At the NWS August Games Day Simon launched his fantastic handcrafted Venetian and Turkish galleys in a premier game based on the Galleys, Guns and Glory rule set by Skull and Crown. I hope this post does the models proud and that my write up is not too biased or one-sided.
Angus and Marc commanded the Sultan's squadrons, while Simon and I had the Christians. Specifically I had the Venetian and Maltese ships.
Sails raised purely for aesthetics.
My ships are the eight nearest on the left
My flag ship,
proudly displaying the Lion of St Mark
Some dubious ships in the employ of the Sultan
My ships as seen form the Turkish side
the red dots denote the ship needs to reload
the chits indicate hull or crew loss.
The pirates had an excellent opening bombardment,
scoring hits with all guns,
including the big gun that scores double.
Ouch!
The Turks score the first sink/wreck
The Venetians defeat the Sultans's ships they were facing,
although they had lost one ship and others had suffered severe damage.
One Maltese ship was sunk, but they too were victorious
However it was not such a good story for the other Christian ships
and things were probably in the balance.
A close up to show off the detail
of these balsa, wood, plastic and paper creations
the oars are from a brush
Hi Mark. With 46 ships on the table it was a big game. Thanks for your write up and to everyone for participating. We had a few spectators as well.
ReplyDeleteGame played well. Looking forward to another encounter.
DeleteNice fleets!
ReplyDeleteYes, and they were a pleasure to play with, not only proving nice to look at, but robust to handle as well (but with care of course)
DeleteAn impressive set of scratch built ships.
ReplyDeleteYes, Simon did an excellent job.
DeleteGreat write up! Fantastic ships Simon! all those oars!
ReplyDeleteThanks. The models were a delight to play with.
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