Sunday 30 July 2017

Fall of Rome boardgame (1973 version) scenarios 1 and 2 replay

Introduction
I cannot remember when I got the SPI Fall of Rome game - I would assume in the early 80's.  I played it a few times but the rules were contradictory and sometimes did not make that much sense. There was errata I later found and boardgamegeek now has a consolidated rulebook. I have not played the game since about 1988.  I enjoyed it a bit then and always wanted to get back to it.  I chose it as one of the games in the 2017 6x6 challenge to get me to play it again, and conveniently it has 6 scenarios.

SPI Fall of Rome 1973
This post contains the replays of scenario 1 and 2.  Scenario 1 is a highlights only report with a couple of pictures.  Scenario 2 is a picture and highlights for each of the 13 turns.

Brief overview of the game
The Fall of Rome (1973 version) is a solo based boardgame where you represent the Empire trying to keep it together despite invasions and revolutions.  It is an area based game with counters for the various forces in the game.  Rather than give an overview, here is a link to a great succinct boardgamegeek review of the game.

Also, the same place has a AAR of scenario 1 and 2, the same 2 scenarios in this post:
Boardgamegeek scenario 1 replay
Boardgamegeek scenario 2 replay

The replay for scenario 1 is better than mine with a photo each turn.  I was going to do that but got too distracted by playing!  Scenario 2 is in a similar format of documenting each turn.

Note that a revised version was published in 1997 that I also own and have played once.  It has a bigger map and more things (different types of legions cones to mind).  I liked the simple version and the larger map of the newer version does not fit in my map drawers!  

Game 01 - Scenario 1 (67AD)
Introduction
Scenario 1 starts in 67AD and is effectively a learning scenario.  There is not much chance of internal revolutions, legions will tend to stay loyal when you group them, the chance of barbarian incursions is low and the Roman Treasury is high and it is unlikely you will ever run short of funds.

I played the first turn through the first few steps and realised I had stuffed up the Syrian and the Gallic legion deployment so I reset the game (for those interested the Syrian deployment really needs to have all 6 legions in the 5MP zone, otherwise the Persians will immediately move into any of the other areas and destroy any legions there.  The Legions need to survive a turn so more legions can move in to resist control.
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After that first turn I also realised that the 14 steps within a game turn, and how the game had all the various different forces moving, controlled and their interactions, was too much for me to hold in my head just from reading the rules.  I created a two page QRS in order of the game turn steps with all pertinent info in that steps description.  This has worked really well and in the first two games I only referred to the actual rules twice for some extraordinary confluence of events.

Highlights

The setup for the start.  Rules on the left and some counters around the map board.  Easily fits into one of my map drawers.
Syria was the main focus for all of the game.  The battle in Syria started from turn 1. Rome finally eliminated all Persians on turn 5. I realise they are the Parthians but the game has them as Persians as they are actually that for all the other scenarios.,  The remaining 5 legions in Syria then immediately formed an independent state!  Rome managed to take it all back in turn 9.  The Persians came back and invaded Syria in turn 11. Syria decides to revolt in turn 13 while both Persian and Romans vie for control (Persian 6SP - strength point - and 4SP of militia, and 5 Roman legions all in Syria-A). Syria was finally subdued by the Romans during turn 14.

Turn 13 also saw Gallia and Afica revolt.  No revolutions all game, then turn 13.  On turn 14 - more internal revolts!  In this time period each turn there a 1 in 6 chance of any revolts occurring and even then only about 4 provinces will revolt).  The revolutions were in Britannia, Gallia (again), Africa (again), Aegyptus and Ilyria. The scenario is only 15 turns so Rome has only two turns to fix it!  Luckily to win only requires controlling 78 province points  and I think I was in the 90s pre-revolutions.

Turn 13 with all the rebellions.
Turn 15 more revolts (!) - Hispania and Cyprus were extras.  I did not manage to put them all down but still ended up with 82 victory points so scraped in a win.

End of game (turn 15) after more rebellions in the last turn.
Verdict
In this game there is little chance of revolution, barbarian creation or legion rebellion.  The Roman Treasury quickly gets so high you do not need to worry about it the Treasury..  Also with the Persians: if eliminated like I did, they quickly make gains on their Treasury (unless Roman can conquer Mesopotamia - possible but unlikely) and the Persian treasury is not depleted too far between when the Persian units return and game end.

A few other things I seem to remember I played differently from 20 years ago.  Back then, I bribed the Persians so they would to move.  This is actually never been in the rules - it applies to Barbarians but not Persians.  I also would halve the Persian forces if they did not control a province.  This was also always wrong, again it only applies to the Barbarians.  Oh dear.  This really makes the Persian war interesting and more like history - you have to get most of your legions out to the Middle East to fight the Persian incursions, and likely you will either lose some legions, or they will rebel!

Scenario 1 (starting in 67AD) is really a training game that lulls you in - Scenario 2 is very different and starts in 247AD.

Game 02 - Scenario 2
Introduction
Scenario 2 starts in 247AD and plays out very differently to scenario 1:
  • The chance of some revolutions occurring per turn is 1 in 6 for scenario 1, scenario 2 is one of the worst of all the scenarios - 1 in 3.
  • The Barbarian table has about 1/2 a chance of barbarians appearing, in scenario 1 you rolled once on the table every second turn (so a barbarian force is created on average every 4 turns).  In scenario 2 it is *twice* per turn for an average of barbarian creation every turn.
  • Legion rebellion was a rare event in scenario 1 (only one could occur as a special event.  Now there is a 1/3rd of a chance of rebellion with four legions, and the chance goes up the more legions in a stack.
  • The Roman Treasury starts at zero and you will be lucky to be able to balance the budget (scenario 1 you rarely lost a province and so the tax revenue always greatly exceeded expense and it was easy to create a nest egg).  You need money to bribe barbarians and pay the legions.
This will be tough.  Luckily, the province victory point required is low at 50, compared to 78 for Scenario 1.  Romans start with about 90 province victory points but revolutions and barbarian incursions will quickly reduce that.

Start of game.  Orange markers are to remind me of provinces in control but with no legions present. I use dice on the turn record track to indicate Persian and Roman treasuries.
Turn 1- 247AD
Persians destroyed the legions in Mesopotamia.  Revolutions in a few provinces that were quelled except Thrace.  Spread out the legions a little so they will not rebel.

Oops.  I deleted the picture thinking it was a duplicate of the above, but alas it was end of turn 1.

Turn 2 - 248AD
Revolution in Gallia, Dacia, Thrace, Africa and Syria

End of turn 2 - Syria and Dacia the hotspots.
Turn 3 - 249AD
More revolutions again - Hispania, Illyria, Thrace.  A few others did not start due to having enough legions in the province to prevent them happening (by luck, not planning!).  With a 50% chance of some revolutions happening a turn, I am feeling unlucky with 3 in a row.  Over. it.  But I put down all revolutions except Syria. The Persians are combating the revolutions in Syria.

And I found the "Revolt Militia" counters this turn.  They were with the nationality markers but I never noticed them until now!

End of turn 3 - Syria still contested.
Turn 4 - 250AD
Uneventful; Persians still reducing revolting Militia in Syria.

End of turn 4 - still Syria!

Turn 5 - 251AD
It had to happen eventually - 15 Barbarian Strength Points appear in Scythia.  They will head for Italy next turn and I have put a legion in Illyria to slow them down.  Barbarian stacks have to stop .when they enter an area with a hostile force and if they do not control the province their force is halved due to attrition.  to control a force they need move than 3 times the Legions in the *province* so putting legions in other areas of the province will stop them controlling it.
I put 4 Legions in Syria to prevent Persian control (it is hard to get back if I lose control but it is not so hard if control remains disputed).  A 1 in 3 chance they will rebel, which they do. A  1 in 6 chance of an independent state, which they do.  The Persians and the new Syrian state will fight it out for a while.

End of turn 5.
Turn 6 - 252AD
Revolution in Gallia, Sicily, Dacia (12! that will be hard to put down) and Aegyptus.
Persians defeat the Syrian State - Persians down to 7 strength points in Syria.
In Egypt revolting militia do a 3:1 attack on 1 Legion and get a 1/2 DE result.  Legions ignore 1/2DE results.  This is the first time a 1/2DE has been inflicted on legions in either game.  This is mainly due to not many attacks against legions.  I think as more barbarians appear, and more revolutions, more legions will be getting attacked.
The Scythians move and get an Exchange against Dacian rebellion, and then attrition due to lack of control see only 3 Syrian Strength Points in Dacia and the revolution has been crushed for me.
Meanwhile, in Germania two stacks of barbarians appear. The next few turns may not be great. I thought about bribing Germs but on reflection I think the empire will be fine to let them move.
Lost quite a few legions this turn.

End of turn 6 - Persians control Syria. Dacia, Gallia and Sicilia still in revolt. Germans gathering on the border
Turn 7 - 253AD
Another stack of Germanic barbarians (10SP).  One of the now three Germanic tribes moves into Illyria. The Persians move into Asia but I move in 3 legions to contest control. Their is a fair bit of money in the Roman treasury so bribed the largest German tribe to stay in Germania.

End of turn 7 - Persians invade Asia, more Germans! White marker next to the Germans shows they have been bribed.
Turn 8 - 254AD
Revolution in Britannia and Gallia. 20SP in Scythia.  7SP of Germans make it to Italy. Hanging in there.Roman Treasury is 170 but went down this turn for the fist time.  Also maintaining Germanic bribes to ensure the different tribes don't join up (this is bad).  I think I can handle the Scythians.

End of turn 8 - Germans in Italy :-(
Turn 9 - 255AD
Germans wiped out the 6 legions I put into Italy for a loss of 3 themselves (so Germans down to 4SP and then two at the end of turn as they do not control Italia).  Scythians take control of Dacia on the way to Italia (it is hard to contest without running a big risk of the Legions rebelling).  Finally put down the Gallia revolution.

End of turn 9 - Germans, Scythians, revolts, Persians in Asia.
Turn 10 - 256AD
Revolution in deep Africa that I could not get to in one turn.  German succumb in Italy to the Romans.
Treasury went down again but not by much.  Scythians in Illyria down to 9SP.  For this turn, after barbarian combat (that happens before the Romans move), Romans had only half the Legions on the map than when they started the game. Extra legions do not appear in a scenario but lost legions can be rebuilt two turns after they are lost.  The last few turns have been bloody. had 1/2 the legions I started with this turn.  Four came back at the end of the turn - looking forward to turn 12 where I get a lot more! I am thin on the ground.  Still managing to maintain a 1/3 of legions in contested provinces to maintain control and stop some provinces going over to the Persians or barbarians. Although Syria is a lost cause; I will not be attempting to reconquer it this game - as the Persians now control it, 12SP of Persian militia will appear if I attack.

End of turn 10 - Hanging in there - cleared a lot of the empire of revolts and barbarians (not Illyria and Asia though)
Turn 11 - 257AD
Revolts in Britannia, Hispania, Thrace and Sicilia.  Scythians move towards Italy but blocked by some Legions that are attacked for no effect.  Persians move to attack Legions in Asia, also attack for no effect.
Bribed all the barbarians stacks (more appeared in Scythia!).  I need them not to move and Treasury went down by 30 due to bribes!  I do have 63 victory points but with two tuns to go  it is touch and go if I will still have 50, unless the barbarians don't invade.

End of turn 11. Feeling a bit more confident.
Turn 12 - 258AD
I cannot get to Britannia so have written it off. Pict raiding party appears so that corner of the world will keep themselves busy.  Even more Scythians appear.  I only bribe the 30SP stack of Scythians - I have almost all the legions back and feeling confident.

End of turn 12 - Britannia lost, Persians reinforce army in Asia but otherwise not too bad.
Turn 13 - 259AD
Africa revolts.

Ended with 86VPs.  Quite a good win.  Keeping 1/3 of forces in Provinces to maintain control was key.
End of turn 13 - the empire is mostly still together.
Verdict
A great game and a great narrative.  The only chore is adding up province tax points at the end of each game turn.  There are about a dozen provinces, all with different values.  Takes only about 30-60 seconds and I am not bad at adding up in my head but it does feel a little tedious.  And I was expecting to have to husband my tax credits in this game but never really had an issue with running out.  If a few more large barbarian forces had come out early it may have been a different story - I would not have been able to bribe them to stay, and I would have had a hard time to fight them.  Instead I got a lot of rebellions!
With the QRS, I find that each game turn takes about 7-10 minutes to play.  I rarely played more than one  turn at the same sitting.  It was quite east to find a spare 10 minutes and play a turn and then come back to it later (sometimes a week later) and play the next turn.  The game ideal for that.  You need some markers to indicate the status of some things and I have some I made up for that purpose (mainly if you have ever lost complete control, and which barbarian stack you have bribed.  Remembering the province target for a barbarian stack was not hard as for each barbarian there are not many options - and it is usually Italy!
It played very differently to scenario 1 and am looking forward to the scenario 3.

Sunday 9 July 2017

Portable "play in a document box or very small table" WW2 game - defining success and battle reports

Warning: This is a long post. OK, a *very* long post!  Lots of text about a portable game that is a 3x4 square grid with 6mm figures.  It does have some AARs.  Either skip though the "boring" bits, skim through for bits of interest, or make a cup of tea and prepare for a long read :-)

If you just want the final rules they are at this google drive link.

Introduction
In 1997 I bought the MiH Tank Commander Eastern Front CCG



In 2006 I came across an expanded version by Gary Chappell.  (webgrognard link)  Seemed a better game but never got around to playing it.

In 2008 I created a 3x4 version combining rules from both the original version and Gary's rules.  I also included a random terrain and force selection method.  Played them a few times but not enthused.

Then in 2014, buried in some TMP thread I mentioned that I was thinking about a portable ancients game that could be played on the train as I go to work.  But I was playing World War Two at the time and have 6mm WW2 figures, but no ancient figures smaller than 15mm. So my thoughts turned towards a (very) portable WW2 game that could be played solo on a train...or a lunch break.

This post details the journey I have taken over the last three years to get to a game that works, including 6 battle reports of the final rules (albeit some tweaking between games!).

Summary
Over the last three years I have done a few attempts to translate Tank Commander CCG to a game.

My first go was heavily based on Tank Commander.While the 3x4 grid seemed OK and some bits were fine, the rest of it I could not get it to work.  So I gave up on everything to do with Tank Commander except the 3x4 format. I kept 3x4 as that fits quite well on an A4 page - excellent for portability.

I then remembered I had a NUTS! variant I wrote that worked for 2'x2' with 20mm and maybe I could combine the good bits of the Tank Commander variant with some of my other WW2x2 rules.  After a few goes I thought I had something that worked.  I didn't.  I went back to Tank Commander.  Not great either.

In 2017 I had a brainwave. I have some homegrown WW2 company level rules (that I did not have in 2014) - convert these to a grid.  This seems to work and have some AARs at the end of this post to prove it.

Test game
My test game is the first scenario in a Kursk campaign that I can no longer seem to find online (although I have a saved copy).  Anyway, the idea is to play the first scenario and if that works, play through the 4-6 games of the campaign.

Battle Description
The Germans are attempting to take a farm in the opening of the Kursk Offensive in July 1943.  The table is mostly wheatfields with woods down the German left flank.

Troops
The poor trained Russian defenders are dug in and are:

  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads each
  • 1 MMG
  • 2 45mm AT gun
  • 3 T34/76 as re-inforcement
  • 2 offtable 122mm artillery battery


The veteran German attackers are:

  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads
  • 1 MMG
  • 4 Panzer IVG
  • 4 Stug IIIG

Terrain
Russians setup in top two rows, Germans enter onto the lower row.

Woods    Farm     Farm
Woods    Wheat    Wheat
Open     Wheat    Light
Wheat    Wheat    Light

Wheat = wheatfields
Light = light cover such as train banks, hedges, tree lined roads, orchard, scrub etc.

Victory
Germans occupy the two farm squares with no enemy in the farm squares

The original scenario is for IABSM and did not have a time limit.  I have found time limits are important for these vignette style battles but with one an activation or two a turn I did not want to count turns (makes it slightly faster) and it is a test game after all.  So I will stick with no turn limits.

Stage 1 (2014) – Tank Commander CCG (discarded)
Note that I went down this alley and discarded it after it was not working.  Go to Stage 4 if uninterested in my attempt to modify the Tank Commander card game to a quick train/lunchtime game.

Evolution of an idea
I got 6 packs of Tank Commander: The Eastern Front, a Collectable Card Game (CCG) back in 1997 or 1998 and liked it, but did not love it.

It is based on a 3x4 grid with a maximum of 3 squads/tanks per square.  Scale is each square being 500mx500m. You build a deck of units and event cards and play.  But (and it is a scenario in the game) we usually played with a set number of units and a limited number of events. Took about 30 minutes a game.  So while it was not great, the grid fits in with a small space and it is fast.  The downside is there is no suppression/pinning or spotting rules, two things I would like to see in the rules. A fuller review  of Tank commander a little later in this post.

In 2006, I came across a variant written in 2002 by Gary Chappell that expanded the grid to 5x4, clarified some of the rules, increased terrain effects, provided a better differentiated tank combat resolution system and increased the actions for each side each turn.  This increased the time for a game but opened up a lot more playability.  I think I only ever played this once as it made the game longer.

In 2008, I wrote a draft of WW2 rules that were played on a 8x8 grid and loosely based on Take Cover/Rapid Fire. These re-used some concepts from Tank Commander.  In reality, the rules were more converting Take Cover!! to use a grid to formalise movement more than anything else and so lost interest.

2014 – I have an idea for a portable ancients games using a 8x8 grid.  I think it will work, but I was thinking of using 2mm units to make it ultra-portable.  I have no 2mm ancient units, but then thought about using my 6mm WW2 collection instead for a game to play on a train.  Tank Commander with its 3x4 grid and small number of units seemed like a good start.

Overview of Tank Commander mechanics
Tank Commander is a d10 based system.  Infantry roll to hit and if hit are destroyed.  Tanks roll to hit, if hit compare penetration Vs armour value and roll to see if destroyed. The grid is 4 long by 3 wide (so a player’s edge is 3 wide).  3 units per player per position.

The turn sequence is IGOYGO but this a player turn:
EITHER
  • Move units from one position to other positions
  • Fire with one unit (not all units in a position)
  • Draw a card (that could be a unit, an interrupt (play anytime including now) or an instant (play later)
  • Play a card (bring a new unit on or play an event)
After doing one of these actions, conduct a melee – any position with units from both sides all fire at each other simultaneously.
A player can hold 6 cards in their hand.
Interrupts are played at any time and are things like equipment, stop a unit from moving, conduct 2 actions.
Instants are played as an action; examples are artillery strikes.

I had a few attempts before I abandoned it, as detailed below

First attempt at the rules
I initially was going to go with Tank Commander but with d6s (I really like d6s).  I changed the infantry to d6 to hit and d6 to destroy (based on cover) to match the 2-step dice rolls for tanks (d6 to hit, d6 to destroy (based on penetration Vs armour).  I was going to keep the cards but not for more units - just for events such as bonus equipment, interrupts and actions.  This did not last as cards would not really translate into a portable game on the train and there was no suppression and suppression is important to me for a WW2 game.  I did add in the concept of being hidden (no move or fire since the start of the game and if you hidden you cannot be hit).

Second attempt at the rules
I revamped the "to hit" and the "to destroy" mechanism.  But the “to hit” now has five modifiers.  I got rid of the event cards. It looks just like normal rules forced into a 3x4 grid.  And suppression, while good, slowed down the game.  It did not play well.

Third attempt at the rules
Kept the suppression and the to hit modifiers and added back in the event cards but as an event roll, rather than event cards.  This was much better.  Events are scenario dependent or randomised for the game (so at least you know the type of events that you can get).  But I did not really like the back and forth – one fire or one move or event then the other player has a go.  The back and forth “activate one unit” was not working great on a small scale.  And even though there were only a few events, they needed to be tracked as they could be saved.  I thought about immediate play of events but this made them too powerful and all a player would probably do was keep rolling for events!  It still was not a great game.

Abandonment
I was trying to shoe-horn a CCG into a miniature game.  In hindsight, it was never going to work.  Tank Commander is a very event driven game that did not translate into a miniature game.  The good news is that after 15 years I can stop thinking about tweaking Tank Commander!

Stage 2 (early 2015) – Upscale my NUTS! interpretation
In 2014, I played a few games of NUTS! and then rewrote a version that used a single d6  and streamlined the rules a lot so it would play faster.  I played on a 2’x2’ table with 5-10 figures moving 4”.  My thoughts were that I could modify the rules to a 4x4 grid and add in some of the work I had done on weapon ranges from the abandoned Tank Commander rules.

First attempt at the rules
For this attempt, at the start of each player turn, a d6 is rolled to see how many areas may be activated, Veterans more than Green. For higher level rules, I like to add troop differentiation of Green and Veterans into morale and/or command and control.  For skirmish games, I do not mind if Green and Veterans modify the fire/save results.  However, in a game on a 4x4 grid with only 8-12 individual units, it may be better to represent troop differences by command and control rather than firing/saves.  And the rules will be simpler!  I could not do this easily with the Tank Commander rules as the turn sequence did not really allow it (I had ideas, but none I felt I would like!).  If it doesn’t work, I can always add back in green/veteran modifiers.

I never played these rules as they just were too clunky and the activation mechanism did not sit well with me.

Side note on 3x4 Vs 4x4 grid (and Vs 6x9 squares)
I started Stage 2 thinking of using a 4x4 square grid.  Not only would this make it easier to convert scenarios (a 3x4 requires some tuning to make sure the approaches are still what the scenario requires) but I could re-use the rules on a 2'x2' table.  But the 6mm Russian units I have do not fit easily into a square on a A4 if using 4 squares along the narrow side.  So I kept with 3.  I also thought about going with a 6x6 or 6x9 grid and only one squad per square.  But that meant I could have only 6 squads maximum across (compared to 9 if you have 3 per square on a 3x4 grid).  I could have gone with less units but with only a small number of units I would feel compelled to mark units as damaged and that may not make a portable game.  3x4 grid it stayed.

Second attempt
I added in a better chance of multiple activations for veteran units.  I also modified the to hit and damage to add in green/veteran modifiers.  I went back to a 3x4 grid.  Strangely, although I did not like the Tank commander activation, I have something similar - one square each side. The twist is there is a chance you may get two activations on your go.  This is done by a die roll, while in the Tank Commander CCG this was a card you may get and then play.  Rolling for it just *feels* more like miniature gaming.

Abandonment
The rules were too complex for a train game.  While interesting as an exercise, these rules are still just like my WW2 miniature rules on a 3x4 grid but badly done!

Stage 3 (mid 2015) - Back to Tank Commander
Yes, I know I abandoned Tank Commander but I went back and actually played it.  My failure previously was adding a lot of rules to Tank Commander. This time all I did was convert Tank Commander from a d10 to a d6 and add a few minor rules.  I did not change the mechanisms.
The instant and interrupts became random events at the start of each player turn, with the events specific to each side.  I played it again once and remembered why I did not think that it was a great game.  Abandoned again!

Hiatus (2015-2017)
Busy doing other projects but every now and then thinking on how to get the 3x4 grid to work.

Stage 4 (2017) - modified my rules for a 3x4 grid
I started thinking on it again. I forgot entirely about using Tank Commander or NUTS! variants.  I also used a scale of 150mx150m for each square as this is more consistent with the frontage for a company battle (width of table is 3 squares or 450m).  I wrote some rules using 1d6 to hit, and then for vehicles a further 1d6 for damage.  There were a number of modifiers (about 4) to each of the to hit and then the vehicle damage roll.  I got to near the end of writing the rules and realised that I was not as fond as I was of a d6 with +/- modifiers as I used to be; and even though the vehicle and infantry used the same to hit table, I did not really want a further roll just for vehicles - it just seemed like it made the process different for infantry and vehicles.  I could go with a 2 rolls for everything hit that would slow the game down.   The reason I wrote these d6 rules is I did not think my latest company rules would work well.  These are based on GoalSystem and see here for a brief explanation of my WW2 version, go to the last table in the post (I have not written up the rules yet).  But I thought to give it a go, quickly wrote a quick reference sheet that seemed to work and was internally consistent.

The final version of the rules I used, WW3x4 Advancing Companies, are at this google drive link.

Quick rules summary
All dice are Goal System dice - 3 faces are blank, 2 faces are 1 success, 1 face is 2 successes; or think of it as a d6 with 1,2,3 is no successes, 4, 5 - one success, 6  - two successes.

Game sequence
  • Player one rolls for activation and conducts activations
  • Player one then conducts melee in any order (melee is any square with friendly and enemy)
  • Player two does the same two steps.
  • Keep alternating.

Activation
Roll 3d and count successes

0
Event
1-2
1 activation
3
1 activation, 2 if regular or veteran
4+
1 activation, 2 if veteran
Cannot activate same unit twice in the same turn.

Activation: pick one square and stands may either fire or move or rally.
There s a simple spot process - a squad can spot before or after activation.  Hidden units not moving or firing require 2 successes on 1 die at range 1.   Units that moved or fire are spotted on one success on one die.

Move
Most units are one square (in any direction).
Stacking limit of maximum 3 bases/vehicles per square per side.

Fire
Rifles squads are range 1, most AT range 2 or 3.

Infantry: mainly 1d per base
Direct HE: Gun HE value Vs infantry. Max range 3.
Vehicle target: 3d + attack #d  - defence #d
Modifiers
-1d
firer moved or pinned
-1d
target in hard cover
+1d
melee
+1d
if target in open
-1d
Range 2+
-1d
Range 3+
Result

Infantry
Vehicle
0
If target able to return fire then if one or more 1s rolled then firer pinned.
Target may return fire if any ones rolled
1
Target pinned; retreat in open; may only move 1.
Pinned.
2
Target suppressed.
Pin and Damaged
3+
1 target destroyed/KO (spec fire treat as 2)
4+
1 target destroyed, rest pinned (5+ suppressed)
Soft/transport vehicles: pinned/damaged = KO
Suppressed – no move or fire
Vehicle 2 x damaged = KO

Note for examples of vehicle attack/defence value: trucks have defence 0, armoured cars 1, Shermans 3.  Attack value of a Sherman ot 75mm is 3. A PanzerIV firing at a sherman rolls 4 dice: base of 3 plus 4d for the 75mm gun minus 3d for Sherman armour.

Rally
Roll 1 die for Green, 2 for Regulat and 3 for Veteran squads.  Need at least 1 success to become unsuppressed.

Melee
At the end of a player turn, simultaneous fire is conducted in all squares with both friendly and enemy bases.

Game 1
I used the same test game from above.

Game highlights

Overview of the table - Russians dug in on the right, Germans will enter on the left.
The Russians set up defensively in the farm, and also in the only other cover - the woods.  The T34s will enter later, and there is room in the back woods square to come in through.
Note I have forgotten to put on the Russian company commander squad.  I only remembered this near the end of the game   The funniest thing though is when I was setting up for game 2, I found I had not forgotten and found the Russian CO under the tree in the corner farm.  I could not see him from the top! Eagle eyes will just see the edge of a base sticking out from the large round tree in the bottom right square above.

The Germans

Germans on turn 2 (two activations to move two different square's forces
 The Germans come on and decide to focus on the woods as a way into the farm complex.

Germans and Russians battle it out in the woods.  The German will lose the squad and a PanzerIV but the Russians will all get suppressed.
Each square represents about 150mx150m so even though I call combat in a square "Melee" it does cover combat that is occurring at a range of about 30-80m.

The Germans not doing well in the woods.
It is here I realise the Germans are being distracted by the woods - the farm is the objective.  The rest of the Germans start to focus on the farm.

Overview of where we are at. I have included a shot of some of the special Goalsystem dice recently made available via the Lead Adventure Forum.

While the Germans are held up in the woods, the rest are continuing to advance on the farm. Rifle squads only have a range of 1 square, as does the 45mm AT gun.  I keep forgetting the ranges are so short.  Also units that have not fired or moved are hard to spot requiring 2 successes on one die (equivalent to rolling a 6 on an ordinary d6) from range 1 only.

Finally, farm action (bottom right)
The Germans make it to one of farms and hold on to it.  For some reason I brought the Stugs on on the other side to the farm, to focus on the woods.  The woods are very distracting, and seems to be working as a distraction for me, even playing solo!

End game, a German win
After a lot, and I mean a lot, of melees in the farm squares the Germans win.  Melee in these two squares must have taken at least half the game time and probably more.

Verdict
Well, that was fun if not a little fiddly with such a small space.  A lot of lessons learned.  There were a few rule omissions and so there were some minor rule additions for situations I had not thought of.  I kept the destroyed tanks on the table and I should just take them off - they take up much needed space. The biggest change though is to the "to hit" results.  I implemented my standard "1 success is pinned, 2 successes is suppressed and 3 successes is KO".  Works really well but in this situation slowed the game down a lot and melees took a long time.  This is not a bad thing and I liked how it worked but I am going to remove the pinned status and have 1 success being suppressed and 2 is KO.  This should speed up the game - it is supposed to be very fast and this one probably took 40 minutes. I am looking for faster!  It also simplified the -1 to hit for pinned as it was confusing on how to handle that with multiple squads in melee and one is pinned and one isn't.  I will play it again but with only these two hits results.  It may be too deadly - only one way to find out.

Game 2
I used the same test game from game 1.

New result table
Result

Infantry
Vehicle
1
Target suppressed. Retreat in open; may only move 1.
Suppressed and Damaged.
2
Target destroyed.
Suppressed and Damaged.
3+
Target destroyed. All  targets in square suppressed
Target KO.
Soft/transport vehicles damaged = KO
Suppressed – no move or fire
Vehicle 2 x damaged = KO

Game highlights
Russian set up is very similar to that of game 1 but more of a focus on the woods.

German Entry with Russians on the right
Moving into the wheatfields in the centre (in front of the farm and beside the wood) would be bad for the Germans as they would come under fire from just about every square! Although the Russians do only get to fire from one square in their activation.  So the Germans move two tanks and infantry into the woods to reduce the forces there.

The Germans move into the woods
Bad luck for the Germans!  All three Germans stands (the two PanzerIVs and a German Gruppe) are destroyed.  In retaliation, the Germans did manage to suppress the three Russian defenders. (Combat in a square is simultaneous but there is a penalty for a firer moving). Distracted by the woods again!

No Germans, but the Russian defenders are all suppressed (the green markers, no not the balls - they are supposed to be trees).   The green "bush" markers next to each stand indicate suppression.
The Russians get an infantry section reinforcement as a random event that moves into the woods on the rear edge.

Germans have lost 3 tanks and 3 squads.  Russians have lost 1 section and a AT gun, but have lost a farm square.   The Germans advance though up the centre and manage to enter the farm on the Russian right flank.

No much on the table for the Germans in the mid game.
Russians get an event that allows for a one square to do a move and fire, or fire and move. Move T34s to the contested farm. and take it back.  Most of the rest of the Germans are gradually routed for only a little loss to the Russians.

The Stugs, the last of the Germans, approach the centre farm.
Only two of the Stugs are left and they manage to get in front of the centre farm, only to be KO'd.  Game over and a victory to the Russians

The remaining Russians.  Not a lot but there are no more Germans!
The whole game the Germans only rolled one activation each turn (should get two activations in one turn about every 3 turns) .  Russians managed to win, but not much left.  The Germans rolled appallingly for activation and combat which did not help.

Arrghhh, and just remembered the Russians had two artillery attacks available that I did not use!

Verdict
I am getting the hang of the rules a bit more.  Even though I wrote them, they do play fairly differently to a non-gridded game on a larger table. I really do feel like a company commander moving my units to where they can do best.  I do not think I am a convert to larger gridded games (not yet anyway!) but in this small format it is working well.  There is no micromanaging for ranges or movement.  Combat takes place mostly at range 0 or 1, so even that is reduced to the most basic (just like a company commander).

I am finding this second game a lot more fun that the first - this second game was a lot faster.  I also think it worked a lot better due to the revised, simpler combat results table.  There is only really one result to track (suppression) rather than pinned and suppressed.  I have kept the damage result for vehicles and it has worked for me in the past where 2 damages equates to a KO.  This helps with being able to actually destroy vehicles, something that would happen eventually: One firing roll does not equal one shot - it is firing over a period of time.

I found a bunch of minor rule gaps I need to write up (e.g. can tanks fire out of melee with only infantry at other tanks?  when can you move out of melee).  I think I am using too many units for the defenders - these rules are very unforgiving to the attacker, especially if not in good cover.   Probably like in real life, just not used to it in a game!  This using of too many defender stands plagued me in the later games as well.

Game 3
Game 3 is a new scenario from the the Day 1 Kursk campaign.

Battle Description
The Germans are attempting to take a farm in the opening of the Kursk Offensive in July 1943.  The table is mostly wheatfields with woods down the German left flank.

Troops
The poorly trained Russian defenders are dug in and are:
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 platoons of 2 squads each
  • 1 MMG
  • 1 45mm AT gun
  • 1 76mm  Zis3 AT Gun
  • 1 81mm mortar team
  • 3 T34/76 - dug in and cannot move
  • 3 offtable 122mm artillery battery
  • 2 squares can be mined, 1 real, one fake.
The veteran German attackers are:
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads
  • 1 Pioneer platoon of 2 squads
  • 2 Tigers
  • 4 Panzer IV

Terrain
Russians setup in top three rows, all are dug in, including the T34s that cannot move. Germans enter onto the lower row.

Hill/Vill Hill       Wheat
Open      Wheat      Open
Open      Wheat      Light
Wood      Wheat      Light

Hill/Vill = Hill with a village
Wheat = wheatfields
Light = light cover such as train banks, hedges, tree lined roads, orchard, scrub etc.

Victory
Germans need to occupy the hill with the village.

Game highlights

The Russians setup.  The lichen in the wheatfield is the real mine location.

The German attackers, left to right: Tanks, 2 pioneer squads, 6 squads and the Company HQ
Russians destroy 3 PanzerIVs for no losses.  Tanks advancing in the open Vs superior guns is really bad.  And rolling zero successes a lot does not help either! But the Tigers are really good and hard to kill.  Their armour is great and so is the gun.  Even though the Russian targets are dug in, the Tigers are still managing to inflict some damage.

3 PanzerIVs gone and the Tigers come on and are reeking havoc - they are hard to kill and heavy armour!
Tigers cause a bit of havoc but in melee some infantry manage to destroy a tTger over several turns (by causing damage twice with lucky dice rolls - in real life maybe grenades in the tracks or something).  The other Tiger fell victim to the 76mm.  But two T34s are gone and some Russian infantry is suppressed. So it did not go all one way.  The Germans still have forces to move on and the defence it dented, but still there. The Russians being dug in is making them makes them quite hard to hit - one less die is rolled.  It is proving to be a tough nut!

The Germans only have the two suppressed squads (on the left)  on the board while the Russians still have a lot of defenders, albeit some are suppressed too.  The Germans keep bringing on more stuff that ends up in them routing :-(
The Germans keep getting one activation that makes it really difficult to bring enough force to bear - some come on, move up, get suppressed and then rout.  They never seem to get enough to be able to move into melee.

It is a disaster for the Germans.  The last few Gruppe move on with the PanzerIV but two good shots by the dug in T34 damage it then KO it.  The Germans only have a few stands left.  I roll for force morale and the Germans concede the ground. Onward to the next scenario!

End game - the Germans have three stands left in total (on the left) while the Russians still have a significant defence force. 

Verdict
Now, on three GoalSystem dice the chances of roll 3 or more successes is aone-third.  So the Germans should be getting two activations every third turn.  It was more like every 10th turn!  This is appalling and cost them the game.  They were activating at the same rate as the Russians and so they never got a chance to do a "double move" and find a point of attack.  The Tigers being KO'd was a bit unlucky too.  There was a stretch at the end where I was constantly unsuppressing the Germans and the Russians were firing right back and suppressing them again. Ah well.  The rules are definitely faster and still fun. Even if it did seem like an overwhelming defeat for the Germans.  I still did not reduce the Russian forces enough for this scenario but the Germans did play poorly (even if it was a solo game) and had poor dice rolls as well.  I am still playing the game off a 1 page QRS and really need to get back to writing up the rules proper.  Especially as I have the rules for barbed wire and mines in my head and not sure I will remember them from game to game.  I have been playing these games in a map drawer and so have not really tested out the "portable" bit.  I am tempted to take them to work and given them a run during a lunchtime.

Preamble to Game 4
So, 4 weeks go by and I am too busy to get some more games in.  I am off on a family week holiday to a beachhouse about 90 minutes away and packing a few games to play just in case, and remember I have game 4 setup.  Why not take it with me?  I grab a document folder and put all the stuff in in and a few more forces if I can squeeze a couple more game in.  10 minutes later it is packed in the bag and ready to go.  The remaining three games (games 4 to 6) were played at the beach house.  Short version: went well, no issues, 25-30 minute games.  A friend that went with us, not into gaming very much but knows of my habit, did think I was taking "miniature gaming" a bit too far! It never struck me before in all these years of testing but a game with toy soldiers on an A4 page may seem strange from the outside - and possibly from the inside as well!  

The portable folder.

The folder open.
Folder contents
The terrain and dice are loose, the Grass mat is A4 size cut from a railway grass mat.  The QRS is under it.  The  woods, markers and 6mm troops are in the small carry case (the case is about 2cm high).  The whole thing is quite light and I could probably make up another carry case or two and have a lot more troop types and different nationalities at well.

Apologies for some of photos coming up
Lastly, the games were played at night and I used my phone camera rather than the digital camera I normally use.  The phone camera is pretty good but occasionally lapses into yellow hues due to my poor positioning of the camera and not bothering to check what the picture looks like after I take it.

Game 4
Game 4 is another new scenario in the Kursk campaign.

Battle Description
The Germans need to take a cross roads to open up the path to a major town.  It is defended by dug-in Russians.

Troops
Germans (veteran):
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 1 MMG
  • 1 81mm Mortar
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads
  • 2 pioneer platoon of 2 squads
  • 1 Tiger
  • 2 Stugs
  • 2 105mm artillery missions
Russians (regular):
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 45mm AT gun
  • 1 MMG
  • 1 81mm mortar
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads
  • 2 KV1S
  • 1 122mm artillery mission
  • 3 minefields – 2 real, one fake
  • 2 barbed wires
KV1s are dug in and cannot move.

Terrain
Russians setup in the top two rows, all are dug in.  Germans enter on the lower row.

Farm  LCover Wheat
Wheat LCover Clear
Wheat LCover Farm
Wheat LCover Wheat

Note: the corner farm surrounded by AT ditch that I represented by some hedges.

AT ditch – cannot be crossed by vehicles. Infantry can only move one square when crossing ditch. Fire crossing ditch against infantry target count target as in Light cover.

Victory
German victory is to control the Light Cover square next the the farm at the Russian edge, but need to ensure no enemy unsuppressed units are adjacent either.

Game Highlights
This game played out a bit differently as the Russians are regular and so have a reasonable chance of gaining two activations.  In previous games they have been "green/poor" and only ever got one.  Of course, in the previous games the Germans rolled consistently shockingly for activations and normally got one anyway!  For this game, I only took a couple of pictures as I was so involved in playing. Sorry.

The German attackers


Empty table, Russians setup on the right.  Germans enter on the left with the objective to hold the centre square on the right edge.
The Germans focus on the right flank as there better cover that was.  The Pioneers advance to clear out the mines and barbed wire.  Everything is going to plan.

Early in the game, the Pioneers are in the centre to clear the wire and mines.  Other Germans are approaching up the right flank. 
The near equality of activations (1-2 for the Germans followed by 1-2 for the Russians) sees the Germans unable to press an advantage anywhere.  The Defenders are many and so whenever the Germans get close, they are suppressed or routed.  The game was over fairly quickly with the defence untouched.  It also did not help that I got the German Company HQ killed early on.

End game.  The Germans do not have much left - what they have you can see at the left of the table.  I rolled a force morale result and they retreated.  The Russians are mostly still on the table.

Verdict
Well, that was a shattering defeat for the Germans.  Once again I have vastly underestimated how hard it is to attack dug in troops and  also in hard cover.  I am obviously not good at converting IABSM scenarios in my ww3x4 rules!  I also think I did not really have a German plan - just winged it and should have focused on one flank. I am going to play this again but cut down on the Russian defenders.  I also think having the 81mm mortars on the table just takes up extra room.  In reality they would not be at the very front line.  I will play them being just off table.  It does not matter for the rules as it still requires a FO or the Co HQ to call in the fire - regardless of if they are on table or not.  These mortars are battalion assets and so require 2 success on 3 dice (about 60%) to be called in.

It was also after this game I slightly modified calling in artillery.  I did have a rule where if you failed to call, the next time you called you needs 1 less success (this was more to represent a successful call but unsuccessful registration).  I got rid of this as I would have to remember something, or use a marker.  The price of simplicity...or age!

Game 5
Game 5 is a repeat of game 4 but will reduced Russian defenders.

Battle Description
The Germans need to take a cross roads to open up the path to a major town.  It is defended by dug-in Russians.

Troops
Germans (veteran):
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 1 MMG
  • 1 81mm Mortar
  • 2 platoons of 3 squads
  • 2 pioneer platoon of 2 squads
  • 1 Tiger
  • 2 Stugs
  • 2 105mm artillery missions

Russians (regular):
  • 1 Company HQ squad
  • 2 45mm AT gun
  • 1 MMG
  • 1 81mm mortar
  • 2 platoons of 2 squads
  • 1 KV1S
  • 1 122mm artillery mission
  • 3 minefields – 2 real, one fake
  • 2 barbed wires
KV1S is dug in and cannot move.

I have reduced the Russians by 2 squads and 1 KV-1S compared to game 4 forces.

Terrain
Russians setup in the top two rows, all are dug in.  Germans enter on the lower row.

Farm  LCover Wheat
Wheat LCover Clear
Wheat LCover Farm
Wheat LCover Wheat

Note: the corner farm surrounded by AT ditch that I represented by some hedges.

AT ditch – cannot be crossed by vehicles. Infantry can only move one square when crossing ditch. Fire crossing ditch against infantry target count target as in Light cover.

Victory
German victory is to control the Light Cover square next the the farm at the Russian edge, but need to ensure no enemy unsuppressed units are adjacent either.

Game Highlights

The German attackers (same as Game 4)

Russian defenders, as per game 4 less two squads and a tank.
The Pioneers move on to head to the farm and them hopefully clear barbed wire and mines.

Opening move with Pioneers coming on.
The Germans have a plan this time - focus on the left flank but use the right farm as a base for calling in fire, and also move across into the centre if clear.enough to do so.

Another early game shot with the Pioneers and some Gruppe on the table.

The German plan is working!  The Germans manage to get to the square in front of the Russian held farm and slowly chip away at the defenders.  They are losing Gruppe in the process, but the Germans have more of them.

The Germans have managed to clear a lot of units from the farm (top right) but at a large cost to themselves.  The crossroads is also clear.

The plan worked - good use of a MMG firebase in the centre, actually having a plan and reducing the number of Russian defenders from the previous game.  It felt a lot more balanced and they the Russians could have won this one.

End game - the Russians only have the Co HQ left (bottom right).
Verdict
A much more enjoyable game.  A lot more balanced and I think I actually used tactics!  A one stage someone looked over at me playing and said "Oh dear, something must be wrong" but it was me actually focusing on the game - I was very engrossed.

This game, and the previous one, took about 25 minutes each including setup.  that is pretty good as I am aiming for a game that takes less than 30 minutes.

Game 6
Game 6 is another new scenario in the Kursk campaign.

Battle Description

Troops
Germans (veteran):
1 Company HQ squad
1 MMG
1 81mm Mortar (offtable)
2 platoons of 3 squads
2 pioneer platoon of 2 squads
3 PanzerIVD
3 Stugs
2 105mm artillery missions

Russians (regular):
1 Company HQ squad
2 76mm AT gun
1 MMG
1 81mm mortar (off table)
2 platoons of 2 squads
1 KV1S
1 122mm artillery mission
3 minefields – 2 real, one fake
2 barbed wires

KV1S is dug in and cannot move

Terrain
Russians setup in the top two rows, all are dug in.  Germans enter on the lower row.

Wheat   Farm    Clear
Wheat   Farm    Wheat
Wheat   Clear   Wheat
LCover  LCover  LCover

Note: The two farms squares are protected by an AT ditch on two sides.

AT ditch – cannot be crossed by vehicles. Infantry can only move one square when crossing ditch. Fire crossing ditch against infantry target count target as in Light cover.

Victory
German victory is to control the Farm square on the Russian edge.

Game Highlights


The battlefield, Germans enter on the left, Russians setup on the right.

The Russian defenders

The German attackers

The Germans have a plan - go up both flanks and then focus on taking over the centre farm from both sides.  The German Pioneers enter first to find a path in the mine fields.

Pioneers enter the battle.

Even with not many Russian defenders, the game is going like Game 4 - the Germans just cannot maintain enough stands on the table to mount a credible offense.  dug in units are really hard to get rid of.  Especially when you are trying to attack without much cover.  I also over did the penetration values of the Russian 76mm by one dice.  This may not sound like much, but it did mean they were like a knife through butter versus the German armour.  I think the Panzers and Stugs would have made a much bigger difference if I had got this right.  They would have stayed longer and supported the infantry; the latter desperately needing it.

Mid-game and the Germans are struggling to manage momentum.

It was no use, it was all too much for the Germans - , the supersized 76mm, the lack of cover and the Pioneers only clearing one of the minefields.  The Russians were good troops and the Germans never managed to stage a credible attack - they could chip away but the dug in, hard to hit defenders would just fire back.    The Germans rolled for force morale and were ordered to retreat from the board.

End game - Russian victory! A couple of Russians defenders gone but the Germans never really had a chance.

Verdict
My mistake - I have overpowered the Russian 76mm.  If I was playing it again, I would also reduce the Russian defenders to 1 AT gun as well.  The Germans may need another Zug to balance  it out, or increase the artillery. The range of most stands is one and the Germans were being fired at while in no cover. In real life it would not have worked either.

 Mid game I also changed slightly the way HE works - now all hits are distributed evenly across all the stands in a square rather than being able to select a stand for hits and then the other overspill.  This means that HE will tend to suppress all units in a square before KOing them.  In my rules for larger table, I let HE suppress a target automatically, but the squares cover a much larger area than in those rules so had not figured out how to do this, until now.

Overall Verdict after these last 6 games
Let's tick some boxes
Tank Commander the Card Game abandoned: tick!
20 year journey over: tick!
Fast game: tick!
One page QRS: tick!
Portable: tick!
Playable in a lunch break: tick (but untested)
Playable on a train: maybe - would have to think about magnetising some of it
Includes suppression: tick!
Includes hidden units: tick!
Feels like a company game with you as the CO: tick (my opinion of course!)
Tested: slight tick - only 1943 eastern front attack/defence
Counts towards 6x6 challenge for 2017: tick, and is 6 plays of one game - double tick

Rules link
The final version of the rules I used, WW3x4 Advancing Companies, are at this google drive link.

Some last bits of left over rules discussion 
Close assault: One thing I did start work on but then abandoned was some close assault rules to represent fighting at less than 30m.  This would only be for stands in melee and not on the first turn of melee.  when melee occurs, one side (or both) could choose to close assault.  If this occurred, each side would choose from Attack, Defend or Flexible and a simple matrix would give bonuses, or not to a side. e.g. if both sides chose attack, each side would roll 1 extra die for melee.  It was just an added complication that I did not think would add to the rules and so never explored it much further.

Roads:  Roads are absent.  I really intended to add roads but on a A4 page putting on roads just got too tight a squeeze for terrain.  If I had "terrain squares' I would think about putting road on the table.  I have rules for roads that are not all that complex and have kept them in the rules as optional, just in case I ever decide to play again and want to use them!

The rules are unforgiving for attacking dug in attackers over open terrain.  I really did not get this even in the 6th game.  Partly that is because I was interpreting scenarios for different rulesets and trying to relate them to a 3x4 table.  I need more work on doing this :-)

Final comment
A long standing side project is complete.  I may go back and test the rules a little more, and maybe actually run a campaign book with them.  For now, I am moving onto other things.  I did enjoy playing these games but I still have to finalise my WW2 rules for 20mm company level games, 20mm skirmish games and 6mm 2'x2' company games.  All require more testing so who knows when I will get back to ww2 3x4 - the proverbial wargamers dilemma of too many projects!