Those torpedoes are going to hurt, aren't they? |
Scipio put the superb text together (although we alternated with our own comments), which I humbly present below - take it away sir!
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Me and Headologist have been long-time 40K players, and we've dabbled in a few Battlefleet Gothic games in the past. But while Headologist has always been a big fan of naval warfare I'm relatively new to it all - drawn in no doubt by the hours of Silent Hunter 3 over the last few months.
So the last time we crossed paths, I dug out four old Imperial Cruisers, and H got his wonderfully painted Chaos ships and we had a trial game of BFG. I hadn't played in a long time, so we stuck to the basic rules. In H's living room, complete with copious cups of tea/coffee, we set out the field of battle. This would be a straightforward Cruiser Clash scenario. I should mention here that we took notes and H drew up some lovely charts to illustrate the battle - each one is a beautiful work of art in its own right, I shall futilely attempt to supplement the pictures with a bit of writing.
(Headologist) The positioning and movement is sometimes slightly off on these maps, they shall be uber accurate next time, but hopefully they give a feel for the game.
Cruiser Clash
- Kasr Lutien, St Gaven Parkway - Tyrant Class
- Retribution - Lunar Class
- Sword of Orion - Gothic Class (Affectionately known as the Sword of Onion)
Headologist
- Hydra, The Drowned - Murder Class
- Triton, Kraken - Carnage Class
Admiral Scipio drew himself up a little taller. He wanted the holographer to get the best recording for his piece in the Sector Newsreel Review that week. He had his best Navy blacks, resplendent with medals, dress plates, gorgets, gloves, sword, his good cap (without the amasec stain)... he spared a thought for his younger brother, a Colonel in the Guard. Crawling through some ditch, up to his epaulettes in mud, no doubt.
His pleasant ruminations were interrupted by the Officer of the Day. "Sir! Sir, contact bearing 020!" With a little reluctance, he hurriedly dismissed the holographer and took up position on the bridge. "Mr. Ramirez! Heave to! Copy signal to Retribution. Send Orion and Lutien about that asteroid field, 40 nm!" He spared a wink for his Fourth Lieutenant signalman. "Don't worry son, we'll flank 'em!"
* * *
After a suitable pause, Amaroth released his grip on the gun-captain's skull. The shocked silence around the bridge satisfied him; he had made his point. He couldn't afford to let any upstarts question his judgement - not when three other claimants wanted his seat on the bridge.
He let the lifeless corpse slump to the ground. Thanks to the distraction, those dogs of the False Emperor had closed - he couldn't hide behind the asteroid field together. He stared intently at the holoslate ... the dots closed towards him, until suddenly they split. "All ahead full!" he snarled, "close on the port grouping ..."
DEPLOYMENT
Scipio: "I planned to use the Parkway and Retribution as a solid firebase, then manoeuvre the Onion and the Lutien around the asteroid field - whichever way they came I could release a barrage of torpedoes as they rounded the corner. Splitting my force was a risk, but I counted on some early torpedo barrages to even things out."
Headologist: "Having lost the roll for deployment, I got to place first. I opted for something pretty generic. After 3 games in 2 days, I was still under the belief that Carnage-class ships only had port and starboard batteries, so placed them to ensure wherever Scipio deployed something would be in their arc, and the asteroid field (destroyed planetoid...?) would also mask them from most opposing fields of fire. The two Murder-classes were placed so their prow lances could get a shot off first."
TURN ONE - Headologist
Scipio: "Damn! I wasn't counting on loosing a hull point so early on. Those lances ..."
TURN ONE - Scipio
Headologist: "Oh shit. This was the part I'd been dreading. We'd played two games prior to this without ordnance and with some lucky rolls had managed to scrape victories both times. But now ordnance was in play and I still had no "anti-ordnance" in my list, I was in trouble - particulalry as Scipio is the reincarnation of Otto Kretschmer and has perfected the aiming of a relatively narrow torpedo spread....
TURN TWO - Headologist
Headologist: "It was with equal parts dread and delight that I watched the pefectly aimed torpedoes tear through the Hydra's hull like.... torpedoes through a hull. At the opening of my turn both bases of 6 torpedoes were sat about half an inch away from the ship's base. I couldn't turn anywhere, I had to make my minimum move forward traight through them. I should have "Braced for Impact" but I went to a Naval College that considers that "sissy". Instead, I hoped I could minimise the damage with the turrets, and if I recall did lessen them slightly, but still took 4 hits, crippled in the first turn. Davey Jones' Void-Sealed Locker was beckoning. The Drowned took revenged on the Gaven Parkway, taking another 3 hull points off and crippling her too. The threat was far from diminished though.."
Scipio: "Phew! Just managed to get those torpedoes to hit with some cunning aiming off. Secretly, I was hoping Headologist braced, for this would reduce his retaliatory firepower a bit but he didn't and took the full hits. Luckily this was still enough to cripple it ... but before I could celebrate the Parkway was crippled in turn. One and a half ships each on that flank!"
TURN TWO - Scipio
Headologist: "I was hoping that a failed Reload Ordnance reload or two would buy me some time to maneouvre past front arcs of Scipio's ships, whilst I believe the Gaven Parkway succeeded, Retribuion failed, and this time some lucky turret rolls reduced the Parkway's torpedo barrage (as did a blast marker not shown I believe. What a dumkopf I am!)"
TURN THREE - Headologist
TURN THREE - Scipio
Headologist: "Arse."
TURN FOUR - Headologist
TURN FOUR - Scipio
Scipio: "A fairly quiet turn - I managed to survive without too much more damage and hit the drowned a bit. And the Onion-Parkway combo (sounds like a rejected flavor of Subway sandwich) were coming around to finish them off ... I have to confess I was quietly confident at this point."
Headologist: "Eek, the two stranded ships were getting back into the action quicker than anticipated, and I wasn't getting to the other side of the asteroid field too quickly."
TURN FIVE - Headologist
Headologist: "A lucky bit of shooting took out the Gaven Parkway in the penultimate turn, knowing we were close to the end of the game I was just hoping to equalise and survive at this stage..."
TURN FIVE - Scipio
Scipio: "Arg! There goes the Parkway ... and the Retribution needs to turn, so he'll probably be effectively out of the fight for now. The Onion and Parkway got off their torpedoes, which finished off the Drowned ... now it was basically 2 vs 2!"
Scipio peered out the escape pod's stern viewport, and watched as his flagship careened off into outer space away from him. He saw bright, fiery veins spread through the ship as it began to blaze uncontrollably and shed parts of the superstructure. The last that he saw of the Gaven Parkway was when the heavy armoured prow began to come loose - it peeled up and over as the ship disintegrated, pulling the ship's interior with it. The Parkway disappeared behind an impenetrable cloud of burning gas and wreckage.
* * *
(Headologist) The fact that I managed to miss a firepower 6 dorsal armament on two ships in three games definitively proves that I'm an idiot. But whilst I'd certainly have had more opportunities for firing, Scipio's torpedo sniping would still have been deadly and the outcome could just have easily been the same. As Scipio said, that's what these practice games are for, with the proper camapaign about to start I'm sensing a naval arms race in the air.. or the void.
Thanks for reading, and so long!
The Colonel and Headologist
Delivered to you in quadroblogic Stereo! :)
ReplyDeleteHaha that has to go in the Oxford English Dictionary...
DeleteI REALLY liked this battle report! The graphics were fantastic and I now really wish I knew how to do that. Great work! And I definitely look forward to seeing more BFG out there.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much, ironically it's the first game we've had for the blog fully painted and with "scenery", but couldn't get the lighting right for photos. I'm quite pleased with how the maps turned out though so glad you liked them :) there's a lot of cheating involved with making them
DeleteIndeed - Brilliant battle report man! Love the maps, those are really cool!
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, I think this is definitely the way we're going to write reports in future, fun to do and a great game as well
DeleteWonderful writing and a fantastic game. I love the ship names though Gaven Parkway seems like something you take on the morning commute, :).
ReplyDeleteThe maps are super evocative - they look like software screen captures. How did you do them.
Cracking stuff all around.
Aha, you sussed me Michael ... I came up with those ship names years ago, about the same time I moved to London, which may explain that name!
DeleteThanks very much Mike, hopefully there'll be a few more before too long. I just drew the maps in Adobe Flash, with lots of layers and tweaking of the glow components (most have about 3 colours in) and then a nice set of lines as a screen overlay (with one on a multiply blend I think for the graphical bods)
ReplyDelete