genesismwt
Posts: 176
Joined: 2/25/2016 From: The middle of flyover country Status: offline
|
The quick answer is that when both sides are equal, with no leader to affect the outcome, each side has rough 1 in 4 chance of killing the other side(roll 5 or less on two dice 6). Both are rolled simultaneously, unless an ambush occurs. If there is an ambush the winner goes first and gets a -1 one to the dice roll. The loser if they survive, gets a +1 to the dice roll. A two to one advantage has a 50/50 chance of killing the other side. Being outnumbered 1 to 2,gets one a 15-20% chance of killing the other side. Leaders will subtract one, two or three from the roll. Units are locked in close combat(cannot move or fire) until one side or the other is completely eliminated. That being said, most evenly matched close combats will go more than one turn, since each side only has a 25% chance to kill the other. Also, because each side has a "chance", you can see a good leader and a couple squads disappear taking out a lone scrub conscript squad. It's not frequent, but its painful when it happens.
_____________________________
The game is afoot! Mike
|