'd love to give them a whirl.
ReplyDeleteIt was loads of fun Matey, "Get Yer Rampant On"!
DeleteExcellent batrep posting and looks like you guys had a lot of fun - especially with the obligatory brown bottle so frequently in shot :-) I'm still trying to come to grips with utilising SAGA for my medieval gaming (using some house rules etc) but it breaks too easily as soon as we do anything more than a skirmish (understandably) so will look these out, and they seem to give a good game with a fair sized army apiece. Thanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteThe brown bottles were of some weird rosé beer flavoured with Raspberry that were the oddest thing I could find in my local super market.
DeleteWe couldn't decide if they were nice or not.........................................
Great write up WP! I'm gonna get mine done tonight when I get home from work.
ReplyDeleteHaving had an incredibly similar experience with Lion Rampant earlier this week, I agree with all of your thoughts - nice, fun, simple and easy to pick up, with a nice element of risk management / uncertainty due to the unit activation system. Nice battle report :)
ReplyDeleteI've been eyeing these rules and the buzz about them closely...thanks for this excellent battle rep...you may have convinced me that this is worth picking up. Like Rab I can see using my Bret figures as the foundation of a force and perhaps my Empire figures for the Op For. Would be be enough flexibility in the stat lines to allow this to be adapted to different races for a bit of warhammer flavor?
ReplyDeleteYup, they even have a sample of this replacing a unit of missile troops with a magic user.
DeleteThere are enough different troop type and upgrades to certain ones to make it flexible enough to accommodate pretty much any set of variable you fancy. Obviously things like monsters would need a bit more thinking about but for a simple skirmish game it really does fit the bill.
DeleteGreat battle report. I have a largish War of the Roses army so will be trying these rules out fairly shortly. Thanks for the inspiration!
ReplyDeleteWhat a Superb Batte Report! Nice photos too.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if those lovely figures are plastic or metall?
I think most of them come from the GW line or am I wrong??
I just desided to get Rampant rules from Osprey and also look for some real nice figures to try this out.
I also wonder if that is a battlemat from the stores or have you made that one yourself?
..and it is very inspirational buildings on your board too.
Thanks. The figures are all metal and a mix of Citadel and Front Rank. The battlemat is homemade, I posted a how to back in march i think. Just use the search function and "mat" and you should be able to find. The buildings are from a company that used to sell the through ebay but have been since bought by Caliver books and can be bought from their website although I'd probably go for the unpainted ones and paint them yourself.
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