Saturday, March 23, 2019

Stratego Waterloo

My dad and I are always trying out new games in our father-son weekends that occur every few months.  In our last one, we decided to unwrap and play Stratego Waterloo, which recreates the Battle of Waterloo, fought way back on Sunday, 18 June 1815.  On that day, the French army under the command of Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by a British-led allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington and a Prussian army under the command of Field Marshal Blücher.

Playing the original Stratego against my dad is one of my first memories of playing boardgames, and I was excited to try this version and refight the Battle of Waterloo. I played Emperor Napoleon, and my dad took the Duke of Wellington.  The winner in this version of the game is the first player that succeeds in severing the lines of retreat of the opposite player (occupying the flank of the opponent).  The game is also lost if a player loses his commander and commander in chief.

The French took a heavy toll on the British early game, but once the Prussians entered the fray, the artillery of the French was quickly destroyed in flanking maneuvers.  Cavalry succeeded on both sides winnowing down opposing forces.  In the end, Napoleon was hunted down and defeated by an elite English infantry unit, and the battle was lost for the French.

Stratego Waterloo is a light wargame, but more heavy than the original Stratego.  You definitely experience the give and take feel of the lines of battle and your use of cavalry to make thrusts into the enemy lines is a key factor in success.  The French made good use of its cavalry early game, but once the Prussians entered the battle, it turned the tide of battle.  Vive La France!



Sunday, March 3, 2019

Axis & Allies: Naval Battles

Lately, over the last few gamenights we have been playing Axis & Allies Naval Miniatures.  The game was produced by Wizards of the Coast as a sister product to its Axis & Allies Miniatures game, (which we have never played).  The game has a simple (but strategic) gameplay, and a typical game can be completed in under an hour.

In the game, players can takes command of ships and squadrons of aircraft.  The ships run the range from aircraft carriers and battleships, to cruisers, to destroyers, to submarines, to auxiliary ships and even motor torpedo boats.


My main fleet is the French Navy, which works great as it can be used as either Allied (Free French) or Axis (Vichy France).  I have the complete set of official offerings:
I have a few other ships from various other fleets, including a German contingent that includes the Bismark and the Prinz Eugen.  I also have a small British fleet, and a contingent of smaller nations (like Poland).

The biggest issue now is that the game was released in 2007, but only lasted with official releases until 2011.  This means obtaining the models at reasonable prices can be hard.  The others in our group have bought some of the more inexpensive offerings from Ebay and other online dealers and inherited some of our more least-played fleets.

We are looking forward to more multi-player games and I'd also like to try out a Battle of the River Plate scenario, as we have the ships top recreate that fateful battle....