Treefrog
Posts: 702
Joined: 4/7/2004 Status: offline
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Liveline99, If this was face to face it would be a beer and pretzels game. It is a delight to simply suspend your modern take on things, let yourself drift back to a simpler time and imagine yourself just sitting on a campstool with a map, receiving dispatches. No radios, no satellite photos, no air recon; just cryptic messages, sometimes incorrect, by candlelight. You don't react to everything and you don't expect instant execution. You plan way ahead allowing for couriers to carry messages, command staffs to pass them on through local orders, and tactical units to implement them. As the classicists say, "you create great combinations" against your adversary. I've been playing these games for 46 years now. A key to enjoying the game is simply to watch Frank Hunter's system operate; it is an exercise in his perception of how things functioned, how things happened. If it were face to face, my friends and I would enjoy watching the successful combinations unfold as much as watching the disasters start to take shape. If you are a "horse**** and blackpowder" kinda player, you'll probably like it. For the price, I would rate it a "best buy". Treefrog a Civil War reenactor that enjoys Napoleonics of any description whatsoever
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