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author | Tor Andersson <tor@ccxvii.net> | 2023-12-13 02:25:02 +0100 |
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committer | Tor Andersson <tor@ccxvii.net> | 2024-01-08 16:36:48 +0100 |
commit | 72bd7a444bffaea97ceb2d8fb69304753a6d8307 (patch) | |
tree | 5d8e66a7ace34174edec3e69049578efa78cd91f /tools/scenarios.csv | |
parent | a5368010c02c750d9f14804b9edb381c808d8cac (diff) | |
download | table-battles-72bd7a444bffaea97ceb2d8fb69304753a6d8307.tar.gz |
take_1_from and make_take_from. little round top.
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/scenarios.csv')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/scenarios.csv | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/tools/scenarios.csv b/tools/scenarios.csv index 7fe413a..6bbdd35 100644 --- a/tools/scenarios.csv +++ b/tools/scenarios.csv @@ -24,9 +24,9 @@ status,expansion,number,name,date,player1,cards1,morale1,tactical1,player2,cards 1,Age of Alexander,18,The Granicus,May 334 BCE,Various Squabbling Satraps,102A-108A,3,,Alexander III,109A-114A,1,,,,"Persia's light cavalry is no match for our boy's infantry and Companions, and it doesn't help the Persian cause that no one is really in charge. About the only thing they have going for them is they're on the other side of a river. Will it be enough?"
1,Age of Alexander,19,Issus,5 November 333 BCE,Darius III,115A-121A,3,,Alexander III,122A-129A,1,,,,"Darius had a numerical advantage – how much exactly is impossible to say – but most of his troops were ineffectual light infantry that weren't actually engaged. Both sides concentrated their strength on their right, and it was a race to see which side's left would collapse first."
1,Age of Alexander,20,Gaugamela,1 October 331 BCE,Alexander III,130A-135A,1,,Darius III,92B-100B,4,,,,"Numbering somewhere between 100,000 and one million (!), Darius's army vastly outnumbered Alexander's. But he was still trying to fight the Macedonians with Persian methods, and after some hard fighting, Alexander broke the Persian left."
-,Age of Alexander,21,The Hydaspes,May 326 BCE,Alexander III,101B-107B,1,,Porus,108B-113B,3,,,,"Crossing the river with a small part of his army, Alexander was initially outnumbered, and the enemy's fearsome elephants threatened to break the phalanx. But daring and complicated maneuvers threw the Indian army into disarray, securing victory for Alexander in his last major battle."
-,Age of Alexander,22,Gabiene,316 BCE,Eumenes,114B-119B,2,,Antigonus,120B-123B,2,,,,"One of the many battles fought by Alexander's successors (the Diadochi), this one proved tactically inconclusive. But the capture of Eumenes's baggage was enough for his Silver Shields to turn him over to Antigonus for execution."
-,Age of Alexander,23,Ipsus,301 BCE,Antigonus,124B-129B,2,,Seleucus,130B-135B,2,,,,"Like Gabiene and many other battles from the Wars of the Diadochi, this battle saw two armies that were mostly identical in structure and tactics. And like many ancient battles, the death of a single man, the enemy commander (in this case Antigonus), was sufficient to secure victory."
+1,Age of Alexander,21,The Hydaspes,May 326 BCE,Alexander III,101B-107B,1,,Porus,108B-113B,3,,,,"Crossing the river with a small part of his army, Alexander was initially outnumbered, and the enemy's fearsome elephants threatened to break the phalanx. But daring and complicated maneuvers threw the Indian army into disarray, securing victory for Alexander in his last major battle."
+1,Age of Alexander,22,Gabiene,316 BCE,Eumenes,114B-119B,2,,Antigonus,120B-123B,2,,,,"One of the many battles fought by Alexander's successors (the Diadochi), this one proved tactically inconclusive. But the capture of Eumenes's baggage was enough for his Silver Shields to turn him over to Antigonus for execution."
+1,Age of Alexander,23,Ipsus,301 BCE,Antigonus,124B-129B,2,,Seleucus,130B-135B,2,,,,"Like Gabiene and many other battles from the Wars of the Diadochi, this battle saw two armies that were mostly identical in structure and tactics. And like many ancient battles, the death of a single man, the enemy commander (in this case Antigonus), was sufficient to secure victory."
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
,Gettysburg,24,Little Round Top,2 July 1863,Union,136A-143A,1,,Confederate,144A-149A,2,,,,"One of the most famous actions of the day saw fewer than three thousand men mount a desperate, hard-fought, and ingenious defense of the Union left flank against the repeated assaults of nearly five thousand butternuts."
,Gettysburg,25,The Wheatfield,2 July 1863,Confederate,150A-156A,3,,Union,157A-167A,3,,,,"Confederate assaults caused the Union to retreat, then Union assoults caused the rebs to fall back, and on and on, back and forth, possession of the Wheatfield changing hands repeatedly, neither side gaining any real advantage, with thousands of casualties"
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