As requested at some point,
here are our custom rules for a 2-player DBA campaign (probably adaptable to
more players). This is a comprehensive set of rules we developed after playing
4 long-term campaigns. They favour quick access to lots of units (hence paper
armies are ideal) due to rules allowing the mixing units with little
limitation. More often than not, during our Alexander vs Darius campaign, we
ended up with mixed armies involving e.g. 3 knights vs 3 scythed chariots
simply because we could create an army for more offensive or defensive purposes
strategically. The result was that this was our ugliest (due to speedy unit
creation) but most intricate campaign.
We have forgotten the places where we found the
variants but most of them come from the fanaticus website (http://www.fanaticus.org/DBA/index.html)
(especially within the pages of 'variants' and 'campaigns'), and the other
inspiration was the Total War game series. We hope this all makes sense and
feel free to ask stuff (how it works, how it worked out in the end etc).
Perhaps the next post might be commenting how each of the following elements
worked out in the end. The text might have some minor repetitions, so, sorry
about that... If there is 'optional' it means that you should consider
dropping that rule as it may complicate things.
Winning: There is one king (determine a specific general unit). If the king dies,
the campaign is over (optional).
After a certain number of years (up to you, can be 5 or 10), points are counted
per controlled city (1) and capitals (2). In case of a draw, you may add 1
point per battle victory and subtract 1 per lost general.
Generals: There are limited generals (1 per available army). The two kings have +PIP/bound
(optional). If there are battles
where one army is found without one of its generals, a 'captain' is assigned on
the spot but without the +1 combat bonus.
Game time: measured in seasons and years. There are 4 seasons and during winter the
marching of armies is risky (unless one risks the attrition - see below). There
is no ‘initiative’ since our movements will be simultaneous, written down in
secret and revealed simultaneously. Army movements happen after all other
actions of the round (recruitment, infrastructure, bribing, mercenaries, all
described below), but remember that all actions are written in secret and
revealed simultaneously. The campaign ends in a certain amount of years (up to
you).
Movement: Each unit, individually, can move once per season between two adjacent
areas. No limitations apply on where you can move your units and how many of
them.
Conquest: After we enter an area (by winning a battle or simply occupying the
space) we have to leave at least 2 units there for 2 seasons (including the
initial season when we move to the area), the second season without giving battle,
or the region returns to previous owner (neutral or enemy). If the attacker
does not want to conquer he can destroy the infrastructure (see below) and
leave.
Attrition: if an army is in a non-friendly area in winter, the player rolls for
attrition (0-3 casualties). If an army moves at any time to a neutral or enemy
area without any friendly area adjacent to it, he needs to roll 4-6 for no
casualties (otherwise a roll of 3 means 1 casualty, 2 means 2 and 1 means 3).
If an army is cut off from all directions (no friendly area around), there is
attrition roll (like in previous sentence) for every season until the area
becomes occupied (practically for one season only unless battle is given). However,
if the army remains cut off when winter comes, attrition starts normally (for
every season from then on). Example: one occupies an area for 3 seasons and
then is cut off in Spring. No attrition happens until winter season. Then one
rolls for attrition for every season onwards.
Beginning phase: We start with 2 armies and with the control of 10 areas/cities each, and
there are 10 more which are neutral (see map above). For every five cities
there is a capital (so we start by controlling two capitals each) where one can
recruit any kind of troops and which provide two talents per year (see below). (In
our following campaigns we tried smaller maps and they were rather handier.
Hence, perhaps it’s better to start each with the control of one capital and 6
areas, and two corridor-areas to be neutral).
Currency: we collect 1 talent for each city and 2 for each capital under our
control. At the end of the year, in the beginning of winter we collect talents
which we start to allocate immediately, in the winter season.
- Applied example: in the end of the first year of our campaign, in the beginning of winter, Macedonia controlled 11 cities and 2 capitals (the initial 8 cities, the initial 2 capitals and 3 more cities conquered during the year). This provided Macedonia with 11+2x2=15 talents. Assuming we decide to start with 2 armies, the cost for sustaining two armies during the winter is 4 talents (24 units/6=4). Thus, by the end of the winter, Macedonia has 11 talents left to spend.
What to do with the money: a. raise new units, b. build infrastructure (explained later), c. attempt
a bribe (optional) on an army adjacent to a friendly area by spending 1
talent for each enemy unit and 50-50 chance - success meaning the bribed units
don't appear in the battle, d. hire mercenaries (optional).
Recruitment: We need to spend 1 talent to raise 1 unit (or 2 for generals/special
units like elephants – optional). It
takes one season to raise a unit and the limit is 6 units/season which then
appear in the respective areas in the beginning of next season. If an enemy
army attacks an area where there are units planned to be recruited, the units
may still appear the next season (unless the city is taken by storming).
Sustaining units: cost of 1 talent per 4 units per
year.
Recruitment limitations: We can recruit units up to the limit determined by the number of capitals
we control (1 capital=up to 12 units). The capitals allow recruitment of any unit and the normal cities
only of auxilia and psiloi (optional)
(this works only with opponent armies with a similar amount of light units, eg
Ps, Ax etc). To make it fair, we consider such ‘light’ recruitment only for
our exclusively ‘light’ units (1 aux, 1 ps for Macedonia, 2 ps for Persia). By
building barracks (see below) one can recruit any unit in a city.
Infrastructure: 1. Marketplace costs 3 talents, takes 3 seasons
to build and increases income (offering 2 talents in the end of the year when
it is completed). 2. Barracks (optional)
cost 3 talents, take 2 seasons to build and offer the possibility to recruit
any unit in that city. 3. City walls take 2 talents and 2 seasons and make a
siege harder. If all the improvements are build in a city, it becomes a capital
and provides 2 points (for final calculations).
Maximum of units: the number of (occupied) capitals defines the maximum number of armies on
the field. Therefore, we have 6 capitals in total, there are up to 6 armies=72
units on the map. By occupying 3 for instance, a player has the right to
recruit up to 3 armies=36 units.
Siege:
Waiting:
If there are no enemy units in
the city, one can leave two units for one season for the city (or three for a
capital) to fall. If there are at least two enemy units in the city, one must
wait two seasons (or one more season for every two enemy units) for the
city to fall (generally 1 unit=none for most purposes).
Storming:
A. If there are no enemy
units, the attacker takes the city without 'waiting' but rolls for losing 0-3
units. If there are walls, to capture it one must roll 6-(1/every 2 units in
the attacking army). If it succeeds he also rolls for 0-3 casualties. If it
fails he rolls for casualties 6-(1/every 2 units in the attacking army). Note:
'waiting' applies after a failed storming.
B. If there are at least two
enemy units but no walls the attacker must roll 6-(1/every 2 units more than
opponent). If the storming fails casualties are 6-(1/every 1 unit difference).
If it succeeds there are casualties 6-(1/every 1/2 unit difference). If there
are walls, he must roll 6-1(rounded down)/every 4 units more than opponent’s
units. If storm fails, roll for casualties and calculate: 6-(1/every 4 more
units of attacker). If it succeeds roll for casualties and calculate:
6-(1/every 2 more units of attacker).
Attacking a besieger: if the besieged army decides to exit the city and attacks, he chooses the
terrain and also attacks first. The besieger rolls for the side.
Armies with less than 6 units:
they can't give battle on the field. Instead roll dice and small army needs
to roll more than the difference of units between the two armies in order to
win. Loser army retreats if there is at least one unoccupied adjacent friendly
area, otherwise the army is lost. If the retreat is successful, loser rolls for
losses 0-3, 1=3 2=2 and 3=1. If loser is the small army then he rolls for extra
loses by adding one to the dice per two unit difference. E.g. in the case of a
losing army of 5 units which confronts a 7-unit army, the loser rolls the dice
for 0-4 losses.
Battles: maximum units in one army are 14. When 1/4 of the units in an army is
routed (rounded upwards, minimum 2), the player rolls a die in the beginning of
every bound. The roll must be higher than the difference of the casualties
between the two players. Eg if Macedon's 12-unit army loses 3 units and
Persia's 12-unit army loses 1, then for every bound the Macedon player must roll
at least 3 (3-1=2) in order not to flee (see below). This may change radically
of course, since with every casualty it is adjusted (and even reversed). If an
army loses 1/4 of its units, the player may decide to flee whenever.
- When an army loses a battle and retreats to a non-enemy controlled area occupied by an enemy army, it gives another battle (as the attacker). If it loses again, it is destroyed.
Flee: When an army flees, all its units recoil one based depth, reverse their
facing and move towards their camp or board edge of entry - 600p (mounted) or
300p (foot) or 400p (foot on road). All the elements have a -1 combat modifier
applied to them and all PIP costs are increased by 1. Fleeing elements may not
initiate close combat and may not engage in missile fire unless PIPs were spent
to keep them from fleeing. PIPs may be spent on an element to stop its flee
movement and the element simply turns to face the enemy. It cannot move
anywhere or undertake any action. PIPs may be spent to stop a whole group from
fleeing. PIPs must be spent on the same elements each succeeding turn or they
will flee.
Maximum casualties: Irrespective of the flee die-rolling rule above, if half the units are
routed (rounded down) the battle ends immediately. Eg a 11-unit army may lose
up to 5 units before the battle is over.
Retreat: one can only retreat to a friendly area and NOT to an enemy-occupied
area, regardless of the presence/absence of armies in the area, otherwise it’s
destroyed. Once the battle is over, all the remaining units of the losing
player move altogether where the player wants (not individually).
Mercenaries: in any season we can recruit mercs (optional)
from any city with the cost of 2 talents per common unit and 1 talent per light
unit (Ps and Aux) (unless of course recruiting is kept free of limits
throughout). From then on they cost accordingly for sustaining for every
season.
Armies meeting: the attacker and the defender are decided in case two
armies march to the same (neutral) area by a 50-50 die roll; the higher roll
allows the player to decide to attack or defend. If two enemy armies march
towards each other’s area, the battle is given between the two areas, in
terrain according to the map’s geography (google maps helps :). The loser
retreats to an area away from the one he started off, unless he left at least
two units guarding the area. The winner occupies the area he was marching to in
the first place.
Nice rules, and a cool site you have here. Love the paper armies and terrain.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Aaron
Thanks!
ReplyDeleteCheers and Happy new year,
yannis