Although we had historical forces (from the battle of Shiloh, I think), the scenario itself was ahistorical, with the Rebels trying to advance on the Union camps, and the North trying to hold off the Southerners long enough for reinforcements to arrive. I was the Yankees on the far left, including that lone regiment in the cornfield.
My goal as the Union commander was to try to delay long enough for other Northern forces to get to the battle. Somehow, that single regiment held off advancing brigades, and I deployed my other forces in line to stop the advancing Rebs.
There was a lot of shooting, both artillery and musket fire, with both sides inflicting casualties. Many units became shaken, meaning they couldn't do much, and some units ended up whipped, but remained on the battlefield.
We even got a few infantry charges in (on both sides), but I didn't make a single command roll to get my cavalry moving the entire battle.When time was up, the Union had won by holding off the Confederates, and I won a tape measure for my regiment's brave stand against the Confederate onslaught. It was a fun time.
1 comment:
A fine job, "General" Mack! Obviously not related to the famous "unhappy General Mack" of Austrian and the debacle at Ulm. :-)
For all the criticism of Warlord for making these troops in (yet another) non standard scale, the look very nice on the table! of course, I don't do ACW gaming myself...
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