This will be more of a light battle report than a review of the system (which I will do at some point). Even so, I'll interject with some system related observations as I think they really affected our enjoyment of the game (in a good way!).
My force, The Jury, has interpreted the law such that advanced AI is illegal. They are aware that a scientist is developing an intelligent droid and will hunt it down and destroy it. The prof has called in mercs to defend him but they too, are unsure where he is exactly. If I find the droid, I win; Adam must defend it.
The droid is in one of the four low buildings.
Adam has a mech behind shed 2 (right) and has a string of infantry along the far table edge. I have a small unit out of shot to the left and a team with ant-vehicle capability to the right. |
My plan was to send the leftmost team past the cylindrical towers and on to the front of the left objective building with the team by the barrels supporting them (maybe scaling that building then searching the middle building). The teams on the right would hold the mech at bay, while advancing to the look inside the comms tower building.
Stag beetles are a group of about 1,200 species of beetle in the family Lucanidae... |
The team on my left flank were weakened by some luck long shots (CotF has unlimited ranges but higher chance of failure over the the weapon's optimal distance - nice!).
These are the swines that took out my left flank. Adam advanced half of them, as the game went on meaning I had to focus on the centre of the table for my advance. |
My anti-infantry team (by the three containers) move up slowly and heavily suppress Adam's chaps under the walkway of the comms building. They cover the advance of the team above them who will search the comms building then move onto the building X5 (by the distant satellite dish). It nearly works.
The lead man checks out the comms building. The Prof and his droid are not there. |
The team drop from 5 to 2 men. Luckily their resolve holds - the word of the law is with them! |
Adam had given up on his unit below the walkway. CotF makes use of Heads Down markers to represent pinning and suppression. I had thoroughly suppressed them. However, the presence of an inspiring leader and a well-timed regroup action brought them back from the brink and allowed them to halt my advance.
On my left flank, my beleaguered unit are pinned behind cover. Adam's "under the walkway" team and the those pictured above effectively cut off off my two depleted teams from searching the last two buildings.
I lost.
So, what did we think of the game? We really enjoyed it. Some highlights of the system that stood out for us:
- No unit coherency. Although it benefits you to stay close to the team leader (as Adam's suppressed team discovered), you can make proper use of cover instead of "stringing" your self across gaps.
- Automatic rifles have a template. This means if you shoot a "conga" line of targets, your rounds don't miraculously stop in mid-air just behind the last man. Bunching up and advancing through narrow gaps is lethal...as it should be.
- Deciding who activates a unit next is random but heavily influenced by the training level of your force's best unit(s). This means you might have alternating activations or runs of the same player activating. There is a strategic element in deciding whether you use the better teams early on since their bonus to the roll is lost once they act. There is also the chance that both players will have to select a unit that "failed to activate". This is a nice "fog of war" element.
What I've written above fails to convey how well the game works for casual and narrative scenarios. It certainly does achieve this and I look forward to using it for all sorts of skirmishes and dust ups in the future. I'll cover this more when I write my review along with a look at the other content such as force generation and scenario ideas.
The game we played here was to get our head around the rules and use some much neglected figures without an oppressive ruleset spoiling our fun. We succeeded. We've found only a couple of very slight issues we'd like to tweak but, this is a very capable system with rules that seem sensible and "right".
So glad you had a great time and looks like a nice table set up to boot.
ReplyDeleteOut of curiosity, what were the tweaks you were considering? Always interested in how people play the games.
Very cool, I like the idea of the template for auto rifles etc. I was considering getting into INFINITY this year but so far haven't managed - would you say this was a similar experience (assuming you have played a game of INFINITY that is!!)
ReplyDeleteAce
I quite like your terrain: it's straightforward but very effective.
ReplyDeleteDItto on the terrain. Is it scratch-built? And those don't look quite like WH40K figures, although I'm not sure. Thanks for putting this up; I just purchased Clash and was looking for some play-throughs to help in understanding the rules. I think I made a good purchase!
ReplyDeleteHi Nicholas
ReplyDeleteI think nearly all of the terrain is scratch built with the majority being from old projector slide cases. The Jury figures are the bag of cheap Warzone plastics that Prince August sells. They have head swaps from an OOP Anvil Industries range.
Hope you enjoy CotF. Ivan writes some really great stuff.