Curtis Lemay
Posts: 12969
Joined: 9/17/2004 From: Houston, TX Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: golden delicious Let's examine this. Turn 1: Units in contact on both sides of the map. A one hex gap between the two French wings stretches to two hexes because the left wing is frozen Turn 2: Units in contact on both sides of the map. The gap shrinks to one hex. French forces span the width of the map Turn 3: Everyone takes their six hours sleep for the night. Turn 4: Units in contact on both sides of the map. There are no wings; only one continuous solid line across the map. Grouchy and Napoleon never lost contact. Turn 5: Units in contact on both sides of the map. New British units- not engaged previously- are preparing a position in the northwest guarding the road to Brussels. Nothing has disengaged. Is it even possible for the Prussians to reach Wavre on the second day as they did historically, or do they have to rely on the new units which you appear to have given them? The French line has a one hex gap, otherwise running between the map edges Turn 6: Contact continues. The Prussians and Grouchy have no been fighting the battle of Ligny for two straight days. A one hex gap in the French line. Turn 7: Another night time turn. Turn 8: The single most disjointed turn of the game. There are no less than three 2.5km gaps in the line. Of course no unit could slip through these gaps as they are all covered by the ZOCs of the cavalry divisions. Turn 9: Realising his mistake, Napoleon closes two of the gaps, extending the battle line at Waterloo to some 20km, essentially linking the battles of Waterloo and Wavre into one single clash. Turn 10: Once again, the French battle line stretches across the map. The Prussians in the East and their French opponents have been in constant action for two and a half days. So in summary, units stay in contact with the enemy until they are annihilated. Because it's Bob playing and he wants things to go right, he makes sure the reinforcements sit waiting at Waterloo and Wavre rather than coming forward- and considers this evidence of disengaging. The French had an almost completely solid cordon across the width of the map on turns 2-7, as well as turns 9 and 10. At no point after turn 2 was there a gap of more than one hex between the two French wings. Bob, I think I'd need to be more than charitable. First, note the initial deployments - they're historical. Pretty spread out, aren't they! Your presumptions about how Napoleonic forces would deploy at this scale are off. In fact, prior to the invasion by the French the Allies were much more spread out - all over Belgium. Napoleon was intending to exploit that. In fact, at Waterloo, Wellington had about 17,000 men spread out off map to the west, guarding his communications. Did Napoleonic forces concentrate in the face of the enemy? Yes. But did that mean that they were in only one or two hexes at this scale? No. Second, as I posted above, this AAR is an example of the French pulling off a victory. It deviates from history in that manner. That includes both the Ligny and Quatre Bras battles being won and exploited by the French. Third, you need to look more carefully at the AAR. There really are heavy concentrations at certain points. The forces are not spread out as much as it appears on first examination. Only single units are making the situation look like a distributed front. Fourth, there are very real reasons for the Allied player to fall back on Waterloo. Specifically, the concentration and value of the objectives there, and the real need to deny the French player the battle use of the second day.
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