First posting an a Sequence question
Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2013 2:28 pm
Have discovered these rules thru the net
My first outings in ECW were George Gush rules and DBR 1.0 in 15mm
A few years ago i started to paint Warlord 28MM plastics and have an army ready (240 inf, 60 cav, 2 art)
In the club we already tried WECW and Pike & Shot, not completely satisfied with either
So now for something completely different
Trying to make sense of the playing sequence
you make the stack of cards as described in the rules -> no problem there
you draw a card and activate unit/brigade/c-in-c -> no problem there
now what ?
their is no explicit shoot order ?
can the unit you activated now fire if within range ? (move and shoot or standstill and shoot ?)
if you activate the brigadire can all units in his range move/shoot ?
do enemy respond or they just take the fire and wait for their card ?
is it correct that the same unit can get 4 consecutive activations by extreme luck ? (unit card, brigadire card and in range, c-in-c card and in range, event card)
just trying to make sense of the different approach (Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore)
Alex
My first outings in ECW were George Gush rules and DBR 1.0 in 15mm
A few years ago i started to paint Warlord 28MM plastics and have an army ready (240 inf, 60 cav, 2 art)
In the club we already tried WECW and Pike & Shot, not completely satisfied with either
So now for something completely different
Trying to make sense of the playing sequence
you make the stack of cards as described in the rules -> no problem there
you draw a card and activate unit/brigade/c-in-c -> no problem there
now what ?
their is no explicit shoot order ?
can the unit you activated now fire if within range ? (move and shoot or standstill and shoot ?)
if you activate the brigadire can all units in his range move/shoot ?
do enemy respond or they just take the fire and wait for their card ?
is it correct that the same unit can get 4 consecutive activations by extreme luck ? (unit card, brigadire card and in range, c-in-c card and in range, event card)
just trying to make sense of the different approach (Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore)
Alex