Another new Fantasy rule set I purchased, the Warlords of Erehwon by Rick Priestley. It is for "warband" size games of 5 to 12 units (5 to 10 figures each on average) or between 500 and 2000 points, which would translate to around 30 to 100 figures so smaller games than mass battle fantasy.
It looks very promising, and I have always enjoyed Rick Priestley's rules including: Black Powder, Hail Caesar, Warmaster, Warhammer Fantasy Battle (WFB) 3rd and 6th editions. Warlords of Erehwon are well supported by Warlord games, the author and a Facebook group. Unlike certain other games is it not structured around army lists based on figures exclusively made by the publisher. Plus the army lists are included with the rules, so no army books to buy. Rick is adding new warband lists for online download plus the
information is provided for players to create their own lists, for
example the author sent me a guide on how to create a Dark Elf list (IMHO they should have been in the rules originally). In addition to the rules and figures you will need d10, pin markers with numbers and Warlord Order dice as the rules do not use the traditional IGOUGO turn sequence. The point system looks similar to WFB 3rd and 6th Edition so I can see these rules working with the Mighty Empires WFB campaign rules.
Here is a summary of the rules from the Warlord of Erehown rules from the publisher.
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Saturday, 11 July 2020
Friday, 10 July 2020
God of Battles
I bought of copy of God of Battles by Jake Thornton (published 2012) from Wargames Foundry some time ago. It is a rule set for using 28mm figures in "mass battles" involving between 50 to 200 figures per side which encompasses war-band size battles and small mass combat battles. I have been recently looking it over an it seems to offer some real promise. In particular the turn sequence of alternating between players units rather than having one side move and fight all its units then the other (traditional I Go You Go). This seems to be a trend that is catching on as I believe a recently released mass combat fantasy rule set called Oathmark also uses this turn sequence. Units in God of Battles fight as units not individual figures (avoiding buckets of dice) but casualties are recorded by removing individual figures. The Army lists for God of Battles do not entirely fit my figure collection as it is based on Foundry 28mm fantasy figures rather than Warhammer Fantasy Battle Citadel miniatures which make up most my collection is (plus some Reaper, Grenadier and other miniature manufacturers). However the rules are designed to be flexible and allow the use of miniatures by any company. There is a work around solutions for the lack of a Dark Elf Army list as those figures work for other lists in God of Battles. In particular the intriguing new army lists such as the Sea Elves and the Godless Hordes. There are also no extra army codex books or special dice to buy!
I still plan to keep playing SAGA Age of Magic while using God of Battles for larger mass battles. I am also waiting the release of Shadow Storm (Hail Caesar Fantasy) another mass fantasy battle rule set.
The designer's notes for God of Battles can be found here:
https://quirkworthy.com/2013/01/25/god-of-battles-designers-notes-which-armies-to-include/
I still plan to keep playing SAGA Age of Magic while using God of Battles for larger mass battles. I am also waiting the release of Shadow Storm (Hail Caesar Fantasy) another mass fantasy battle rule set.
The designer's notes for God of Battles can be found here:
https://quirkworthy.com/2013/01/25/god-of-battles-designers-notes-which-armies-to-include/
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