Title

Title
Tally Ho!

Saturday 1 August 2020

And the graves were opened - a kings of war campaign

Many years ago the wizard Jarvis sought out the quiet of The Cracked Lands to pursue his studies of the ancient Ophidians magic's. Even though the necromancy they practised was dark his aims were noble, to mobilise the dead in the fight against evil.    


In the lonely Tower of Najash he toiled in solitude seeking the secrets of the Ophidians. In the end he was successful in learning the necromantic spells  for raising and controlling the dead.  But his efforts did not go unobserved, as in seeking solitude he had chosen a site near the Southern Rift and greedy eyes watched his progress from the Abyss.


From her torture chambers in Rifthold, the Succubus Queen Mau’ti-bu-su monitored his progress, determined to steal the secrets of the tower and raise her own army of the dead.
So at the moment of his triumph she struck, launching at attack from the Rift. Hurriedly Jarvis summoned his forces, and so the graves were opened and many bodies of the warriors which slept arose.

In this campaign we pit the Abyssals against the Good Undead forces under Jarvis in a struggle to control the Ophidian magic. Will Mau’ti-bu-su take the tower or will Jarvis destroy  Rifthold?

Game 1 - Raze



In the Raze scenario you must capture objectives in your opponents half and there is a central tie-breaker. The twist is that objectives are captured at any point you have more Unit Strength within 3' and not at the end of the game. So its capture and move on.    


The Undead deployed a very elite and therefore quite small force. The left was two werewolf hordes supported by a werewolf hero. Centrally was a big block with Mummies, Revenant skeletons, and Vampires on foot. The right was speedy with Revenant skeleton cavalry and Wights.     




I setup with my left (opposite the mounted) of an Archfiend, two Succubi units and some Gargoyles. The centre was the remaining infantry with Lower Abyssals, Molochs, Flamebearers and the Well of Souls. The left was just a single unit of Abyssal Horsmen.

My plan was to hide behind the hill on the right with the Horsemen, push forward in the middle  so the Molochs could engage and attack through the woods on the Succubi. Deployment was a worry though as i was outnumbered on both flanks and the left was where I had two of my objectives. 

Succubi and the might Archfiend


Move 1 the Succubi made it into the woods and with the Archfiend threatening the Revenants I was bale to draw them and the Wights into an unfavourable charge in the rough. The cavalry bounced andf were quickly gobbled-up but the Wights stuck about for much of the game.


On my right I made an error - I hoped to delay the Werewolves for much of the game or make them crest the rise and be charged. I forgot it was Raze though so they simply scampered up and claimed the objective. They in-turn made an error though of turning into the centre and allowing the Well of Souls to fly over the lines and flank them for 20 attacks.     



On my left the tide was now in my favour - the Archfiend was able to stomp the remaining cavalry while the Succubi finished off the Wights and turned inwards to attack some Mummies.




As we entered the last 2 moves things were in the Abyssals favour but not a done deal. I had 2-1 on objectives but 3 were still in play. The Well was able to fly into the backfield and make it 3-1 whilst the Undead consolidated their hold on the central one, making it  3-2.   As we finished the Undead were unable to claim either of their 2 remining objectives making it a 3-2 win for the Abyss.



Reflections



The Succubi performed well -they hit hard and from the front and/or in cover are tough to kill. They have the speed and threat to draw the enemy into unfavourable charges.  The Molochs are also good value but the monstrous sized base can be tough to manoeuvre in the congested mid-field. The Archfiend and Well of Souls are a work in progress - I've little experience of using big, costly, flying monsters and getting them wrong wastes a lot of points.



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