Tuesday, 27 May 2025

Vintage Dresden - The Game

I was joined by Nigel, Tony and Goya for the game. Each player commanded the troops on their half of the table with reserves to be fed in and assigned to a player on arrival. We started with a round of artillery bombardment and then got stuck in.

Schwarzenberg (Nigel) wasted no time in getting things moving on the allied left, his men launching an immediate attack towards the village of Lobtau (worth 10VP to the allies, 3VP to the French). The Austrian 4th Hussars (foreground) are obvioulsy eager to cross swords with the enemy in their first outing as a full unit.
On the other side of the Weisseritz River the rest of Nigel's infantry are making for Plauen (worth 5VP to either side). All that painting and refurb work on the Austrians appears to have paid off.

Meanwhile Wittgenstein (Goya) brings up the Prusso-Russians to within striking distance of the Great Garden. At this stage the garden was thinly defended by a handfull of French Voltigeurs and a single unit of Young Guard.

The 26th, 51st (Splenys) and 59th Austrian infantry regiments advance behind a screen of Jagers who are exchanging shots with the French Voltigeurs in front of Plauen.

The Russians near the walls of the Great Garden - so far so good for the Allies.

The French left is in danger of being enveloped. The Great Garden is worth 10VP to either side whilst Windmill Hill (in the rear) is worth 10VP to the Allies but nothing to the French.

Fortunately for the French Ney (Tony) is on hand with the Young Guard. The Marines supported by the 9th legere (seconded to the Guard for the day) move up to meet the Prussian hordes. In the distance the Eclaireurs are clashing with the Silesian Hussars.

Turn 3 and out of nowhere the entire Allied heavy cavalry appeared and descend on the French centre. The Allies drew the card for their arrival from reserve and placed them in their front line (sneaky). This was my (St Cyr) section of the line held by the 45th and 24th regiments. The 24th managed to form square in the nick of time but the 45th became disordered - eek!

On the French right, the arrival of Victor's Corps enabled me to reinforce the position at Lobtau. At this point the river could be forded anywhere but that situation was not to last.

The fighting for the garden is in full swing with Prussians already in the grounds while the Marines and 9th legere slog it out on the extreme left of the French line.

The Prussians are swarming into the Great Garden, I do hope they're not trampling the flowers!

Over at Lobtau there is one heck of a cavalry melee developing as the Austrian Hussars mix it with the 5th Lancers. Believe it or not it was the French who eventually came out on top in this scrap.

The curse of the new unit - the Grenzers took some heavy casualties in the fighting for Lobtau and were eventually reduced and removed from play.

Nigel's Prussian Dragoons bounce off the square of the 24th ligne. The square has only stood due to the morale bonus imparted by La Bedoyere who rode forward in the nick of time to steady the ranks. His plume may not be the right colour but he certainly inspired confidence in the men!

The Allied heavy cavalry slams into the poor 45th ligne. In the distance you can see that the Toskana Dragoons have just overrun a French artillery redoubt. The French centre is looking awfully exposed.

The Russians are at the gates!
The Silesian Landwehr move up in support of their commrades engaged with the Young Guard (You know things are getting serious when the Landwehr arrive). In the distance the Eclaireurs and Prussian Hussars are still meleeing - I believe this fight lasted for three turns.

Turn 4 and suddenly the lights went out! Unperturbed we soldiered on by candle light (actually there was plenty of light coming through the cabin windows). This provided a dramatic backdrop to the drawing of the Joker card - a torrential rain storm had occured flooding the River Weisseritz so that it could now only be crossed at the bridge.

The pesky Toskanas ride on and overrun another of my batteries while the 45th ligne are trampled under the hooves of the Prussian and Austrian Cuirassiers.

Nigel continues to push his infantry forward towards Plauen while assembling a grand battery to pummel the place into submission.
At Lobtau the Austrians try but fail to dislodge the 25th ligne. The rather nice building is from Goya's collection.

Finally some good news for the French - the heavy cavalry have arrived and plug the gap in the centre. The Allies decide that discretion is the better part of valour and their own heavies do a quick about face and retire!
At this point we had to call it a day and it turned out to be a French win on points as of all the victory locations only the Great Garden was (partially) in Allied hands. The French Guard had never even made it onto the table.

Despite my optimism that the movement trays would help speed things along we only managed 5 turns which was the same as last year's game. Clearly there were just too many troops on the table as my desire to see all those Austrians/Prussians/Russians in action got the better of me when planning the scenario. It was still a good game though and I think we all thoroughly enjoyed the spectacle.

My thanks to the visiting generals for making the effort to come along and playing in such good humour, and a special thanks to Mrs S whose quick thinking allowed her field kitchen to operate despite the hour and a half power cut!

20 comments:

MSFoy said...

Superb game, Ian - spectacular. A huge amount of work to put everything together, but a brilliant job. Thanks again for everything, not least the emergency field kitchen unit defying enemy fire so heroically. The soldiers are just wonderful - I was in the cabin with them, but I'm still amazed by the photos!

A magnificent day all round.

Rob Young said...

Nice. Though that really goes without saying :)

Rob said...

What a great game, a real shame it couldn’t be payed to a finish, perhaps you should re-run it as an online game over several days.

Donnie McGibbon said...

Quite superb, a really great spectacle, so many lovely troops on the table, plenty to pore over.

Norm said...

Wonderful!

Stryker said...

Thanks Tony, it was fun!

Stryker said...

Thanks!

Stryker said...

Rob, in this case I doubt the Allies could have won if we played on as the Guard infantry and cavalry were still uncommitted. It did occur to me that playing solo might be the only way to see such a big game through to a proper conclusion but it wouldn’t be as much fun.

Stryker said...

Thanks Donnie, I had a quick count and there were over 1,200 troops in the game!

Stryker said...

Cheers Norm!

Matt said...

Marvellous looking spectacle! Looking forward to August!

Stryker said...

I’m looking forward to it as well Matt!

Bob Spruster said...

What a grand sight! Well done! I appreciate it even more knowing the effort required to collect the figures and the labor you put into making them so handsome!

Stryker said...

Thanks Bob and you’re right it has been a lot of work!

Wellington Man said...

It's always a pleasure to see your outstanding work, Ian, and what a spectacular setting! I think the massed Austro-Prussian heavy cavalry may have stolen the show on this occasion. It looked like the 45th may have lost their eagle again.

My only gripe is that I couldn't find a single decent shot of your lovely new Tirailleurs. They seemed to have been going great guns in the Great Garden.

Stryker said...

WM - you’re right the Tirailleurs did seem a bit camera shy! Don’t worry though they didn’t come to much harm as they never came to grips with the enemy. They will get their own post soon so you can fully review them then.

Aly Morrison said...

A truly beautiful looking game Ian…
The danger with a game like this is that you can spend a lot of time just looking at the toys instead of moving them and rolling dice…
Mind you that doesn’t sound so bad either 😁

All the best. Aly

Stryker said...

Thanks Aly!

the Archduke said...

I should like to reassure Aly that I wasted no time moving my troops.......not necessarily to the right places.....

Stryker said...

Nigel, I would say you moved your cavalry to exactly the right place!

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