Wednesday 25 September 2013

A brief and unscientific review of Longstreet

Last night mate Ian brought Longstreet around for the first time.


Jay (left) led the Confederate forces, and I the Union. Ian (right) briefly explained the rules to us.

We deployed in two lines facing each other, with half a dozen units a side.  I carefully positioned both of my batteries so that they would have no targets, and Jay did likewise- in fact Jay's guns were masked by his other troops, and remained unable to fire all game!  This was due to our ignorance of the terrain and artillery rules, we'd have a much better idea, another time.

The card play proved easy to grasp, rather easier than Maurice, I thought.   Cards modify shooting, movement, casualties and so forth.  There are also special events played at the start of a turn, and cards that can cause chaos to the other player's movement plans during a turn.

Jay rather sportingly advanced and let me take a pot at him first.  Later he charged: this proved premature, as my boys gave his a bit of a kicking and shot him again, to boot, after he recoiled.  I have formed the impression that one shouldn't charge until either the enemy have been weakened by a firefight, or one has drawn the right hand of cards.  

I found some of the cards quite humourous, and there were several attempts at Southern drawls, and much general hilarity, especially as the second bottle of wine of the evening was drained.

As I shot him up, Jay played cards left, right and centre to remove casualties.  Despite this, his losses mounted until I was informed that I was close to victory.  At this point I drew a fabulous hand, and was able to shoot with two additional cards that modified his casualties upwards, and then play 2 more cards to charge through the smoke to hit a unit of Jay's square in the flank, deciding the game.



The rules seem very easy to grasp, and by the end of the evening we knew pretty much what we were up to. The cards give the game a very narrative quality, and added a lot of character.  I'll certainly play Longstreet again!

6 comments:

  1. Really enjoyable game. The cards really add another dimension to the game play and add a bit of surprise and humour. Simon you must have realised that the reason my cannon didn't let rip was because of my abolitionist stance (cough cough).

    Although I lost the battle apparently making heroic charges can add to your 'legend' as a commander in the campaign game rule. It will be interesting to see how that works.. I felt like an 1860's General Haig.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice report. We are enjoying Longstreet also. Your review is very similar to what is happening in our club. Much laughter and and an enjoyable game. A controlled fallback as a defensive maneuver has proven to be quite effective by keeping the attackers out of charge range but still in rifle range. Will be interested to see your review of the campaign system, We are just starting it and it seems like a lot of fun. For reference, see the posts about Longstreet on either my blog or Baron Von J. Both of these are non-commercial sites. http://essjam.blogspot.com or http://baronvonj.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. It sounds from your report that you used two cards to modify fire in the same phase. We did this mistakenly at first. You can only use one card to modify any given action.
    We really like Longstreet. I game in the same group Essjam does.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks Bill, I don't think Ian was aware of that rule. I'll make sure we limit modifiers to one, next time.

    Essjam, controlled fallback sounds good. I'll have a look at your blogs later!

    Cheers Simon

    ReplyDelete
  5. Nice report. We use Mr. Lincoln's War - quick and catches the flavor - regimental level though. My blog: The Amateur Military Historian

    ReplyDelete