By Miguel Bolivar de IRG

Our second game of Midgard was to be that most cherished of battles, Agincourt 1415. Here on the field of 15mm battle we sought to uphold the ideals of the hero rather than the saint. We had the new set of wargames rules, Midgard, one that emphasised the key role of courage, leadership and risk- taking. But, Mike and I were to be French!

The French host at the bottom of the picture. The smaller English army awaits its fate!

The Midgard download ( available for free from the superlative mogsymakes.net) punishes the French lack of coordinated command. Charles I d’Albret maybe Constable of France but he is classified as only a “ minor” hero. The other commanders are similarly insulted but they do have the “ Today we fight to win” ability that can add D6 combat dice to any melee.

Seeking triumphant death, out gallant martyrs in armour Boucicaut and John I, duc d’ Boubon, stir their charges!

Two superb mounted knight units and two of foot knights would be our main fighting units but the English archers had yet to deploy their stakes. Midgard gives “ support” for troops defended by stakes and also penalises those mounted troops who fool heatedly attempt to to charge through them.

Antoine, Duc d’ Brabant led the fickle foot and mercenary crossbowmen on the French right.

The five non-noble heavy foot are classified as “ fickle” and that posed a problem for us. Such troops dice to rout at half casualties and get through the arrow storm. Regarding cowardice and dishonour as the worst possible evil, the footmen trudged forward.

Would they make it to the English lines?

On the right, Monsoir Lannes was not waiting for his mounted gendarmes to be unhorsed by the crooked sticks of the English…

In two moves, our knights on the right were clashing with the English men- at-arms. The accompanying Coustiliers and crossbowmen are conspicuously absent in support of the charge.

On the left, Charles I d’Albret advanced far enough to threaten a charge but pulled away once the English had committed to place their cowardly stakes. A forest prevented flanking and although courage is a virtue, stupidity is not!

The English centre is assailed!

The manouvers on the flanks were ignored as the respective centres clashed. Midgard is so good at handling such scrums! The heroes challenge each other and are punished for refusing. First Alençon fell and then The gallant Welshman Llewellyn! Shakespeare would be upset.

English witchcraft holds the line!
The French knights are unstoppable despite the English archers gaining from their firepower and stakes.
Riding over their fallen comrades, the French nobles on the left return to the fray!

Simultaneously the French knights on both flanks vanquished their foes! On the left, Charles I swung round and added to the slaughter.

Magnanimous only after defeating the enemy!

It had been a close run thing but the last English unit’s demise exhausted the coin in the goblet of reputation ( a neat mechanism for assessing victory and defeat, combined with encouraging the heroic ethos)

The tumult subsides!

So a French victory! ✌🏾 Midgard really captures the grim slog of combat but also provides scope for heroics. A longer game than we usually play, coming in at over three hours but we are still quite unused to the system. That being said the game did flow without rules referrals.

Join us next time for more heroics from the American War of Independence as the colonies rebel against their rightful overlords ( Sorry Mark Morin, I couldn’t resist!)

Sweet victory!

2 responses to “Wargaming Midgard: refusing to love one’s enemy!”

  1. Nice game and minis! 🙂 Maybe a good job you chaps weren’t in charge at Agincourt though!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. A French knight actually defeated Henry V in single combat but didn’t even stop to ransom him! A bloodfest!

      Liked by 1 person

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