CLASSICAL WARRIOR
Errata to 16 March 2010
Any updates or corrections are shown under the specific list. Lines refer to the line starting underneath the list and also reference a complete entry, not just a carryover from a previous line.
Unless otherwise specified, Elephants may have detachments of Elephant Escorts if the latter are in the army list.
GREEK INFANTRY RULES: Second line, after "16" add "(also includes Citizen Hoplites)"
Lists 3, 17: The ally references in the Notes to "no others" should be read to mean no other sublist allies (and, in the case of List 3, Thessalians from the main list), and not to the generic allly generals in the main lists or the troops under their command. None of the sublists is a stand alone allied contingent; each just specifies how troops from the main list can be used when playing that "nationality". Any army can use not only the CinC (modified if necessary by a sub-list) but also the generic ally generals listed in the main list (with one exception of the Phokians in List 17, for which all such generals must be downgraded to sub). Note that, for those sub-lists that include special treatment for a "national" general (e.g., Spartan or Theban in List 3), only such a "national" general (be it CinC of sub) can command troops from that national sub-list. For a full explanation of this issue, go to www.fourhorsemenenterprises.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=16862.
ROMAN INFANTRY RULES: The "fulcum" rules as outlined in Imperial Warrior apply to the following troops:
List 6, Thracian Late Period, Roman Legionaries (NOT Imitation Legionaries)
List 28, Ptolemaic Late Period, Garrison Roman Legionaries (NOT Imitation Legionaries)
List 36, Numidian Roman Civil Wars/Juba I-II, Roman Legionaries (NOT Imitation Legionaries)
Page 3, Roman Infantry Rules, Line 2. Add: "36, " after "33" and before "Roman Deserters"
Page 3, Roman Infantry Rules, Circulating Combatants, Delete the entire "Circulating Combatants" section and replace with: CIRCULATING COMBATANTS: Advanced military techniques developed in Rome included the regular practice of circulating ranks and units to the front in hand-to-hand combat. To reflect these practices, as an exception to WARRIOR rules sections indicated below, such troops NOT shaken, broken, broken-through, disembarking, contacted to the flank by an enemy body or in difficult terrain or in "fulcum" may:
1) Exchange one or more ranks during the Approach phase as a single formation change, instead of taking the entire move
2) Replace an element in contact with opponents with an element directly to its rear during the Approach or Counter/Retirment phase (as well as when making a Recoil move, 6.51), without dicing or being prompted, but only during the second bound of a continuing H-T-H combat. Such a replacing element counts as steady in the following H-T-H combat phase, even if its body is not otherwise considered steady; thereafter, it counts as having the cohesion of the worst affected element(s) in the body. Such a replacing element also counts as in first contact (9.3), even though its body is by definition already in contact; it does not count as charging or counter-charging (9.42).
3) Interpenetrate another body of such legionaries (6.52) not in "fulcum" to replace it in combat (6.163 and 6.523). Legionaries interpenetrating other legionaries in this way to replace them in combat are not disordered by virtue of the third and fourth bullets in 6.521, but are subject to all other causes of disorder specified in that section.
MACEDONIAN COMPANION CAVALRY RULES: Item 4, insert ",either alone or in combination with other Macedonian HC covered by this rule,"
Page 4, GENERAL COMMENTS, 1st paragraph, Add new sentence at end: "The 'rounding concept' applies only to upgrades that are seperately stated to be available to a proportion of troops".
Page 4, GENERAL COMMENTS, 2nd paragraph, next to last sentence: Insert "other" before "numerical" and insert "as they pertain to fractional upgrades" after "limits".
1 |
Italian Hill Tribes |
|
2 |
Skythian |
720 BC 50 BC |
3 |
Early
Hoplite Greek |
|
4 |
Estruscan |
|
5 |
Illyrian |
|
6 |
Thracian |
|
7 |
Lydian |
|
8 |
Saite
Egyptian |
|
9 |
Campanian,
et. al. |
|
10 |
Lowland Italian |
|
11 |
Early
Macedonian |
|
12 |
Etrusco-Roman/Tullian |
|
13 |
Early
Achaemenid Persian |
|
14 |
Pre-Mauryan Indian |
|
15 |
Early Carthaginian |
|
16 |
Syracusan |
|
17 |
Late
Hoplite Greek |
|
18 |
Late
Achaemenid Persian |
|
19 |
Bithynian |
|
20 |
Camillan
Roman |
|
21 |
Gallic |
|
22 |
Alexandrian Macedonian |
|
23 |
Alexandrian
Imperial |
|
24 |
Asiatic Early Successor |
|
25 |
Lysimachid |
|
26 |
Macedonian Early Successor |
|
27 |
Seleucid |
|
28 |
Ptolemaic |
|
29 |
Samnite |
|
30 |
Pyrrhic |
|
31 |
Pergamene |
282 BC 129 BC |
32 |
Galatian |
|
33 |
Polybian
Roman |
|
34 |
Later
Carthaginian |
|
35 |
Bactrian
Greek |
|
36 |
Numidian |
218 BC 25 AD |
37 |
Hellenistic
Greek |
|
38 |
Later
Macedonian |
|
39 |
Spanish |
|
40 |
Maccabean
Jewish |
166 BC 104 BC |