I jazzed things up a bit by offering both Richthofen brothers with ace abilities as standard in triplanes and giving the British two Bristol fighters, these planes have not been used before so they were getting their first run out.
Unfortunately due to circumstances beyond my control we had four players rather than six, which was a shame as I would have liked to have seen the skies buzzing with aircraft, but we all get caught out at times. Maybe later we can try it again.
I was German and choose two lovely Fokker DVIII's while Ryan (Ryan Air .... come on) took two Siemans Schukert DIII's, for the RAF Andy had two SE5a's and Simon took the Bristols. Both sides headed towards the opponents balloon, well we all did but Ryan seemed to be taking the long way round. After the first pass I decided to send one of my planes back to defend our balloon, Simon had the same idea but brought both of his back, this left my one DVIII on his own but he gallantly pursued his mission and soon was pumping the dirigible full of lead. Meanwhile Ryan and Andy got caught up in some desperate dogfighting around the German balloon.
I lost the first aircraft, my Ace was struggling with a wound while his engine smoked and belched flames, he couldn't fight off two Bristol fighters and down he went in a fiery ball. I decided to bring on Richthofen, although it was a black triplane as the original lost its magnet while unpacking. Andy lost an SE5 and brought on a Camel as replacement, somewhere in the maelstrom Ryan also lost one of his. All this time I kept plugging away at the balloon with my remaining DVIII, the damage cards were piling up on it while my pilot dodged death for a long time, sadly though he too spiralled earthwards. The triplane arrived to help but he didn't last long, there seemed to be something wrong with our bloody planes today, or something like that. I took a Fokker DVII for my last choice, as had Ryan and we both sped towards the badly damaged British balloon, the one I had badly damaged may I add and suffered while doing it. In came a red nosed Fokker, a quick burst and five points to Ryan Air.
A good game but I would like to try it with more players at some point. Elsewhere we had a boardgame and a large Frostgrave game.
I have almost finished the Carolingian cavalry, I will give them some shading tonight and then have them varnished and ready for the weekend. I have a few small projects of my own to get sorted out and will also have to get the organisation for the new army done so that I know what I am looking at. Doing some Bolt Action at the weekend, looking forward to that.
Great stuff you can't beat WoW for a fun game, perhaps that is all we will be up for Monday, with Dave having me being ill and me with jet lag.
ReplyDeletePerhaps we may wing it better than usual :~)
Hope you enjoyed your trip, see any battlefields perhaps?
DeleteCertainly did thank you, some pics will be up in the blog later :~)
DeleteExcellent stuff! I am inspired to update my own collection with some of these newer planes. The balloons look great and I like the flame/smoke trail effect. I moved away from WoW in order to field larger numbers of planes and invested heavily in Tumbling Dice 1:600. Unfortunately, all the rule sets - and I must have 7 or 8 - are grognard inspired in their complexity. Far too much to learn for the odd game and a problem in my personal view across wargaming and board wargaming especially.
ReplyDeleteMost of those were metal kits from Red Eagle if I remember correctly as you could not get them at the time, only as card sets. They may now be available as 'official' planes. The balloons are resin and again not 'official' but more realistic and cheaper. I moved to kits as the prices for the real stuff hit the roof for a small plastic plane.
DeleteI shall sniff around ebay and see if anything comes up cheap. The official planes are pricey particularly as I repainted mine and added new decals.
ReplyDeleteTalking of wargame rules does anyone remember Edward Woodward as Callan who was a spy and wargames buff. In one episode a man called Schneider asks him if he fancies a game and they play Waterloo and Gettysburg straight off with no rules in sight! Seem to remember Callan "wins" Gettysburg with a distinctly Napoleonic use of cavalry against infantry.
I remember it, very envious at the time.
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