Sunday 23rd November was the day we gathered to celebrate great gaming buddy Julians 70th (I think his actual birthday is Weds 26th)
As mentioned previously, we understood it was going to be a V&F Napoleonic game, but when Andrew and I arrived, this had morphed into Dark Ages Britian using TtS!
No matter, a great game was had, and all sides could take something away from the result.
The scenario was, the Saxons have been besieging Bath when Arfur and his Romano-British turn up in their rear to break the siege.
Barry, Rick, John and I commanded the Saxons (or in John's case, their Pictish allies), whilst Chris, Andrew, Nick and Julian were the Brits. (Julian, as King Arfur, would arrive at some yet to be determined time and location once battle was well and truly joined).
Here are lots of pics, increased in number by some nice close-up contributions by John, plus some AI generated "Cinematic" effect images I did tonight. For those interested, this is the AI site I have been using AI Image Generator (free, no sign-up, unlimited)
Let's start with a couple of my AI creations!

The table at commencement of hostilities, Romano-Brits on the left - they had to advance quickly to avoid being stuck behind the river (the Severn, perhaps?)
My command in our Saxon right centre
The Arthurian army on the far bank of the river
Nick was on the Arthurian left, opposite John and me
One of the disadvantages of TtS is all the playing cards and other markers and paraphernalia you need to keep track of everything......
I think this was the "hilarious" moment John turned two ones in a row after using his attached leader to redraw for activation... it wasn't so funny later on after I had lost my leader and I did the same thing three MOVES in a row!
My Saxons took up position atop a handy hill and waited for Nicks boys to come to them
Which very shortly, they did!
To my left, Rick faced the advancing Britons under Andrw, whilst on the flank, Chris was attacking Barry in the wooded area
Despite his double 1 for activation, John was doing rather well against Nicks cavalry on our right flank
By this stage, the Arthurian light cavalry had all been driven from the field and the Picts looked like they might run rampant behind Nicks infantry
At around 1130, Julians wife and daughters supplied us with a little sustenance to keep us going until luncheon - jolly civilised!
By this stage, Julian had arrived - fortunately for us in the right rear of the Britons position rather right on John's flank, as he would have done if he turned a 9 or 10 card!
A view along the length of the table from John's end (the figures in the woods bottom left are actually deid!)
The Saxons had taken a bit of a battering and had lost a few units (and army morale coins) but were still holding the line pretty well. The Pictish light cavalry pulled back when faced with the Arthurian heavies.
Arthur led his cavalry along the rear of the Britons and crossed the river to attack John and me.
And here they come!
Nicks boys came in against my front line again
To my left, Andrew was smashing a path into the heart of Ricks Saxons
Arthur himself led the charge against my line
But the Britons were repulsed, and the shield wall held firm!
And now - luncheon is served!
Very nice it was too, al fresco on a pleasantly warm late Spring Day in leafy Remuera!
Right, let's get back to it!
By this stage, despite the relatively stable tactical situation, the Saxon morale was pretty shaky at 3 coins left to around 8 or 10 for the Brits!
Another unit of Arthurian cavalry, minus the Great Leader this time, finally managed to break one of my shield walls
The cavalry, in turn, were disrupted and beat a hasty retreat so they did not end up as a broken unit too!
Despite my atrocious run of three failures to activate in a row, I managed to get my lines rearranged, pulling back the battered troops who had done all the heavy fighting thus far, and substituting them with fresh warriors!
But we had just about done our dash - at the other end of the table, Chris had finally turned Barry's flank, and despite taking quite a battering, Andrew and Nick still had plenty of fight left in them
I think the final Saxon points went when Julian, in the shape of King Arthur and his personal cavalry unit, broke another of my shield walls and that was the game. However, the table still looked reasonably tidy, and the Saxons had a pretty strong position right along the line, so our side didn't feel too badly about losing - and it was nice that the birthday boy won the game for his side!
Here are more close ups from John I could not work into my narrative. All the figures are Julians but quite a few were painted for him by either Nick or Andrew 10+ years ago,
Pict cavalry
Pict general
Finally, the images below are specially for Iain's (Caveadsum) wife 😁😉
Our tree in action Friday night after I got home from Julians, courtesy of my dear wife
And as a bonus, the tree our staff put up in our head office at work late last week!
That has taken me about two hours to post, partly due to Blogger deciding to load all my images in reverse order for the first time in years - so I had to delete them all and start again! Hopefully some readers think the effort was time well spent - please leave a comment and let me know!
Lovely looking battle Keith, I’m very fond of Dark age battles of this period and always looking for suitable scenarios. Reminds me of course to paint some more Romano british from the lead pile. Not sure about Christmas in November ! But then if it wasn’t for the kids I might not do it in December either !
ReplyDeleteThanks Matt. They are very nice figures, no doubt about that. Personally I could ignore Christmas too....we don't have any young children in our family at the moment and I have always felt the non religious part (trees, decorations and food) are a bit of a damp squib once you are past the age when presents are "exciting "!
DeleteExcellent looking battle and enjoyed your report of the day. Sorry, skipped past the AI images. Preferred looking at the lovely miniatures.
ReplyDeleteThanks Richard and no issue with you skipping the AI, they would not take close examination well anyway, unlike Nick and Andrew's painting!
DeleteFantastic looking game sir!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Michal, it's a pretty looking period to play!
DeleteWow, what a grand affair. Not a bad way to spend the day!
ReplyDeleteSo true JBM, a more or less perfect way to spend the day...even the result was OK for all involved! The lunch was pretty nice too.
DeleteAn unexpected game makes this a surprise birthday party. Great close-ups of the figures.
ReplyDeleteHaha...yes I guess so Jon...a surprise for the guests rather than the birthday celebrant!
DeleteLovely looking battle and like Matt a reminder to get back onto my late Romans, haven't played TtS! in ages but still a good game set, not sure about pagan Saxons in a shieldwall but at least they lost! Nice Christmas trees but I'll avert my wife's gaze!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Cheers Iain, TtS has its limitations but it's good for this type if game and situation, and the figures are all very pretty to look at. Time you had your own tree up my friend!
DeleteSuper looking game Keith, lovely collection of figures on the table, really nice.
ReplyDeleteThanks Donnie, it is a wonderful collection of figures.
DeleteThat looks like a lovely collection of figures. Are they all Julian's? Our tree should be up but we haven't had a chance yet.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lawrence...yes, all Julians but with quite a few of them painted for him by both Nick and Andrew. Maybe the early tree erection is a Southern Hemisphere thing?? It's the prelude to our long hot summer holidays, so a bit different to our mates in the frozen north.....
DeleteLovely armies and a very subtle gridding on the mat, hard to know it is a TtS game from just the images.
ReplyDeleteThanks Norm and yes sometimes the gridding is a bit too subtle!
DeleteSuperb looking game and great looking armies
ReplyDelete