Table feel
The game has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth. Players need to pay attention to each other's actions frequently. However, there is less emphasis on cooperation.
Players
2
Time
?-?
Age
12+
Weight
4.11
Rating
7.17
Teaching signal
High replayability
Highly interactive
Scales well
Deep strategy
More strategic control
The game has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth. Players need to pay attention to each other's actions frequently. However, there is less emphasis on cooperation.
The game offers a high level of variability with different experiences each time it is played. The presence of expansions adds new content and gameplay elements. There is deep strategic depth and room for players to improve their strategy over time. The game scales well with different numbers of players without compromising its appeal or balance. While it may take some time to learn, it offers a rewarding and engaging experience.
The final luck score for Wellington's Victory: Battle of Waterloo Game - June 18th, 1815 is 7, indicating a moderate influence of luck. Random elements have a notable but not exclusive impact on the game outcome. Players have substantial ability to mitigate randomness through strategic decisions and planning. The game outcome is primarily determined by player strategy and decisions, with luck playing a minor role.
[from the back of the flatpack edition] Wellington's Victory : The Battle of Waterloo - Four-color 68” x 44” contour map in four sections - Innovative Fire and Shock Combat mechanics - Line, Column, Square, Skirmish and Cavalry formations - Hougomont, La Haye Sainte and Plancenoit Scenarios - 40 Game-Turn Grand Battle Scenario Wellington's Victory is a grand tactical simulation of the Battle of Waterloo which occurred on June 18, 1815, at a minor crossroads south of Brussels, Belgium. The battle marked the first and only encounter of history's two most renowned generals, Sir Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, and Napoleon Bonaparte, Emperor of France. A brutal day-long French assault against the British held ridge brought Wellington's army to the brink of defeat. By later afternoon, however, the arrival of Wellington's allies tipped the odds decisively against the French; Napoleon chose to stake his empire on the outcome of a final attack by his most trusted troops – the Imperial Guard. Wellington's Victory is played on an innovative game map composed of four 34” x 22” map sections on which significant differences in ground contours are differentiated by color. There are five distinct contour levels depicted on the map as well as an extremely accurate survey of all battle field terrain features including Hougomont, La Haye Sainte, and almost every other farm and dwelling, woods and orchards, streams and ponds, and raised and sunken roads. Each of more than 500 French, Prussian and Anglo-Dutch combat and command units are fully identified by battalion, regiment, brigade, division and corps designations as well as numerical game values which differentiate each unit's strength, effectiveness, and mobility. The game utilizes a fifteen minute Game-Turn. Each mapsheet hex represents a distance of 100 yards. Each Strength Point represents 100 infantry or cavalry troops or one gun or howitzer within an artillery battery. Each Game-Turn employs a unique, asymmetrical, sequence of play in which Players alternately participate in a series of Phases covering activities which include the execution of chain of command mechanics (such as activating and committing reserve formations and initiating cavalry charges), rallying disordered and routed units, executing facing and formation changes (including a repertoire of infantry formations such as column, line, square and open order or skirmish formation), regular and grand tactical movement, and finally executing artillery and small arms fire as well as infantry and cavalry shock command. The Fire and Shock Combat mechanics which decide the battle were also designed to yield realistic results without sacrificing playability. Fire resolution requires no arithmetic calculation since each unit fires separately. The Relative Firepower Table used to resolve Fire Combat is a new type of CRT which directly interrelates the strength, formation and quality of the firing unit with the formation and terrain cover employed by the defending unit. The Shock Combat Table is also unique in that it employs an “odds” comparison to account for Troop strength differences between the attacker and defender and a “differential” comparison to account for any qualitative difference between the opposing forces. Losses, which are recorded directly on the map by placing a Strength marker under the unit suffering casualties, may result from either Fire or Shock combat. In general, however, Shock Combat is depicted as a “morale showdown” more useful for gaining ground than inflicting casualties. Morale, which Napoleon deemed to be three times as important as numerical strength on the battlefield, is accurately accounted for in the Effectiveness Rating assigned to every infantry battalion, cavalry regiment and artillery battery crew. Buyer's Guide for WELLINGTON'S VICTORY The following ratings are based on at least 100 player-replies to surveys conducted through Strategy & Tactics Magazine. Ratings are on a 1 (worst) to 9 (best) scale. Average ratings (for over 60 historical games in print) are: Acceptability-6.00, Complexity-5.00. Acceptability Rating: New Game Complexity Rating: (est.) 7.8 Avg. Playing Time [hrs.] (est.) 6.0 “Acceptability” depends a lot on which historical period interests you the most. “Complexity” ratings for other games are, for example, Monopoly – 2.34; Afrika Korps – 3.48; Diplomacy – 4.51; France, 1940 – 5.78; PanzerBlitz – 7.01. Most games average 2-3 hours playing time.
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