Before I get to the Siege Turn rules, it would be useful to
have a quick reprise of some of the key indicators and systems that run through
the game.
Resolve
Resolve is a biggie; the armies each start with a Resolve Pts total
which gradually runs down. For every hit suffered (and hits are recorded by
adding “loss counters” to the units), Resolve is reduced by 1. Resolve may also
be impacted by Event Cards, by the loss of senior personnel, by the creation of
breaches in the walls, and for the Garrison it is also altered to reflect
changes in Local Support (LS), which in practical terms reflects the morale of
the civilian population. It’s worth mentioning that, though hits erode the
Resolve score, the process of rallying away those hits does not add points back
onto Resolve. Hits will be discussed in detail in the Artillery and Combat
phases.
Resolve is a measure of the commitment to carry on fighting,
which is why there is no overt morale system in the Siege Turns. Units may be
forced to retire, even to a designated Safe Place, but they do not rout from
the field in the familiar manner of miniatures wargames. There is nowhere to
go; units will stay on the field if not eliminated, even if they are reduced to
a state where they can no longer achieve very much.
Victory
Conditions
Either army may choose to give up at any time for their own
reasons, especially if they consider their position hopeless. More formally,
the game should end as soon as Victory Conditions are met. These can be:
·
Some specific requirement of the scenario note
is fulfilled (these may be time-related, or may refer to specific objectives –
“capture of the citadel of Santa Maria”, “substantial enemy penetration of the
fortress walls”, etc).
·
Either army runs out of Resolve or gunpowder.
·
The Garrison runs out of Food.
·
Local Support for the Garrison drops below -3
(at which point the citizens will open the gates…).
The Besiegers may abandon the siege at any stage, or they
may offer the Garrison terms of surrender at any stage. There is no set
Diplomacy section in the rules. The Garrison may also ask for terms at any
stage. Whether terms are accepted is up to the players. Negotiations may be
undertaken. Beyond any guidelines in the scenario, the Commanders should
respect the importance of their future reputation – this is a game for
gentlemen!
The Housekeeping Rules
Let’s step through the Housekeeping Phase of the Siege Turn, which differs a little, depending which side’s turn it is; in an attempt to set
this out consistently, keeping the sections in order and avoiding too much
jumping about, items which apply to both sides will be in
black text, things which
only happen if it is the Besiegers’ turn will be in
red,
and things which only apply during the Garrison’s turn will be in
blue.
(a) Odd Jobs
[Besiegers only:] The Digging
Standard. Review the Digging Standard (DS). This is a number between 1 and
6, which is displayed on an oversized die on the edge of the table. The
Commander rolls 1D6; if it is lower than the current DS, DS is reduced by 1; if
it is higher, DS is increased by 1. If the initial DS has not been set during
game preparation, the Commander sets it during his first turn: roll 2D6 and set
DS to the lower of the two dice-scores.
In use, the DS has to be beaten
(with D6 rolls) by troops (on either side) doing Sapping, Digging or Repair
work. The lower DS is, the easier it will be to complete such work; when DS is
6, no-one can beat it, but it also has a special meaning – Torrential Rain. DS
= 6 means that no-one can do any work on the surface, all current fires are
extinguished, artillery may not move and all artillery fire halves the number
of dice used (round ½ down).
[Garrison
only:] Fire fighting. Check progress of any fires currently burning in
the town. Fires are represented by small puffs of cotton-wool – they are not
attached to any particular building or part of the town – they are just there
to be counted. Fires are started by indirect fire from mortar shells (or
carcasses, if in use), and sometimes by Event Cards, and they may spread.
Garrison
roll 1D6 for each ongoing fire
5 or 6 Fire extinguished (4,
5 or 6 if sappers on fire duty in the town)
1 Fire spreads –
add a new fire
Anything
else Fire burns on
After the
Fire Fighting, Local Support (LS) is reduced by 1 for each complete 5 fires
still burning (eg: if there are now 8 fires burning in the town, reduce LS by
1; if the same 8 fires are still burning on the Garrison’s next turn, LS
reduces by 1 again). Remember to adjust the Garrison’s Resolve in real time for
all LS changes.
[Garrison
only:] Issue Food Rations. Deduct 1 from Food store. If Food store is
causing concern, the Governor may take steps to eke out food for the Garrison.
Each of these measures may be done only once per game, and only one of them may
be used in a single turn:
· Reduce rations for everyone (add
10% to no of turns in store, but -3 to Resolve)
· Requisition food from citizens
(add 10% to no of turns, but -1 to LS)
· Slaughter all horses (add 3 turns,
but -1 to LS)
· Slaughter domestic animals and
pets (add 1 turn, but -1 to LS)
· Eject unproductive citizens from
town (add 33% to store, but -2 to LS)
Scenario
may make further suggestions, but no cannibalism in the Age of Reason, please.
[Either side:] Draw Event Card. If it is a court
card, or a 2 (Scenario Special), check out instructions. Place card on discard
stack after use. If the card is a Joker, shuffle and re-start the Event Deck.
(b) Espionage
[Either side:] Each army may have up to 2 spies at any moment;
spies may be recruited (costs 1 Resolve Pt), or sacked (costs nothing, but
replacing him will), may be lost in action and may even be captured and forced
to reveal information about their own side.
Spies should have names (for identification and entertainment!), but quality is
not known until their 1st assignment is ordered (at which point,
roll a D6 to determine quality, which is half of number rolled (rounded up): 1
(poor); 2 (competent); 3 (exceptional) – keep a (secret) note. Spying missions
must be attempted, even if quality is not up to the job.
Armies may also opt to purchase a Security Officer (Provost or
Chief of Police) to give them extra protection against enemy spies (costs 1
Resolve Pt to replace him).
Spies (disappointingly?) do not have representative figures – they
are somewhere in the enemy army – we don’t know where. If you wish to have your
Security Officer as a figure then please do so – only advantage is that you can
see if he is still active.
The possible espionage missions are of two types: Information and Sabotage.
They will have difficulty ratings of 1 to 5, 1 being easy. This table gives the
permitted missions (which may be amended according to scenario), which side may
attempt each, the difficulty rating and the potential result:
|
Mission
|
Who?
|
Diff
|
Effect
|
Notes
|
|
Obtain
Information:
|
|
|
Reveal:
|
“Extra”:
|
|
Current
Local Support (LS)
|
Besgr
|
1
|
|
|
|
Current
Resolve Pts (RP)
|
Both
|
2
|
|
|
|
Garrison
food store
|
Besgr
|
2
|
Turns in
store
|
|
|
Enemy
powder store
|
Both
|
2
|
“Loads”/tons
|
|
|
Strength
of walls etc [pick 3 sections]
|
Besgr
|
3
|
Strength
pts
|
|
|
Mining
& countermining status
|
Both
|
3
|
Full
details
|
|
|
Carry
out Sabotage:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contaminate
or damage Garrison’s food/water
|
Besgr
|
2
|
-½D6
from Food
|
-D6 from
Food
|
|
Encourage
desertion among enemy
|
Both
|
2
|
Hit
(dice for unit)
|
½ D6
hits
|
|
Damage
powder store
|
Both
|
3
|
D6 Loads
|
2D6
Loads
|
|
Decrease
Local Support for Garrison
|
Besgr
|
3
|
LS and
RS -1
|
Fail
badly LS, RS both +1
|
|
Start
fire in town
|
Besgr
|
3
|
1 fire
|
2 fires
|
|
Kill officer (not CinC) or Named Indiv
|
Both
|
4
|
Success
|
|
|
Kill
CinC
|
Both
|
5
|
Success
|
|
Procedure:
When a spy attempts an espionage project, the spying side adds the
spy’s quality rating (which will have to be established if this is his 1st
mission) to 1D6; the side being spied on adds the difficulty of the selected
task to 1D6, and then adds a further 1 if they have a Security Officer in
place. Comparison of these totals gives outcome.
Outcomes:
·
Spy total greater by 2 or more: mission is
extra-successful; spy remains active
·
Spy total greater by 1: mission successful;
spy remains active
·
Totals equal, or Spy total 1 less: mission
fails, but spy remains active
·
Spy total 2-3 less: mission fails and spy is
lost; this, and anything worse is a bad failure
·
Spy total less by 4 or more: mission fails,
spy is executed, but first is forced to reveal one information item from the
table above about his own army.
Example:
Spy Grammaticus is new (and thus has unknown quality), he is sent to
assassinate one of the enemy’s Senior Officers (mission difficulty 4). Since he
is untried, must roll D6 to check his quality: roll of 4 reveals that he has
quality rating of 2 (competent). The enemy does not have a Security Officer in
place at the moment.
Spying side D6 roll is 5, add 2 for his quality, total 7; enemy
roll is 4, plus 4 for difficulty; total 8. Result is that spy loses by 1, so
mission fails, but Grammaticus remains active. If the side being spied upon had
had a Security Officer, the result would have been a loss by 2 for the spy, and
Grammaticus would have been lost to history.
(c) Move Officers and Named Individuals (to assist
with Rallying)
[Either side:] Move Officers, Commander and Named Individuals
anywhere within permitted limits (this is to assist with Rallying for any unit
which has suffered “hits”). For the Besieger,
permitted limit is anywhere not in advance of the heads of sap; for the Garrison, permitted limit
is not in advance of the edge of the fortress, which may be the Covered Way or
some outwork. Officers may help to rally any unit within 1 hex.
[Garrison only:] For the
Garrison, if LS is not negative, the Town Mayor may be used to help rally
troops and encourage the citizens, so he may be moved appropriately during this
phase.
(d) Rallying Troops (and Citizens)
[Either side:] Hits, as recorded by loss markers against each
unit, represent a reduction in combat effectiveness. Casualties will contribute
some of this, but loss of fighting spirit, fatigue and equipment damage are also
implied.
Infantry units are eliminated by 4 hits, artillery by 3 and
sappers by 2. A unit which has been eliminated may not be rallied. An artillery
unit which has 2 hits marked against it may not fire until it has been
rallied/repaired; such artillery repairs must be carried out in the army’s Safe
Place.
The active Commander will select a unit which has hits, and roll
1D6 for each hit. Note that losses due to disease or desertion (which use a
different colour of counter) may not be rallied. A unit which attempts to
rally, regardless of whether it is successful, may not do anything else in this
turn, so a Hold marker is attached.
Hits are removed for a roll of 6. The rolls for each rallying unit
are helped by
·
+1 if a Senior Officer or the CinC is
attached, or within 1 hex [or
Mayor if LS not -ve]
·
+1 if the unit is out of immediate danger
(concealed, or not within 2 hexes of enemy)
Rallying stops for this turn as soon as a unit has no loss
counters removed, so try for the priority units with the most hits first.
Example: It is the Garrison’s turn to rally.
The Governor selects an infantry battalion in the Covered Way
which has 3 hits; a Senior Officer is within 1 hex, and the unit is out of
immediate danger; thus it has 2 bonuses, and only needs to roll 4+ to rally
away each hit. It rolls 4-2-1, one counter is removed, and the unit is given a
Hold marker, since it may do nothing else this turn.
The Governor next directs his attention to rallying an artillery
unit, which has 2 hit counters (and is thus currently unable to fire) and is in
the workshops in the fortress (a Safe Place). There is no Officer present, so
the unit has a single bonus (out of immediate danger), and requires 5+ to
remove hits. The unit rolls 3-2, no hits are removed; it is given a Hold
marker, and rallying must now end for this turn.
Remember that recovering hits does not add anything to the army’s
Resolve.
[Either side:] Recruits and Replacements. If the Commander
is alive then, subject to the game limits imposed on his army, he may recruit
extra (or replacement) Spies, Named Individuals, Sapper Teams (any of which
costs 1 Resolve Pt) and Miners (3 Resolve Pts, if relevant). He cannot add
extra Senior Officers or Engineers once the game has started. If the Commander
is not alive, the only action permitted at this point of the Housekeeping is to
promote a Senior Officer or an Engineer to replace him (no cost for this); if
none is available the army will no longer be able to rally troops (or, for the
Garrison, negotiate with the townspeople or manage the Food supply).
[Garrison only:] Meet with
Citizens. The Governor (or the Town Mayor, if LS is not -ve) may be placed
in the “town” area, to meet with the townspeople. Roll 1D6 – if it comes up 6,
the meeting has gone well, and 1 is added to LS; if it comes up 1, the meeting
has been a disaster, and 1 is deducted from LS.
[Garrison only:] Insurrection Control.
If LS is zero or less, the Governor must allocate infantry units to the job of keeping
the civilians under control.
|
LS
|
Policing Requirement
|
|
Zero
|
½ a battalion
|
|
-1
|
1 battalion
|
|
-2
|
1½ battalions
|
|
-3
|
2 battalions
|
The policing troops must be placed in the “town” area, and may do nothing else.
For each ½ battalion which the police force is short, roll 1D6. 5 or 6 means a
hit on the garrison – Governor decides which units are affected. Remember to
adjust Resolve for these “insurrection” hits.