Triumph! is a new rule set from the Washington Grand Company for
fast-play ancient wargaming. For those of you familiar with DBA, it is
very similar. I have read comparisons between it and DBA 2.2+, which
was a fan-made extension of original DBA. They say imitation is the
sincerest form of flattery...so, it has that going for it.
There
are many different troop types so you don't have that problem where
your New Kingdom swordsmen are exactly the same as Roman Legionaries are
the same as Viking Axemen. Which is good. Cavalry has gotten a boost
with new troop types including "Bad Horse", which this author thinks
describe Roman Equites quite nicely.
TRIUMPH! has a
points system, so gone are the limitations of 12 stands per army. This
alone may make some DBA-haters come in from the cold. It also has a big
battle system available for free online. There are also some special
rules and a card system where a card can be played to set off a one time
special rule. You can probably ignore the cards if you want.
Dismountables and special support situations for certain army lists are
allowed. Overall there is more flavor and chrome than you get with
vanilla DBA, and I think it is worth a look.
Today's game was Polybian (Republican) Roman vs Carthaginian.
This
is presented using 2mm figures from Irregular Miniatures UK. They are
based in DBA standard 40mm frontage. If you are limited in space and
budget - and have good eyes - this is a scale that can give you a real
battlefield feel.
Republican Romans. Triari at the rear.
Carthaginians. Elephants at center.
Carthage Deployment. An MU is 1/2 a base width. All board measurement is done is MUs.
Closeup
of 2mm scale Elephants with escort. Okay so you laugh. "There so
tiny"! "Ed, you're an idiot!" "You Fool! Stop before you ruin
miniature wargaming for all time!"
Yeah, shut up. I like them.
Romans deploy with skirmishers front.
The
battle is joined. Carthage decides to push the elephants, escorted by
skirmishers in the center, with a double rank of warriors (Mercenary
Gauls) with the Light infantry (Punic militia) on the far right. The
Romans managed to march past the rough ground so they would not have to
fight in it where they would be -2 to their die roll.
Carthage cavalry takes the far left flank.
Three stands of Carthaginian Heavy Infantry make up the reserve.
In
the end, the Romans were able to fight the elephants to a standstill.
Roman Elite Heavy Infantry (Triari) eventually crushed the right flank
of the Carthaginians. By the time the Carthage Heavy Infantry reserve
got in to the fight, they put up a good showing, but it was too late.
Having lost 5 stands to the Roman's 2, it was over.
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