Sunday, August 29, 2004

August 29, 2004

Eight of us gathered in Germantown to play Wooden Ships and Iron Men. I prepared the gameboard and environs and Glenn Bramer prepared the ship log sheets for the chosen scenario.

Ready to Go

With eight players, we decided to do the Battle of the Chesapeake, a large encounter between the French and the British involving 42 ships of the line. The French have a numerical superiority (24 versus 19 ships) with large crews, while the smaller British crews are of better quality. We did not use the land mass which is normally an obstacle in this scenario; we played open seas.

Glenn and I each took command of one fleet. Glenn was given the choice and took the French. We then split up Eric Haas and Steve Bramer as the other two experienced players. Eric joined the British, while Steve went with the French. Finally, we randomly assigned Rachel Jones, Alex Ruvinsky, Dave Fair and Dan Korn. The former two went to the British, the latter to the French.

Teams having been assembled, we went through a quick explanation of the rules and set up the game.

Playing

The wind, blowing to the north, was favorable to both fleets as they entered along the east and west sides of the game map. The French came in two long lines very far apart, while the British formed up in four lines fairly close together. After several turns of sailing full ahead, the first British ship to hit the French line was the flagship, the Barfleur, commanded by Bob. Enduring several rakes from Glenn’s squadron, the Barfleur tied up the front of the French line while going toe to toe with the French flagship, the Ville de Paris and another of Glenn’s ships.

Lines of Battle Annotated

Because of this, and the general pile up of ships that followed, the Barfleur was the first ship to strike her colors with the Ville de Paris not far behind.

Confusing Melee

Not long after, Alex’s squadron met up with the French line while Rachel and Steve started some long-distance sparring to the north and Dave and Eric began pummeling each other to the south. A number of struck ships started clogging the sea and it became very difficult to break through the tangle. At one point at least a dozen ships were fouled together.

The French and Alex

By the end of the game, nine ships had struck their colors (5 British, 4 French) with many more ships seriously wounded (note, one of Rachel’s ships struck her colors but has not been crossed off the tally).

The Tally

Glenn’s squadron, in the midst of most of the British fleet, took the worst pounding, with only 15 hull points left between his three remaining ships. However, Glenn is responsible for nearly all of the damage to Bob and Alex’s squadrons while killing two ships and capturing one. Bob’s ship, America, visible all alone approaching Dan’s squadron in the next photo, had only one hull box left.

End Game Annotated

Sadly, Dan’s squadron went the whole game without firing a shot. Starting farther to the north, Steve and Dan were tacking against the wind all game. Steve was in the van and so able to engage around mid-game. Dan was finally in a position to get into the fight when we called the game. In restrospect, we should have mixed up the squadrons a little more (maybe given him half of Glenn’s ships and vice versa) to make sure everyone got involved. Putting Steve and Dan’s squadrons to the north pretty much guaranteed victory for the French, though. With at least two French squadrons untouched at the end of the game, the British fleet would have been hard pressed.

The point of the session was to teach the rules and get as much done as we could in the time allotted. With a smaller scenario, we could have easily finished. With 42 ships, however, combat took far too long. At 4:30 we decided to play until 6PM at which time we ended the game. Another five or six turns probably would have ended the game more decisively.

At the start of the game, the French had 24 ships comprising 347 hull points. The British had 19 ships with 234 hull points. At the end, the French had lost 31% of their hull points while the British had lost 43%.

Note on pictures: The “struck ship” counters were originally used to denote surrendered ships. However, so many ships fouled, we started using the struck counters to designate that. We ended up flipping over the struck ships (as you will see in some of the pictures.) The arrow in the following photo represents the ship Glenn captured from Alex.

Close Battle

I hope we can play again sometime soon. Glenn has a much smaller scenario already prepared. My crystal mega mat will have arrived by then and I’m going to put together some “fouled ship” counters. :-)

Saturday, August 14, 2004

August 14, 2004

Thanks to everyone who came out last Saturday for a day of gaming. As always, I enjoyed myself as I hope everyone did. Of course, the impetus for getting together was Paul Czarnota who was in town for the day.

Thanks to Carol for cooking dinner for everyone.

Looking back, I realized we played four of the great Alea game series, Traders of Genoa, Ra, Taj Mahal, and Puerto Rico. That’s pretty impressive!

Our next game is going to be on Sunday, Aug. 29th, where we’ll be playing a huge Wooden Ships and Iron Men scenario. We may have up to ten players. If you haven’t signed up but are interested, let me know.

The results are below (winner listed in bold).
Titan: the Arena
Bob, Carol, Paul
Bob: T:TA has made quite a comeback over the past few months; we’ve been pulling it off the shelf more and more often. For those who don’t own this game, it’s being rereleased by Fantasy Flight Games as Colossal Arena and will be available this fall.
Titan: the Arena
Carol, Bob, Paul
Modern Art
Jason, Bill, Steph R, Paul, Carol

Ra
Dave 38, Bob 34, Eric 24, Katherina 17

Ticket to Ride
Rachel J 110, Carol 80, Eric 29, Noreen 68, Royal 55

Venture
Dave 193, Paul 180, Bob 152, Stephanie W 146
Bob: This is a classic Sid Sackson (creator of Acquire) game from the late ’60’s. Paul brought it so we could playtest it. We all enjoyed it, although I thought it went a bit long. Still, the mechanisms were way ahead of their time and the game has a great deal of depth for a simple card game. Very nice.
Titan: The Arena
Paul, Stephanie W, Dave

Robo-Rally
Rachel J, Andrew, Noreen, Royal, Carol, Eric

Traders of Genoa
Paul 1020, Bob 965, Stephanie W 840, Alex 705, Dave 580.
Bob: This was an epic game. Many, many deals were made and the negotiations were quite protracted and involved at times. However, I owe both Dave Fair and Alex Ruvinsky an apology. Normally, I’m pretty aware of how each player is doing. As the game went on, Dave Fair was doing an impressive job of fulfilling large order after large order. Since large orders give one of the biggest payoffs in the game, I assumed that Dave was rolling over the rest of us and harped on his lead at every opportunity. When Alex Ruvinsky gave Dave a sweetheart deal, I teased Alex about it more than I should have. As it turns out, Dave wasn’t doing nearly as well as I thought; rarely have I so misjudged a game. In the end, Paul got the well-deserved victory. My apologies to Dave for going on and on about his lead and to Alex for teasing him about a simple mistake.
Sequence
Rachel J, Carol, Eric

Puerto Rico
Carol 57, Rachel J 50, Bob 49, Paul 47, Eric 45
Bob: A great game with lots of different strategies employed. Carol’s effective use of the Wharf and the Harbor gave her a big victory. And congratulations to Rachel Jones who nearly extended her winning streak to four games.
Taj Mahal
Paul 75, Bob 46, Carol 45
Bob: This was no contest. Paul captured 6 or 7 of the Province tiles and crushed Carol and me. Taj Mahal with three players is definitely different than with more players.


Eric’s Notes
2:23 pm:
Eric arrived at Bob’s around 2:30. Bob, Carol and, Paul were playing Titan: the Arena. The Fairs arrived shortly after Eric.
2:34 pm:
The Ruvinskys arrived. Carol won Titan: the Arena.
2:42 pm:
Paul, Carol, Jason, Bill, and Steffie started Modern Art. Dave, Katherina, Bob, and Eric started Ra.
3:09 pm:
The Whites arrived.
3:54 pm:
Jason won Modern Art. Dave won Ra with 38, Bob had 34, Eric had 24, Katherina had 17.
4:03 pm:
The Ruvinskys had to leave.
4:11 pm:
Bob, Dave, Paul, and Stephanie played Venture while Noreen, Carol, Royal, Rachel J, and Eric played Ticket to Ride.
5:11 pm:
At the end of Ticket to Ride, Rachel had 110, Noreen had 68, Carol had 80, Royal had 55, and Eric had 79.
6:22 pm:
Dave won Venture with 193, Paul had 180, Bob had 152, and Stephanie had 146.
7:17 pm:
We took a break for dinner, and then Bob showed us the pictures he and Carol took on their recent vacation.
7:41 pm:
Bob and Rachel left to pick up Alex. Stephanie, Dave, and Paul played Titan: the Arena while they were waiting.
8:09 pm:
Paul won Titan: the Arena.
8:40 pm:
Paul, Dave, Bob, Stephanie, and Alex played Traders of Genoa while, Andrew, Noreen, Royal, Rachel, Carol, and Eric played Robo-Rally.
11:11 pm:
Rachel won Robo-Rally.
11:51 pm:
Rachel, Carol, and Eric started a game of Sequence.
12:07 am:
Rachel won Sequence.
12:39 am:
Paul won Traders of Genoa with 1020, Bob had 965, Stephanie had 840, Alex had 705, and Dave 580.
1:07 am:
Carol, Paul, Rachel, Bob, and Eric started a game of Puerto Rico.
3:18 am:
Carol won with 57, Rachel had 50, Bob had 49, Paul had 47, and Eric had 45. Eric left after Puerto Rico. Paul, Carol and Bob played Taj Mahal.
?:?? am:
Paul won Taj Mahal with 75, Bob had 46, and Carol had 45.