Introduction
Many times over the life of this blog, I have run a Christmas-themed game of Hordes of the Things. All of these can be found using this link: https://colgar6.blogspot.com/search/label/Santa .
The annual holiday game didn't happen last year (global pandemic, don't ya know!), but we're back in 2021 with a new battle. This time, Santa's home is under threat from tribes of goblins and their associated wolves & trolls. He has allied with a barbarian tribe (probably through promises of extreme feasting and loot, I imagine!) to defend against this threat.
The Forces
Each of the 4 bands was an independent 24AP army for Hordes of the Things. The forces of destruction (two goblin armies) were controlled by my friend Steve, whilst the bringers of light and happiness were led by myself and my son. I took the barbarians, whilst my son took Santa. He (my son, not Santa!) had just received a vaccine booster shot the day before and hadn't slept well overnight. This might go part way towards explaining some of the outcomes in the game!
Santa's Army
Santa's force is a mixture of elves, toy soldiers, fierce ice bears and hordes of snowmen. It is described in more detail here: http://colgar6.blogspot.com/2013/12/hott-santas-army.html .
The Barbarians
My barbarians have a lot of foot warband elements (as might be expected), some archers, some hard-charging panther-mounted knights and a general mounted on a woolly rhino.
The Goblin Raiders
Facing the barbarians we had a goblin force consisting of 2 trolls, hordes of goblins and a large number of wolf riders. Also, the woods are full of (unridden) wolves.
[Side note: this force looks like more than 24AP to me. Oh, well - mistakes may have been made, but if so then it didn't affect the end result, as you will see].
The Goblin Hooligans
The goblin force facing Santa also had two trolls. It was lead by some greater goblin warbands and had huge numbers of lesser goblins. Even when deployed, these vandals pushed over the signpost which led to the North Pole, thus earning the title "the hooligans".
The Battle
Santa's snowmen had a minor moment of success when they flanked, outnumbered and swarmed a troll, but this didn't make up for the losses they were taking. |
Conclusion
Well, that was an abrupt ending!
- The goblins timed their run for the cottage perfectly. Santa simply couldn't catch all of them on his own and they breezed through the second echelon stuff that was left to guard the objective.
- Santa sacrificed some of his troops early in charging forwards; the shooters might have been better employed waiting for the enemy to come to them instead.
- The ice bears were bogged down fighting with vast hordes of goblins. Even though they were generally winning each round of combat the bears had a long way to go before they could push the little monsters off the table.
- The barbarians were mesmerised by the wood full of wolves; fearful of a flank attack if they tried to skirt around it and not confident of their chances if they attacked the forest head on.
- When the barbarians eventually tried to redeploy, it was too complicated and too late. All they did was sacrifice their mounted troops for no real gain.
So, a well-deserved victory to the goblin hooligans. Let's hope that isn't an omen for Christmas 2021!
Great !
ReplyDeletean another Christmas battle to read.
Hope you enjoy it!
DeleteI think of them less as Barbarians and more as a vibrant cultured permafrost hunter confederation of tribes.
ReplyDeleteA surprising with for the goblins that required two or three successive lucky dice.
The little green guys usually have a tough time, so celebrations may go on into the new year.
Well, the barbarians were useless - whatever you call them :-) ! And the goblins made the most of a hole in Santa's defenses when the opportunity was presented to them.
Delete