Another exciting 800 point FOG game today with my Greeks
taking on Mark’s Ghaznavids.
A lot more terrain than usual (I am still learning how to
handle medium foot and as I was running a unit of Thracians and one of Cretan
militia I thought hiding them in a vineyard and on a steep hill would be the
way to go against a cavalry army).
In the picture above the Ptolemaic left is anchored by the
Cretan javelin armed conscripts on the steep hill, which has disordered them,
but hopefully put them out of harm’s way.
The right is the vineyard where the Thracians are heading.
The Ghaznavid centre, defending their camp.
The Ghaznavids wanted that vineyard! In the centre can be seen the Ghaznavid
skirmishers harassing the Ptolemaic pikemen.
Thorakitai (Hoplites doing double duty) guard the flanks of the pike phalanx.
More skirmishing on the left: the elephants being too slow
to get into action, but still wheeling around all the same. The little chap is sounding the alarm in Ptolemy’s
fortified camp.
The Cretan foot on the hill look on terrified as the
Ghaznavids successfully assault the camp, despite the efforts of the trumpet dude.
The Thracians fight grimly for the vineyard, but are being
worn down, particularly by the enemy elephants.
The Xystophoroi lancers are trying to come to their rescue.
The Xystophoroi are too late and the Thracians are broken.
Ptolemy checks out how his centre is going. At this stage I was two units and my camp
down.
But on the left things started to look up. A unit of Ghaznavid Mameluks are wiped out
when trapped between the Cretans infantry they had been hassling on the hill
and the elephants that came round to attack them. In the background the other Mameluk unit,
laden down with loot from successfully sacking the camp, is shot to pieces by
some Ptolemaic archers.
On the right a unit of Ghaznavid light horse fought desperately
so their lancers could take the Ptolemaic spearmen in the flank. On their cohesion test they would break on anything
but an 11 or higher ...
However that had used up all the Ghaznavid’s good luck and
their cavalry came off the worse in the resulting combat.
Ptolemy himself, doing his best Alexander the Great
impersonation, has revenged the Thracian foot, but is now in a standoff with
the Ghaznavid elephants.
Meanwhile on the left the Cretan conscripts aided by the
elephants defeated a unit of Ghaznavid bowmen who had arrived too late to save
the Mameluks.
Ptolemy’s fight with the elephants was not going well, but
by this time the Ghaznavid morale had broken.
Phew!
And just as well as clearing their remaining force off the hill would
have been a hard slog.
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