Having picked up the new edition of Over The Hills in the Kickstarter earlier in the year I finally got this set to the table, having heard good things about the 1st Edition.
The scenario I chose was Vimeiro, as it was due in my decadal battle series (if a year late!) and there was a nice scenario for the southern part of the battle using OTH courtesy of the Devon Wargames Group.
It was also my first chance to try out my new foam mats, and fight on 10cm squares instead of 10cm hexes (I converted OTH readily for the purpose).
This was the starting deployment, looking S, French on the left.
Four tiles to my 2:1 standard, the Mk1 top right just as underlay |
The Battle
Only a brief summary. The French "came on in the same old style, and the British repelled them in the same old style". With only a battery apiece there was little time for preparation so the French columns piled into the British lines on the hill and got beaten back. The British followed up and inflicted more casualties, breaking one Brigade.The lines clashing. Puff = 1 fatigue |
On the French right (bottom of top picture) the cavalry tried to take on the advancing British but the terrain was too complex, the British formed square and the Cavalry went home. A final showpiece British vs French cavalry charge achieved little. At the end of Turn 8 (suggested scenario end-point) the French had 27 fatigues, only 3 off the Army break point, the British had about half that, so a clear victory for the British.
British Light Dragoons - Airfix conversions ~30yr old. Yes I know not Tarleton. |
The Rules
I suppose the problem I have with OTH is that they are a very standard set, and as such I naturally think that my "standard set" - Steady Lads Steady - are better, and most of the changes I'd make to OTH would just make them more SLS like. This is in contrast to say Snappy Nappy or Et Sans Resultat where the mechanics are different enough that there is no direct comparison.30+ yr old brittle Airfix Highlanders get a rare outing! |
That said OTH played pretty well, and certainly prefer them to Black Powder or Liphook, but perhaps not to Francis Long's. I need to retry GdA/GdB and Shako for further comparison.
The only thing I particularly liked was the Skirmish ratings as a way of abstracting skirmishers. Did also give me some ideas for better use of Generals in SLS.
French Grenadiers flanking some 95th |
Things I was less keen on were (and may just be me misreading rules):
- The whole movement segment things, just more data to remember
- Shot from artillery impacting Skirmishers, only getting the line behind on 50% chance follow through
- The ease with which units could recover Fatigue, so many units stayed at full strength
- The rules layout, things were often quite buried and not helped by having melee rules about 3 times for the different situations (Inf vs Inf, Cav vs Inf, Cav vs Cav)
So glad I've played it, but not one I'd turn to again out of choice, but happy to play at a club (who might understand them better!)
British Light and Rifles - again 30+ yr old Airfix conversions. Even stovepipes! |
The Grid
Worked really well. There are dots every 10cm, but even up close I sometimes had to hunt for them. Units could still manoeuvre on diagonals and wheels - although there wasn't much scope for that in this game. Looking forward to using them in ECW next.
Spot the grid? |
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