The Wood Elves of Mirkwood Forest, under the command of King Thanduril and accompanied by Thorin Okenshield attempt to stem the tide of the Evil (BWAH HAH HAH) onslaught.
Over the Christmas break Honorable Son #5 (The Skirmisher) and myself played an oldie but goodie: Games Workshops' The Battle of Five Armies. The Battle of Five Armies using the Warmaster rules concept, one of the more innovative sets of rules developed. We see its influence, combat and activation system in many subsequent rules that have been written. Sadly, it is out of production.
The Field of Battle.
"Halt!" cried Gandalf, who appeared suddenly, and stood alone, with arms uplifted, between the advancing dwarves and the ranks awaiting them. "Halt!" he called in a voice like thunder, and his staff blazed forth with a flash like lightning. "Dread has come upon you all! Alas! It has come more switly than I guesses. The Goblins are upon you! Bolg of the North is coming!
For this iteration I was going to be the Wood Elves, the Dwarves, the men of Lake Town and the Eagles. Honorable Son #5 (The Skirmisher) would be the Goblins, Wargs, and Goblin Riders (BWAH HAH HAH).
The Elvish Army deploy on the Eastern Spur to the right of Thorin's Gate.
In the scenario, all of the Forces of Good (except the Eagles and Beorn) are deployed while the Army of Bolg deploys his Wargs and Wolf riders. The Goblin infantry each turn must roll a six sided die to determine how many goblins units arrive. Traditionally they arrive helter skelter allowing the Forces of Good time to deploy, disrupt attacks and buy time for the Eagles and/or Beorn to show up.
Thorin and Company. Once Thorin Oakenshield passes a command roll, the gate comes crashing done and the mighty warrior and fellow companions enter the fray.
The Dwarven Army under Dain Ironfoot and the men of Lake Town under the command of King Bard await the enemy onslaught.
Usually when I play the Forces of Good I am more cautious as it is easy to get overwhelmed or outflanked by the faster Wargs and Wolf riders. This time I decided to be more agressive, advance with all of my forces and combine them near the ford and wait for the Eagles and /or Beorn to show up.
Bolg.
To make a long story short; for once the goblins moved onto the table like maniacs. The Forces of Evil (BWAH HAH HAH!) fought a sacrificial delaying action to keep the men and dwarves out of the main battle (and I had trouble getting the men and dwarves activated!). The Elves were left to face the full fury of Bolg and the goblins in the open. The Eagles and Beorn never showed up. It was not pretty but we went down fighting!
Here are some pictures from the battle:
A hearty handshake, some laughter and another game well done. Now where is my ring, pipe and hot chocolate?
Very cool, Neil. That's some very impressive painting in that scale.
ReplyDeleteDean,
DeleteThanks. I have figured out for 10mm that the trick is to paint the unit, not the individual figures if that makes sense.
Neil
The lands of Middle Earth will be ringing with the sounds of battle from your fields of Mars?
ReplyDeleteNow that would be interesting!
DeleteNeil
Looks great. I have seen this action done with other rules as well, And it is usually close then, too! I can still hear the dialogue and music from the very well done Rankin-Bass animated production of "The Hobbit" from 4+ decades ago. :-)
ReplyDeleteGonsalvo,
DeleteI still have the Rankin-Bass on DVD and love it. I wish the so called Hobbit trilogy had more of Tolkien's songs and poetry in it. Thanks!
Neil
While the Peter Jackson LOTR trilogy might have benefited from being even a bit longer, Hobbit would have been better if it was 50% shorter, and a lot more Tolkien!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely!
DeleteNeil