Showing posts with label DBA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DBA. Show all posts

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Battle Report: Battle of the Hydaspes River

Dave put on a version of the Battle of the Hydaspes River, Alexander the Great's last great battle, last night. He used DBA 3.0, with a few variations - no rolling for command pips was the biggest one. It ended ahistorically with an Indian victory, which is a pity as I played the left flank for the Macedonians.

Indian chariots and skirmishers dominate the battlefield to begin with...

Alexander's forces march on to the table.

The phalanx on the left flank. Two units of companions are shifting from the left to the center behind the phalanx line.

Alexander (the purple-caped cavalry) and his Companions bullying the Indian skirmishers off the hill.

Indian elephants lumbering toward the Macedonian left flank.

The Indian front line retreats from the Companions, but their main line approaches...

Indian skirmishers move through rough going, covering their elephants.

Treetop view of the battle from the Macedonian left. The left phalanx is shifting a bit to avoid being outflanked by the elephants. The Indian front line is bowing away from the Companions.

Indian front line is (mostly) driven off by the Companions. 

The elephants finally hit the Macedonian left flank, smashing into the skirmishers guarding the far left.

Indian line reforms and prepares for the second clash of arms.

Elephants drive the skirmishers back a bit...

... and have destroyed two stands. The phalanx will soon be outflanked. Also, this is when I realized that my phalanx was advancing on archers, not spearmen. Stupid straight bows...

Cavalry smashes into the spearmen, phalanx endures a rather ineffective volley of arrows, and the elephants move around to the rear of the phalanx.

Companions face off against the second line of infantry and elephants.

Overview of the unfolding disaster on the left flank. Note the lack of Macedonian skirmishers.

Overview near the end. In the far distance, the Macedonian reinforcements have crossed the Hydaspes and threaten the Indian left... but too late.




The end, at least as far the left flank is concerned - demoralized and fleeing past the elephants.


Sunday, March 27, 2016

Battle Report - Polish Rebel Alliance vs. Teutonic Knights

Kevin threw together a quick big battle DBA for Dave, Andy, and me yesterday - Poles, Old Prussians, and Latvians facing an attack by the Teutonic Knights and a few non-Teutonic crusaders. No particular battle was represented, just one of any number of possible conflicts during the Prussian Crusade.

Deployment. Poles on the right, Teutonic Order on the left.


Not much of a battle report this time; I was working on very little sleep, so I don't recall much of it. Enjoy the pictures.






Near the end.
Fun, and fast playing. I have to admit, like mold, DBA is growing on me the more I play it.

Monday, March 21, 2016

PDX March Historical Wargames Day - DBA & Saga

This month's historical day went pretty well! We had the regulars plus a few other folks turning up for some Saga action, and I played/demoed De Bellis Antiquitatis a few times - standard Polybian Romans versus a slightly non-standard Seleucid list. (I haven't any scythed chariots, as it's pulled together from some other figures.)


I am still undecided on how much I like DBA. It certainly plays quickly - five games in four hours, and that's allowing for quite a bit of not-playing time where I was chatting, browsing merchandise, or kibbitzing on the Saga games. I also like the smallness of the scale - 12 elements to a side, 24 x 24" board, etc. But it does feel quite swingy - more of a dice game than a strategy game, as it were.


Everyone had fun, as far as I can tell, and we may have hooked another fellow into the Saga pond. Thanks to everyone who attended!


Next month it looks like I'll be demoing Sails of Glory, based on the poll I put up on the Wargames Oregon Facebook page.

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Battle Report: King Karl has a Danish. (DBA 3.0 big battle)

It has been an eventful couple of weeks for me and my family, which pretty well sabotaged any gaming or hobby work for me. But things are finally settling down - I hope - and so I was able to attend Kevin's Carolingians vs. Danes battle at Guardian last night. We used De Bellis Antiquitatis 3.0, big battle version - my first time playing this in a large format.

On the side of good, i.e., my side, we had Karl Magnus leading four battlegroups of Christian Franks and such - mostly Knights and Spears - and my pagan Slavs, mostly Fast Auxiliaries with two bases of Cavalry and two Psiloi for support. On the side of evil - i.e., hapless Danes of the Low Countries defending their settlement - we faced five battlegroups of mostly Blades, with a few Psiloi and Fast Hordes thrown in for good measure.

The center of the Carolingian line as battle begins. Charlemagne himself is to the right of this photo, with the yellow flag.
 The battlefield was a simple one - a road leading across the field to the Danish town, flanked by a pair of woods quite a ways from the road on either side, with a bay anchoring the Danish left. The Danes deployed first in a simple battle line with a single battlegroup behind as a reserve. The Carolingians pretty much likewise, but constrained by the woods. The Slavs took up the Frankish left, hoping to charge through the woods, and two battlegroups held the reserve - including Charlemagne's own command.
Moments before the clash.
 The battle proceeded to unfold in a fairly predictable manner - knights charged in, and either triumphed or were repulsed by Danish axes and blades.

After the initial clash - one Carolingian battlegroup has broken and fled the field, but the Danes are in disarray.
 The initial clash found one entire Carolingian battlegroup broken and fled, but the Danes were in too much disarray to capitalize on this Frankish setback, and shortly afterward lost the battlegroup that had been anchoring their own left flank.

Meanwhile, on the Danish right/Frankish left, the peasant Hordes managed to hold up valiantly against the Slavic auxiliaries in the woods - thanks to their local knowledge, they suffered no combat penalty in their own forests (scenario ruling), and proved amazingly resilient.

The reserves coming into play.
 The reserves on both sides moved up to fill in gaps, and things came down to the grind of Frankish cavalry against the Danish shield wall. The Danes made one last push with their final battle line, but...

Just prior to the final Danish push - the Slavs and Danes have been tied up in that wood in the foreground most of the game.
 It was in vain. The peasants finally fell to Slavic swords, and that shook the final Danish battlegroup. Their morale broken, the Carolingians held the field and moved in to sack the settlement - for the Emperor!

The final shot of the game. A Danish warlord is still locked in combat with his Christian counterpart... for at least five combats with a tied result.
Not exactly a decisive victory of Karl, but the bards will dress it up well enough. The Danes retreat in their longships and leave the Christians to the sack, but they've given Karl a bloody nose. Maybe next year it'll be their turn to do a little pillaging.

Friday, July 31, 2015

DBA Republican Romans

I just finished my first proper army for De Bellis Antiquitas: Polybian Romans from Essex Miniatures, suitable for fighting Carthage or Syria. I'm pretty happy to have finished an entire table - ready army in a week. Next up I need to finish the Japanese and Galatian armies to oppose them...