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authorTor Andersson <tor@ccxvii.net>2023-12-14 11:26:50 +0100
committerTor Andersson <tor@ccxvii.net>2024-01-08 16:36:48 +0100
commitfa11ea4c8dd0c423ad1e86ba0f6a7dd31a35c9af (patch)
tree6c6bde4b1b512b6aecc0d94266506f86d0079185 /tools/scenarios.csv
parentfc17fd425e861c7c92c85f94e3483efc004d4868 (diff)
downloadtable-battles-fa11ea4c8dd0c423ad1e86ba0f6a7dd31a35c9af.tar.gz
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@@ -39,18 +39,18 @@ status,expansion,number,name,date,player1,cards1,morale1,tactical1,player2,cards
1,English Civil War,31,1st Newbury,20 September 1643,Parliamentarians,194A-199A,2,,Royalists,200A-206A,1,,,,"A surprise attack grabbed key terrain and threatened the Royalist flanks. Recovering from the chaos, a counterattack broke the roundhead center, splitting Essex's army. An attempt to envelop the two halves was thwarted by the London Trained Bands."
1,English Civil War,32,2nd Newbury,27 October 1644,Parliamentarians,207A-211A,1,16,Royalists,212A-216A,2,16,,,"Attacked from opposite directions and outnumbered more than two to one, the King appeared to be doomed. But the enemy just couldn't coordinate; stubborn Royalist resistance denied Essex anything more than a tactical victory."
1,English Civil War,33,Naseby,14 June 1645,Royalists,178B-183B,2,20,Parliamentarians,184B-190B,2,,,,"The New Model Army at last achieved decisive victory at Naseby, leaving Charles without a field army. It was also a political victory, as they captured (and published) letters in which the King plotted with foreign troops against his subjects."
-all_extra,English Civil War,34,Tippermuir,1 September 1644,Covenanters,191B-196B,4,,Royalists,197B-202B,0 - see below,,,"If any Royalist card Routs, the Covenanters win immediately.","Meanwhile, in Scotland, Montrose sought to block the intervention of the Solemn League and Covenant, and near Perth won a decisive victory &ndash; supposedly losing only one man to Elcho's two thousand dead. Yeah, sure."
-montrose,English Civil War,35,Auldearn,9 May 1645,Covenanters,203B-208B,5,,Royalists,209B-216B,0 - see below,,,"If any Royalist card Routs, the Covenanters win immediately.","400 desperate men defend Auldearn from a Covenanter army nearly 2,000 strong. Their only hope is that Montrose will arrive in time to turn the tide. He better hurry it up!"
+1,English Civil War,34,Tippermuir,1 September 1644,Covenanters,191B-196B,4,,Royalists,197B-202B,0 - see below,,,"If any Royalist card Routs, the Covenanters win immediately.","Meanwhile, in Scotland, Montrose sought to block the intervention of the Solemn League and Covenant, and near Perth won a decisive victory &ndash; supposedly losing only one man to Elcho's two thousand dead. Yeah, sure."
+1,English Civil War,35,Auldearn,9 May 1645,Covenanters,203B-208B,5,,Royalists,209B-216B,0 - see below,,,"If any Royalist card Routs, the Covenanters win immediately.","400 desperate men defend Auldearn from a Covenanter army nearly 2,000 strong. Their only hope is that Montrose will arrive in time to turn the tide. He better hurry it up!"
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
1,Base Game,36,Pharsalus,9 August 48 BCE,Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus,217A-220A,2,,Gaius Iulius Caesar,221A-225A,2,,,,"The decisive battle of Caesar's Civil War saw him square off against his old ally Pompey the Great. Knowing he would lose a straightforward clash of arms, Caesar gambled everything on a bold stratagem."
1,Base Game,37,Inkerman,5 November 1854,Russian Empire,217B-220B,1,,Anglo-French Alliance,221B-225B,2,,,,"In a dense fog, a massive &ndash; but badly coordinated &ndash; Russian army launched a surprise attack. As the fog lifted and fresh Allied troops poured in, their desperate, doomed defense improbably turned into a lopsided victory."
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
-,The Grand Alliance,38,Fleurus,1 July 1690,French,226A-231A,1,,The Grand Alliance,232A-239A,3,,,,"Luxembourg split the French army in two, attempting a risky double envelopment of Waldeck's line. He succeeded, and the enemy only escaped total destruction by the skin of its teeth. Both players should read the ""Retreat to Nivelles"" card carefully before playing."
-,The Grand Alliance,39,Marsaglia,4 October 1693,The Grand Alliance,240A-245A,2,,French,246A-251A,2,,,"In this scenario, if a player loses both linked formations, they immediately lose (if it happens to both players at the same time, The Grand Alliance wins).",Catinat's superb generalhsip and innovative use of a mass bayonet charge turned nearly even odds into a smashing victory.
-,The Grand Alliance,40,Chiari,1 September 1701,French,252A-257A,2,15,Austrians,258A-263A,2,22,,,"Eugene's careful defense and choice of terrain negated the French numerical advantage, resulting in a decisive victory that persuaded the English and Dutch to join Austria in its war against France, getting the Grand Alliance band back together."
-,The Grand Alliance,41,Blenheim,13 August 1704,The Grand Alliance,226B-233B,2,,French & Bavarians,234B-242B,3,,,,"The towns of Blenheim, Oberglauheim, and Lutzingen anchored hte Franco-Bavarian army, and they did not expect the enemy to dare an attack. At first, it seemed a folly, but a French blunder created the opening Marlborough needed for a breakthrough and a decisive victory."
-,The Grand Alliance,42,Ramillies,23 May 1706,The Grand Alliance,243B-247B,1,,French,248B-254B,4,16,,,"Villeroy stretched his army to secure his flanks. Seeing an opportunity, Marlborough risked envelopment with a much shorter line that allowed for a greater concentration of force against weakpoints in the enemy's line. Marlborough's gamble paid off in a lopsided victory."
-,The Grand Alliance,43,Denain,24 July 1712,The Grand Alliance,255B-259B,2,,French,260B-263B,2,,,,"As Eugene marched toward Paris and final victory, his supply line was overextended. It crossed the Scheldt at Denain, a fortress held by only 10,000. A cunning night march allowed Villars to bring 24,000 to bear against the doomed defenders. His victory at Denain ended Eugene's advance."
+"retreat, tactical draw",The Grand Alliance,38,Fleurus,1 July 1690,French,226A-231A,1,,The Grand Alliance,232A-239A,3,,,,"Luxembourg split the French army in two, attempting a risky double envelopment of Waldeck's line. He succeeded, and the enemy only escaped total destruction by the skin of its teeth. Both players should read the ""Retreat to Nivelles"" card carefully before playing."
+1,The Grand Alliance,39,Marsaglia,4 October 1693,The Grand Alliance,240A-245A,2,,French,246A-251A,2,,,"In this scenario, if a player loses both linked formations, they immediately lose (if it happens to both players at the same time, The Grand Alliance wins).",Catinat's superb generalship and innovative use of a mass bayonet charge turned nearly even odds into a smashing victory.
+1,The Grand Alliance,40,Chiari,1 September 1701,French,252A-257A,2,15,Austrians,258A-263A,2,22,,,"Eugene's careful defense and choice of terrain negated the French numerical advantage, resulting in a decisive victory that persuaded the English and Dutch to join Austria in its war against France, getting the Grand Alliance band back together."
+1,The Grand Alliance,41,Blenheim,13 August 1704,The Grand Alliance,226B-233B,2,,French & Bavarians,234B-242B,3,,,,"The towns of Blenheim, Oberglauheim, and Lutzingen anchored hte Franco-Bavarian army, and they did not expect the enemy to dare an attack. At first, it seemed a folly, but a French blunder created the opening Marlborough needed for a breakthrough and a decisive victory."
+1,The Grand Alliance,42,Ramillies,23 May 1706,The Grand Alliance,243B-247B,1,,French,248B-254B,4,16,,,"Villeroy stretched his army to secure his flanks. Seeing an opportunity, Marlborough risked envelopment with a much shorter line that allowed for a greater concentration of force against weakpoints in the enemy's line. Marlborough's gamble paid off in a lopsided victory."
+1,The Grand Alliance,43,Denain,24 July 1712,The Grand Alliance,255B-259B,2,,French,260B-263B,2,,,,"As Eugene marched toward Paris and final victory, his supply line was overextended. It crossed the Scheldt at Denain, a fortress held by only 10,000. A cunning night march allowed Villars to bring 24,000 to bear against the doomed defenders. His victory at Denain ended Eugene's advance."
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
,Charles Alexander of Lorraine,44,Hothenfriedberg,4 June 1745,Prussia,264A-272A,2,,Austria,273A-278A,3,24,,,"After a daring night march, the Prussians planned to overwhel the Saxons with a surprise attack, then roll up the Austrian flank. But a staggered river crossing gave Charles time to hastily form up, forcing Frederick to improvise. The Austrians were obstinate but were ultimately routed."
,Charles Alexander of Lorraine,45,Soor,30 September 1745,Austria,279A-285A,4,24,Prussia,286A-291A,2,,,,"Here Charles had overwhelming numbers, devastating artillery, favorable terrain, and the element of surprise. Which makes his lopsided defeat all the more humiliating. But he came close. ""At Hohenfriedberg I fought for Silesia,"" Frederick recalled later, ""but at Soor, I fought for my life."""