Report by Steve H, Pictures by JJ
Every summer we all put on our best smocks and head north to
So the following activities need to be started in advance:
Buy and paint additional figures on top of any existing
stock.
Parcel out painting duties
Learn the relevant rule set.
Get false birth certificates made up to prove that we are
all related and this will prevent us being burnt in a wicker frame as
outsiders.
Buy beer.
A smaller advance game is also played to try out the said
new rules so that we all have plenty of time to forget it all before the big
event takes place in June/July.
This month Chas bravely put on the trial game using the Deus
Vult rules which are aimed at this period. There is no point giving a Battle
Report as it was just a trial game where we tried to play out every rule going
irrespective of its effect on the battle and also because I got completely
wiped out . If you want to know about sequences and stuff then there have been much
more complete reviews for Deus Vult on other sites like TMP which I suggest you
read. Instead this is going to be a gamers’ first glance. What you get below is
my summary of what we learned from the game, intermixed with pictures of the game taken by JJ.
You start by splitting your forces into Divisions, we had five each with four to six units per division and the divisional commanders have various
ratings which are rolled for against a table, recorded onto their individual
card and these are used as required.
Each unit also has all the normal stuff
you would expect as well, all be it with different names. Discipline is used
for movement decisions and Courage for morale (overly simplified by me) but
you can on occasions use your Divisional Commanders ratings instead if within
the 8” radius.
Then you decide each turn who has the Initiative (Straight
roll off) and you stack your Leader Cards in the sequence you wish to move
them, each side then moves one division (Initiative Winner decides which side
gets to move first) and carries out all shooting and fighting before moving on
to the next.
What did I learn, well obviously not much given my complete
lack of survivors but here goes.
Commanders have a Command rating either rolled
for as above or historically allocated and this determines how many units in
your division you can choose to move each turn.
Suppose like our reserve your command rating is one and you have four units , well each turn one unit can take actions as normal and you join a second unit for the old follow me type stunt. The other two units must then wait until everyone else has moved and either do nothing, or roll against their Discipline rating to activate.
Now I wish at this point
to add in a common occurrence. Whenever you have to do something like a
Discipline Test or Morale/Courage you get to do the 4+ roll . As long as you can
score 4+ on a dice you pass, I like this as its simple, no cross referencing
multiple lists. Better troops/leaders get to roll more dice but still only
need one 4+. So our elite reserve got to throw two dice to try and activate for being
out of command and my scummy ill-disciplined horse archers only had one roll which
is why I failed my evade dice three times running.
Ah ha you say, why not use
your commanders rating instead, that’s all very well but he was also a one and
besides he was underneath piles of dead horse archers.
Failure is punished by going into disorder so think before
you roll.
Shooting is ok as well, ranges are quite long but suitable
for 28mm and you get two dice per six man infantry base and one dice per two man cavalry
base. 6’s are killing hits with 4’s and 5’s being what I call morale hits.
First try and save the kills against your armour save and then add all the hits
together to see if you have forced a morale/courage roll (the old 4+ again).
Usually anything between three to five hits will be enough depending on the troops. You
can shoot twice if standing still.
Now hand to hand. This took me a while to absorb, the main
point is that you don’t get to fight back until its your turn and this takes a
bit of getting used to, plus if they have already moved that division this turn
then it is possible, with good luck, to hit them again in the next turn before they
get any chance to reply. Hand to hand requires lots of dice. Hits as per
shooting above.
Key points I learnt the hard way.
If charged and you have only one dice to roll to try and evade
then you might as well counter charge no matter how puny you are .
You see we are now moving on to Disorder, this is heavily
punished in Deus Vult.
Never get disordered. If you fail a 4+ roll then you are
disordered (there are other ways but that’s the main one). If disordered then
all shooting and combat dice are now changed so that a 4/5/6 will kill. Nasty!
In our game a unit of half dead knights, (that’s half dead
not undead) being rather miffed about the amount of pointy things coming their
way, charged all those responsible and each time my horse archer units got
charged they failed the evade roll, becoming disordered and got to lie down in
untidy heaps very fast.
I admit that if I had instead counter charged I would
still have had to pass a Disarray test but without the rules I don’t remember
if this was as bad. Probably.
Finally each unit has a mass of additional skills like
Counter Charge or Manoeuvrable , I think the record for one of our units was nine and these all do various jolly things to liven up the day.
So don’t get disordered, and finish off those weak units (taken off when you lose the next base after 50% e.g. if six bases strong then
remove from table when down to two bases).
Obviously it was our first time so we must have made masses
of errors, however we did try out as many rules as possible and it looks a
promising set of rules suitable for the Summer Game.