I like to be nice about most games and minis.
I purchased A World Aflame from Osprey
recently. I am a bit of a Spanish Civil War bore and kind of like the
idea of doing some Very British Civil War too, so it seemed like a
good idea at the time.
There basically seemed to be two
schools of thought when in comes to wargames rules which are reality
or fun. I have always liked the concept of realism rather than
abstract. Fun and slaughter are not natural bed fellows and anyone
who thinks like this should take a long hard look at why they game.
Accurate ranges are an important part of realism for me. This put me
off flames of war.
One of the first things in the rules is
about table scale, distance and time basically saying that there
isn't one. This means that it would be impossible to have them
because the rules will fall down if you have one. The rules also talk
about fun in the game referring to a few comedy shows set in that
era. This is an era marked by bloody civil wars where indiscriminate
atrocities were common place. Injecting a note of fun into this
doesn't really do it for me. If you want fun play a zombie game or
40k.
One of the flaws of many games
designers is that they have no idea about range and weapon
performance. Not that I am particularly anal about it but anyone can
look up basic details on wikipedia. A sniper rifle has a range of
thirty inches in the rules and a flame thrower has a range eight
inches. I'll use the sniper rifle as the basis for comparing weapons
ranges. A sniper rifle of the period probably had an effective rage
of around 600-800m. So for the sake of an argument lets call in 600m.
A flame thrower at best had a range of about 40m but realistically
hitting anything more than 20m away was a lucky shot. So being
generous we will call the range of a flame thrower 40m which is about
a 1/15 the distance. So that gives the flame thrower a massive range
bonus. The flame thrower should have a relative range of about 1-2”.
HMGs are more accurate than sniper rifles. Given that at long range
they would be relying on gravity to plunge the round onto a target I
am not sure but don't think that would work even if it was an area of
effect weapon
You can throw a grenade about 20-25m in
the real world which is about an inch on table. Soldiers in A World
Aflame can throw a grenade up to six inches up to 150m. It has a
lethal blast area of 75m which is about 25% likely to hit the
thrower.
Shotguns have a range of 10” or about
a third of that of a sniper rifle. I have shot a fair bit with
shotguns and would have said hitting anything at more than about 30m
was a good shot. The books give them a range of about 40m. I believe
that you can hit with a solid slug at about double the range. 10”
is about 200m or about five time what you would hit with a shotgun.
I could go on as all the weapon ranges
seem wrong but why bother. It's broken.
The game uses something like fog of war
cards. There aren't many and many are just not very good. I think
this idea was probably pushed onto the system and they are not a
patch on the ones in Force on Force.
Infantry can move (if they are lucky)
up to 16” or roughly 320m) almost as fast as the fastest tanks can
drive at full pelt (21” or rough 420m). Moving (not charging)
cavalry move at no more than 15” or a little slower than a tank.
Charging cavalry manage up to 19”.
Whichever bit of the rules I look at I
find flaws. So many that I just can't be bothered listing any more.
I got the rules because I wanted to
play them. I like the era particularly. I might give them a try but
to be honest I think there are better rules out there. If you want a
“fun” game rather than something approaching a simulation you
might be okay but to me this is a big stretch.
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