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				|  | Warrior Ancient and Medieval Rules A Four Horsemen Enterprises Rules Set
 
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		| Mark Stone Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 2102
 Location: Buckley, WA
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 1:43 am    Post subject: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
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				| At least three of the Four Horsemen have a long-standing, and sometimes
 professional interest in the military history of the Orient. It's not
 surprising, then, that Oriental Warrior represents more of a "labor of love"
 than any of the army list books so far. The "notes" sections with each list
 make a fine historical document in their own right, and FHE has clearly gone
 further and been more daring with list rules here than in any other book in an
 attempt to get the feel and tactics of the period right.
 
 From a historical point of view, I have my reservations about some of this. I
 think allowing Mongol MC, HC, and EHC to dismount element for element as MI and
 HI respectively may be well intentioned, but is likely to lead to lots of
 Mongols fighting dismounted in a rather unhistorical manner. And I still don't
 think we've got the behavior of the steppe peoples light cavalryman right,
 though I'll let Christian speak to that. He's both more of an authority on the
 matter and more eloquent than I am.
 
 Overall, though, my historical reservations are minor. This isn't my period of
 history, and despite misgivings on one or two points, I'm just not prepared to
 challenge people arguably more expert than I am.
 
 I will comment on playability in the competition/tournament setting, which is
 something I care a great deal about and know more about.
 
 I've now skimmed through every list at least once, and read several in great
 detail. Overall, I think we can expect to see Oriental Warrior armies in
 abundance in tournaments for the next couple of years, and I expect we'll see
 many of them as consistent top finishers. These are very, very competitive
 lists compared to their predecessors. I'm not saying that's a good thing or a
 bad thing, but it is a real thing.
 
 Off the top of my head, and this is highly subjective and will vary much with
 individual playing style, I'd say the best tournament lists in the book are:
 - Han Chinese
 - Tang Chinese
 - Burmese
 - Mongol
 - Timurid
 
 The only major army to get noticably worse is one that's been a tournament
 favorite for several years now: Sultanate of Delhi.
 
 Here's a quick description of what I see as the salient points about some of
 these lists:
 
 Sultanate of Delhi: Very similar to the way the list used to be, except that you
 get fewer light infantry to put on the base with elephants, and said light
 infantry can only be Irr C rather than Irr B. If you didn't play light infantry
 on the base, you aren't going to care. If you did, you probably won't want to
 play this army any more.
 
 Han Chinese: A complex and very flexible list. Now has some of the best chariots
 in the game (4 horse heavy, crew of 1 w/2HCT, 1 w/B, and javelinmen detachments
 that can fight from behind). Has a lot of missile fire, a mix of close and
 loose order foot, and 2HCT foot guys that now fighting in a rank and a half will
 do some real damage. There's irr foot to keep you honest as well, and a mix of
 decent cavalry besides the chariots. The only downside that I see is that this
 gets to be an expensive army very quickly (extra point for 2HCT, uparmoring to
 HI or LHI, morale upgrades to B or A...). As a consequence, it may not hold
 much frontage if you aren't careful.
 
 Tang Chinese: Very similar to the Han Chinese, but with more and better cavalry
 instead of chariots. Anyone who has had to face Eric Turner's Yuan Mongol will
 recognize a similar challenge here, the main difference being better morale for
 the foot on the Tang list.
 
 Burmese: Very similar to the old Burmese list, but now with some decent regular
 loose order foot thrown into the mix. This should turn an already competitive
 list into a very good one.
 
 Mongol: This list gets several list rules that other Mongol lists don't get
 (better flank marches, potentially better terrain picks if you have enough
 scouting). It isn't as versatile in terms of troop types as other Mongols, since
 it lacks the allied or subject troops that show up on some of the other Mongol
 lists, but the lists rules here have the potential to really open up the field
 of battle in ways that the army is really optimized to take advantage of.
 Traditionally the Mongol weakness in tournament play has been fighting elephant
 armies. That is now _completely_ reversed as the Mongols can simply dismount and
 present the elephants with HI/MI LTS,B,Sh or Pa. Not a good prospect for the
 elephant player.
 
 Timurid: This list is going to play very similarly to the Imperial Warrior
 Sassanid Persian list: you get an abundance of decent skirmishers, both LI and
 LC, you get SHC with L,B,Sh who can be backed by EHC, and you get 4 elephants.
 The negative, compared to Sassanids, is that your cavalry can't be elephant
 proof -- and that's a pretty big negative. But the advantages are many: you get
 regular loose order foot armed with 1HCW,B,Sh, which now gives you the rough
 terrain troops the Sassanids are so sorely lacking. You get the dismount rule
 that enables you to turn your Mongol cav into dangerous LTS foot. You get the
 interpenetration rule, avoiding some of the tricky spacing problems you usually
 have to worry about with LC. You get cavalry who can counter any time,
 regardless of threat. Nor do you have any required troops that you'd really
 rather not be buying. This gets my vote for the current "cadillac" of army
 lists across all books published so far.
 
 
 -Mark Stone
 
 
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		| Mark Mallard Centurion
 
  
 
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 868
 Location: Whitehaven, England
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 1:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
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				| In a message dated 02/02/2005 15:53:12 GMT Standard Time,
 browntj007@... writes:
 
 I'd have  to say I agree completely with Mark's accessment. Taking it
 further, I'd  caution the FHE against the Games Workshop mentality -
 and Jon should know  this very well - that each succeeding army list
 book should outdo it's  predecessor - because it drives sales and
 interest. I do hope that the  lists reflect an honest and realistic
 attempt to get the history right and  not the GW approach that all
 lists should be competitive and playable.  Let's assume the better
 since I refuse to accept the other. Then... I have  to ask - surely
 the Mongols weren't the only HC with L,B cav to  effectively dismount?
 Yet - the same dismount rules do not apply. Surely  other armies used
 incendaries in open battles other than "Oriental  Warrior" list
 armies? Yet - the exceptions...again. As far as being  masters of
 seige warfare - aren't other armies from previous time periods  - list
 books - equally as impressive? My point is - if it's not too  obvious -
 is that you've ,meaning the FHE, opened up a can of worms by
 introducing several 'new' concepts based on the idea to 'get it
 right'. You've said the FHE will re-examine the lists, and I hope
 sooner than later - I personally play  a great variety of armies from
 all eras so I'm not pulling for any one particular army- I just get a
 very bad feeling when I see special rules applying to one army / area
 when they should be applying to others. I applaud the effort, but
 there's lots of work still. My suggestion would be when you decide to
 introduce a new special rule that you examine whether or not it
 applies to other book lists as well and modify them immediately upon
 introduction. Will this take a lot more time? Yes, but I think it's
 only fair given the risk of unbalancing gameplay towards one
 particular army/area/era.
 
 Tim Brown
 
 
 
 
 ** no criticisms meant but as i have stated before i feel ALL list rules
 should have a points cost. This argument would then be largely irrelevant or
 atleast less serious.
 
 mark mallard
 
 
 [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
 
 
 _________________
 Chess, WoW.
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		| joncleaves Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 29 Mar 2006
 Posts: 16447
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 5:42 pm    Post subject: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
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				| <<It's not
 surprising, then, that Oriental Warrior represents more of a "labor of love"
 than any of the army list books so far.>>
 
 I, at least, would have to disagree.  Back in 1999-2000 we set out a plan for
 the list books that took the practical approach that we wanted to do them in
 increasing order of difficulty in the writing - meaning the most important ones
 to 'get right' would be done last and the ones that were 'easiest' to write
 would be done first.  This somewhat correlates to the amount of material
 available for each era - least to most in terms of the order in which these were
 written, generally speaking.  We knew up front that getting romans, mongols,
 hoplites and macedonians 'right' would be our greatest challenges and we sought
 to give ourselves the most time possible to 'solve' each 'problem'.  Personally,
 I actually know more about the romans and the feudal/medieval armies than I do
 most of the oriental warrior lists...
 
 You wanna talk pure labor of love?  See New World Warrior...lol
 
 << The "notes" sections with each list
 make a fine historical document in their own right, and FHE has clearly gone
 further and been more daring with list rules here than in any other book in an
 attempt to get the feel and tactics of the period right.>>
 
 Thanks.  We think so.
 
 <<From a historical point of view, I have my reservations about some of this. I
 think allowing Mongol MC, HC, and EHC to dismount element for element as MI and
 HI respectively may be well intentioned, but is likely to lead to lots of
 Mongols fighting dismounted in a rather unhistorical manner. >>
 
 The mongols dismounted all over southeast asia.  They were also masters of siege
 warfare.  We are certainly not the first or only rules set that permits mongols
 to dismount effectively.
 
 << Overall, I think we can expect to see Oriental Warrior armies in
 abundance in tournaments for the next couple of years, and I expect we'll see
 many of them as consistent top finishers.>>
 
 This is no different than pre-Oriental.  Two of the top four armies in the last
 NICT were pre-Oriental Warrior oriental lists.  The NICT has been won by
 oriental lists on many occasions, including the last two.  I would bet 2/3-3/4
 of the NICT and doubles competitors over the last three years come from either
 Feudal or Oriental.  I think as player's understanding of the roman list rules
 improves, they will begin making a comeback.  I also believe there will be a
 resurgence of Classical because I believe those lists have been suffering from a
 lack of 'state of the art'.
 
 << Off the top of my head, and this is highly subjective and will vary much with
 individual playing style, I'd say the best tournament lists in the book are:
 - Han Chinese
 - Tang Chinese
 - Burmese
 - Mongol
 - Timurid>>
 
 The han and burmese are perennial competitors, and I think rightly so.  I
 personally think the society Tang list did not reflect their capabilities.
 Obviously I also personally believe no rules set has properly captured the
 mongols - one of the most effective militaries in history.  No question it was
 one of our missions to get them as right as possible.
 
 <<The only major army to get noticably worse is one that's been a tournament
 favorite for several years now: Sultanate of Delhi.>>
 
 I know I would disagree.  I do believe the society Dehli list did some things
 that just aren't supportable (IMO), but I do not agree that they do not remain
 effective.
 
 <<Han Chinese: A complex and very flexible list. Now has some of the best
 chariots
 in the game (4 horse heavy, crew of 1 w/2HCT, 1 w/B, and javelinmen detachments
 that can fight from behind). Has a lot of missile fire, a mix of close and
 loose order foot, and 2HCT foot guys that now fighting in a rank and a half will
 do some real damage. There's irr foot to keep you honest as well, and a mix of
 decent cavalry besides the chariots. The only downside that I see is that this
 gets to be an expensive army very quickly (extra point for 2HCT, uparmoring to
 HI or LHI, morale upgrades to B or A...). As a consequence, it may not hold
 much frontage if you aren't careful.>>
 
 Not a lot different than before.  From a competition standpoint, by trying to
 reflect the correct effectiveness of the Han chariot vis-a-vis its historical
 opponents we may have made it slightly more effective in an open environment -
 but I do not think enough so that a tourney player will be rushing to build this
 army around its HCh. Note that JLS detachments behind were a part of both the
 society Qin and Han lists, yet not exactly rolling over the competition - mostly
 I think because of the extreme cost per frontage of such a unit and its
 inability to enter terrain *at all* and its vulnerability to El and K.  Other
 then that, thought, they are clearly super-troops...lol. 2HCT has been changed
 from 7th to more accurately reflect its use, but now that you can no longer take
 JLS behind the 2HCT in the Han list (a 'downgrade' from the society version) you
 are indeed paying for that capability without the efficiency that a brigans- or
 marine-type unit would give you.  The cav sucks almost as bad, but is now at
 least historically correct.  You have a little more Irr A than you used to, but
 you're already an expensive army.
 The biggest change was to rid them of the ridiculous minimum to have more C/D
 than A/B foot - a choke hold that no other army in 7th suffered and for which we
 could find no historical basis.  That does indeed theoretically improve them
 over their predecessor, but it does not change Mark's very dead on assessment
 that the good stuff is burgundian-like in its expense.  There are good things in
 there, but you sure as heck cannot have them all.  I think the best thing about
 this list is that it can be taken in so many different ways, which is reflective
 of the heterogeneous ways they appeared on the battlefield at different points
 in their history under different leaders.
 
 <<Tang Chinese: Very similar to the Han Chinese, but with more and better
 cavalry
 instead of chariots. Anyone who has had to face Eric Turner's Yuan Mongol will
 recognize a similar challenge here, the main difference being better morale for
 the foot on the Tang list.>>
 
 I believe Yuan of the past were played with the misunderstanding that you could
 shoot using pavise completely shielded and behind cover along with the old
 mistake that you could put two bolt shooter models on one base and somehow get
 to fire double crew.  I think you will find both the Tang and Yuan effective but
 reasonable.
 
 <<Burmese: Very similar to the old Burmese list, but now with some decent
 regular
 loose order foot thrown into the mix. This should turn an already competitive
 list into a very good one.>>
 
 I would look more closely.  This list IMO is not as good as the H+C list.  But
 then again, I never met an H+C list I agreed with....lol  You get things now
 that you used to not get, but you also cannot do some of the things you used to
 be able to do.  I, for one, do not believe the corrections in this list actually
 help it from a competition standpoint when compared to the old list.  I was
 actually surprised not to get a howl of discontent from the known burmese
 players...we'll have to see.
 
 <<Mongol: This list gets several list rules that other Mongol lists don't get
 (better flank marches, potentially better terrain picks if you have enough
 scouting). It isn't as versatile in terms of troop types as other Mongols, since
 it lacks the allied or subject troops that show up on some of the other Mongol
 lists, but the lists rules here have the potential to really open up the field
 of battle in ways that the army is really optimized to take advantage of.
 Traditionally the Mongol weakness in tournament play has been fighting elephant
 armies. That is now _completely_ reversed as the Mongols can simply dismount and
 present the elephants with HI/MI LTS,B,Sh or Pa. Not a good prospect for the
 elephant player.>>
 
 Having playtested this more than any other of our 'changes' (including the roman
 list rules) I can tell you there is a big difference between the reaction to
 scanning this list and actually making it work on the table.  I am extremely
 pleased with how it turned out and am sure we will see more mongols in opens
 than we have (umm...that would be zero...).  I do not think it is as easy as it
 might appear....
 
 <<Timurid: This list is going to play very similarly to the Imperial Warrior
 Sassanid Persian list: This gets my vote for the current "cadillac" of army
 lists across all books published so far.>>
 
 They didn't conquer India with 100E of Irr D LMI JLS...lol  Just as the
 Sassanids did not halt Rome simply with desert.
 
 I remain surprised that Early Indians are not looked at harder....
 
 J
 
 
 _________________
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		| Tim Brown Legionary
 
  
 
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 326
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 6:48 pm    Post subject: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| I'd have to say I agree completely with Mark's accessment. Taking it
 further, I'd caution the FHE against the Games Workshop mentality -
 and Jon should know this very well - that each succeeding army list
 book should outdo it's predecessor - because it drives sales and
 interest. I do hope that the lists reflect an honest and realistic
 attempt to get the history right and not the GW approach that all
 lists should be competitive and playable. Let's assume the better
 since I refuse to accept the other. Then... I have to ask - surely
 the Mongols weren't the only HC with L,B cav to effectively dismount?
 Yet - the same dismount rules do not apply. Surely other armies used
 incendaries in open battles other than "Oriental Warrior" list
 armies? Yet - the exceptions...again. As far as being masters of
 seige warfare - aren't other armies from previous time periods - list
 books - equally as impressive? My point is - if it's not too obvious -
 is that you've ,meaning the FHE, opened up a can of worms by
 introducing several 'new' concepts based on the idea to 'get it
 right'. You've said the FHE will re-examine the lists, and I hope
 sooner than later - I personally play  a great variety of armies from
 all eras so I'm not pulling for any one particular army- I just get a
 very bad feeling when I see special rules applying to one army / area
 when they should be applying to others. I applaud the effort, but
 there's lots of work still. My suggestion would be when you decide to
 introduce a new special rule that you examine whether or not it
 applies to other book lists as well and modify them immediately upon
 introduction. Will this take a lot more time? Yes, but I think it's
 only fair given the risk of unbalancing gameplay towards one
 particular army/area/era.
 
 Tim Brown
 
 
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		| joncleaves Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 29 Mar 2006
 Posts: 16447
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 7:26 pm    Post subject: Re: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| << I'd caution the FHE against the Games Workshop mentality -
 and Jon should know this very well - that each succeeding army list
 book should outdo it's predecessor>>
 
 Yes, I am aware of the 'codex effect', and this is precisely what I was trying
 to disabuse Mark of....we are not trying to make every list book better.
 Instead what I think you are seeing is the effect of our choice to do the books
 in the order we did them - a deliberate choice.  We did in fact 'save the best
 for last' for a number of reasons.  But we certainly are not deliberately trying
 to make lists more competitive either sequentially as books come out or in the
 face of a non-competitive historical record.  We *are* trying, and very hard, to
 get militaries that should be performing a certain way and did not under 7th to
 do so.  Those militaries increase on a per-book basis as we publish them BECAUSE
 OF the order we chose to publish list books.
 Our chosen method of trying to get these armies to perform historically - list
 rules - *also* has the benefit of adding color and excitement to the lists,
 again a deliberate choice.
 
 << I do hope that the lists reflect an honest and realistic
 attempt to get the history right and not the GW approach that all
 lists should be competitive and playable.>>
 
 Not a hope - a fact.
 
 << Let's assume the better
 since I refuse to accept the other. Then... I have to ask - surely
 the Mongols weren't the only HC with L,B cav to effectively dismount? >>
 
 Actually, yes, from an army-wide and 'doctrinal' standpoint.  Remember, any HC
 can dismount.  But almost all did not have the extra riders, horses and or
 doctrine to do so without losing combat power.
 
 << Surely other armies used
 incendaries in open battles other than "Oriental Warrior" list
 armies?>>
 
 Indeed they did.  And they can.  But mostly they were used in siege warfare by
 the 'westerners' and often simply as a matter of course by 'easterners'.
 Culture matters...
 
 <<My point is - if it's not too obvious -
 is that you've ,meaning the FHE, opened up a can of worms by
 introducing several 'new' concepts based on the idea to 'get it
 right'. >>
 
 New?  That the mongols terrified millions?  That romans were the best swordsmen
 of their day?  That the chinese had armories with hundreds of thousands of
 firelances in them?  Surely these are not new concepts....
 
 <<You've said the FHE will re-examine the lists,>>
 
 I said we will be looking at some list minima that we may have gotten wrong.  I
 also know we might look at some minor things for biblical warrior.  I am not
 aware anyone said anything about a wholesale revision of lists.  Certainly I am
 not into that.
 
 <<and I hope
 sooner than later - I personally play  a great variety of armies from
 all eras so I'm not pulling for any one particular army- I just get a
 very bad feeling when I see special rules applying to one army / area
 when they should be applying to others.>>
 
 I am not aware of any major case where a special rule applies to x and x doesn't
 have it.
 
 << I applaud the effort, but
 there's lots of work still. My suggestion would be when you decide to
 introduce a new special rule that you examine whether or not it
 applies to other book lists as well and modify them immediately upon
 introduction.>>
 
 Again, I guess I'd consider that if I knew such a case existed.
 
 The great mass of troops in ancient and medieval times were what we'd call Irr
 LMI JLS, some with Sh.  Militaries were designed to either defeat that or to
 defeat what their neighbor came up with to defeat that.
 
 Also, list rules are designed to cause an army to perform the way it did
 *against its historical opponents*.  If that has an additional good effect in
 open competition - fine.  But that is not the point.  Not at all.
 
 If someone's favorite list did nothing in history but beat up on saxon women and
 small dogs, then they are simply not going to be tough in an open format.  I
 certainly am sorry this is true, but there is not much to be done about it.
 
 Most importantly, this is NOT WRG 7.7.  We are sons of that legacy, but
 certainly not beholden to the way 7.6 list researchers did their work.
 Especially with the H+C lists....
 
 J
 
 
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		| Mark Stone Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 2102
 Location: Buckley, WA
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 7:30 pm    Post subject: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| --- On February 2 Mark Mallard said: ---
 
 >
 > no criticisms meant but as i have stated before i feel ALL list rules
 > should have a points cost. This argument would then be largely irrelevant or
 > atleast less serious.
 >
 
 I wouldn't make this a blanket policy, but I tend to agree here.
 
 Jon has said repeatedly that points cost is not just a function of utility in
 the game system, but also a reflection of availability/complexity of the
 technology for the time, as well as training involved in producing a particular
 capability. Thus while a shield might be a more useful thing to give an MI
 figure than armor that makes him HI, armor was a more difficult technology to
 produce and hence costs more (2 points instead of 1). Jon has also said that
 the main purpose of the point system is not to balance open competition gaming,
 but rather to put costs in historical perspective for the purposes of scenario
 gaming and other historical matchups.
 
 That's fine, and by and large I agree with Jon's philosophy here. But that same
 philosophy does suggest that all other things being equal, when two troop types
 differ only by one having a capability, as a result of training and/or
 technology, that the other lacks, then they should also differ in point cost.
 
 This doesn't play out the same with all list rules. I can't see why Swiss should
 cost more per figure than other pike-armed troops just because they are loose
 order. They are loose order guys with a weapon, the same as any other loose
 order troops. Nor is there anything to suggest that the Swiss went to great
 lengths in terms of technology development or training to achieve what they
 did. They simply did what seemed natural to them given the environs they lived
 in and the foes they faced.
 
 But Romans and Mongols seem to me to be rather a different case. If I have two
 different nationalities of Reg C HI HTW,Sh, and one benefits from the Roman
 interpenetration rules, fulcrum, etc. and the other does not, I cannot for the
 life of me see why the point cost for the two should be the same. They don't
 have the same capabilities. One went through training the other didn't. And one
 benefited from difficult to replicate technology that the other lacked. Why
 then, are they pointed the same?
 
 Likewise with Tim's and Mark's concern about Mongols. If I have two different
 nationalities of Reg B HC L,B,Sh, and one benefits from being able to dismount
 1 for 1, counter any time it wants, and be interpenetrated by its own LC, and
 the other does not have these benefits, why in the world would they cost the
 same?
 
 
 -Mark Stone
 
 
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		| Mark Stone Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 2102
 Location: Buckley, WA
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 7:35 pm    Post subject: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| --- On February 2 Jon Cleaves said: ---
 
 >
 > I would look more closely. This list IMO is not as good as the H+C list. But
 > then again, I never met an H+C list I agreed with.
 >
 
 Well, I never even factor the H+C lists into consideration when making
 comparisons. I just don't take them seriously, and would never resort to
 playing one. A man's got to have some standards.
 
 
 -Mark Stone
 
 
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		| Recruit
 
  
 
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 72
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 7:46 pm    Post subject: Re: Re: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| Sorry but, what is H+C??
 Emilio.
 
 
 Well, I never even factor the H+C lists into consideration when making
 comparisons.>>
 
 We have no choice but to take them into consideration - if for nothing else than
 we have players playing them and have to make sure we leave no stone unturned.
 Pun intended..
 
 << I just don't take them seriously, and would never resort to
 playing one. A man's got to have some standards.>>
 
 Something we agree upon completely.
 
 Note that the last two NICTs were won using H+Cs..... ;)
 
 But *that* little problem is about to be solved forever...
 
 J
 
 
 
 
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		| joncleaves Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 29 Mar 2006
 Posts: 16447
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 7:48 pm    Post subject: Re: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| Well, I never even factor the H+C lists into consideration when making
 comparisons.>>
 
 We have no choice but to take them into consideration - if for nothing else than
 we have players playing them and have to make sure we leave no stone unturned.
 Pun intended..
 
 << I just don't take them seriously, and would never resort to
 playing one. A man's got to have some standards.>>
 
 Something we agree upon completely.
 
 Note that the last two NICTs were won using H+Cs.....  ;)
 
 But *that* little problem is about to be solved forever...
 
 J
 
 
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		| Tim Brown Legionary
 
  
 
 Joined: 12 Apr 2006
 Posts: 326
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 9:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| --- In WarriorRules@yahoogroups.com, JonCleaves@a... wrote:
 >I have to ask - surely
 > the Mongols weren't the only HC with L,B cav to effectively
 dismount? >>
 >
 > Actually, yes, from an army-wide and 'doctrinal' standpoint.
 Remember, any HC can dismount.  But almost all did not have the extra
 riders, horses and or doctrine to do so without losing combat power.
 
 --------->"Almost all" means there are some that did, therefore re-
 examining which lists did would be helpful. I don't want to argue who
 in particular. That's not my point. And not my area of expertise. But
 I have read several accounts of Arabs against crusaders dismounting
 as a tactic, and I think the Byzantines did as well, but I'm not
 sure. Perhaps you could run these special ability rules by the group
 to determine who else might they apply to before assigning them to
 one particular army? I suspect there are several people with very
 specialised knowledge.
 
 >
 > << Surely other armies used
 > incendaries in open battles other than "Oriental Warrior" list
 > armies?>>
 >
 > Indeed they did.  And they can.  But mostly they were used in siege
 warfare by the 'westerners' and often simply as a matter of course
 by 'easterners'.  Culture matters...
 
 ----------->Perhaps. But you've severely restricted just recently who
 can use for example the flaming arrows in what situations. Again,
 each list should be examined if an exception exists.
 
 
 > <<My point is - if it's not too obvious -
 > is that you've ,meaning the FHE, opened up a can of worms by
 > introducing several 'new' concepts based on the idea to 'get it
 > right'. >>
 >
 > New?  That the mongols terrified millions?  That romans were the
 best swordsmen of their day?  That the chinese had armories with
 hundreds of thousands of firelances in them?  Surely these are not
 new concepts....
 
 ---------> As did the Huns, Vikings, etc, etc. Where are the
 terrifying special rules for those? The concept isn't new - that they
 now have a gaming effect IS.
 
 > <<You've said the FHE will re-examine the lists,>>
 >
 > I said we will be looking at some list minima that we may have
 gotten wrong.  I also know we might look at some minor things for
 biblical warrior.  I am not aware anyone said anything about a
 wholesale revision of lists.  Certainly I am not into that.
 
 --------> I hope not , either. Just when you decide Army A suddenly
 has this or that special ability you ought to examine whether other
 armies had a similiar ability. Or other abilities to this or that
 army.
 
 
 > I am not aware of any major case where a special rule applies to x
 and x doesn't have it.
 
 --------> I'll leave it up to the experts, then, to provide you with
 data.
 
 
 
 > Again, I guess I'd consider that if I knew such a case existed.
 
 ---------> At least you're willing to listen to reason! *grin*
 
 > The great mass of troops in ancient and medieval times were what
 we'd call Irr LMI JLS, some with Sh.  Militaries were designed to
 either defeat that or to defeat what their neighbor came up with to
 defeat that.
 >
 > Also, list rules are designed to cause an army to perform the way
 it did *against its historical opponents*.  If that has an additional
 good effect in open competition - fine.  But that is not the point.
 Not at all.
 >
 
 ----------> OK...special list rules designed for against historical
 opponents should by that reason be left for the Theme competitions.
 Otherwise...
 
 > If someone's favorite list did nothing in history but beat up on
 saxon women and small dogs, then they are simply not going to be
 tough in an open format.  I certainly am sorry this is true, but
 there is not much to be done about it.
 
 -------> Good. If the army sucked historically, it should reflect
 that in open competition. If effect is what we're after, some armies
 then should be carrying IPW throughout...or have special rules that
 reflect their low stature.
 
 
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		| joncleaves Moderator
 
  
  
 Joined: 29 Mar 2006
 Posts: 16447
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Wed Feb 02, 2005 11:01 pm    Post subject: Re: Re: Oriental Warrior in competition |  |  
				| 
 |  
				| <<Perhaps you could run these special ability rules by the group
 to determine who else might they apply to before assigning them to
 one particular army? I suspect there are several people with very
 specialised knowledge.>>
 
 I would revel in that.  Anyone on the group is free to do that at any time.
 Greg's last mail to me offline about Byzantine cav was a wonderful piece that we
 will give every consideration to.  Same with Greek's recommended lists.  If
 someone thinks there is a troop type that ought to get the same list rule as
 Mongols, please do send it along.  Just include your homework...
 
 
 <<----------->Perhaps. But you've severely restricted just recently who
 can use for example the flaming arrows in what situations. >>
 
 Yes, a silliness I should have corrected on day one instead of waiting until
 recently.  That was a 7th rule without the least bit of historical justification
 - it just slipped through the cracks.
 
 
 <<---------> As did the Huns, Vikings,>>
 
 The Vikings terrified no standing military.  They terrified civilians... Their
 battlefield rep is a myth.  I'm sorry, I think they are cool, too.  But who did
 they beat, really?
 
 
 <<-------->  Just when you decide Army A suddenly
 has this or that special ability you ought to examine whether other
 armies had a similiar ability. Or other abilities to this or that
 army.>>
 
 It isn't sudden, Tim.  I have felt games have gotten Romans and Mongols and
 Hoplites and Phalangites wrong for years.  Some do better than others depending
 on the game system.
 
 Note that we did not make a sudden change to the Romans or Mongols.  There was
 no FHE list for Marians before Imperial Warrior, nor have we ever done a Mongol
 list before Oriental.  We were living with borrowed stuff during a period of
 transition.  Now that dark age is almost over....
 One of our major goals was to bury the mishmash of lists that supported 7th once
 and for all and to simultaneously create a set of coherent lists owned by one
 company with writers who give full access to their customers.  We have never,
 ever ONCE turned away a piece of historical support for a given rule or list.
 We have considered in full every single one sent.  We did not agree with them
 all, but none was ignored.
 
 I am not talking about posts here that say 'i hate the point system'.  I am
 talking about an argument backed by history that we might not be getting it
 right or as a proposal for something we have not yet written.  We have issued a
 call to our players for input on every list book but biblical (based on time
 constraints back in 2001) and even then, people known to us who know biblical
 lists were contacted.
 
 <<--------> I'll leave it up to the experts, then, to provide you with
 data.>>
 
 So, this is just a hunch we got something wrong somewhere..? lol  Come on, Tim,
 laugh with me...
 
 > Again, I guess I'd consider that if I knew such a case existed.
 
 ---------> At least you're willing to listen to reason! *grin*>>
 
 Sure, send away.  Right now the spirited discussion at FHE is about hoplites.
 And boy, aren't there some people out there who have sent us their
 opinions...lol  We are looking carefully at all of it.
 
 <<-------> Good. If the army sucked historically, it should reflect
 that in open competition. If effect is what we're after, some armies
 then should be carrying IPW throughout...or have special rules that
 reflect their low stature.>>
 
 I don't think the mobs with entirely IPW qualify as 'armies' needing 'lists'....
 BUT - when all the list books are published we will start doing some specialized
 lists (like hawaiians....).  If you have one, send it to us!
 
 J
 
 
 _________________
 Roll Up and Win!
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