Austerlitz and Le Feu Sacré
We had a wonderful day on Sunday, as our bicentenery celebrations took off in dramatic style- full refights of both Austerlitz and Trafalgar! We staged Austerlitz at 1:100 scale in 15mm, with 9 players and an Umpire, on a 10' by 6' table.

I had received the game plans from the two commanders, Nod and "Mother", in advance. The allies had gone for a fairly simple plan, that of a strong assault on the centre/centre right, whilst keeping the line as short as possible. The French, by contrast, adopted a "wait and see" approach, seeking to use their buckets of command PIPs to change orders once the allied plans were visible (and, with the number of Poor commanders on that side, pretty irreversible).
The first thing was the terrain- 10' by 6', a real thrill for me (sad) to see the Austerlitz battlefield in miniature.
I had plans to mess with the allied plan, should it be too complex. However, Nod had come up with a good simple plan, so I contented myself with extending Kienmayer further to the south, whilst tinkering with arrival times/positioning of the columns.
I had decided that we would be historical with the weather, so it was foggy. This made the first few moves interesting, as Spotting was next to impossible unless, like Kellerman, you get so close to someone (Bagration) who promptly bashes you on the head!
Anyway, the morning was pretty quiet, until Davout arrived. This, coupled with the fog clearing, showing heavy concentrations of allied troops in the centre, persuaded Napoleon that a right hook was in order. Soult advanced from his positions around Telnitz and Sokolnitz (Davout's troops taking these over) and headed toward the Pratzen heights. At lunch, the game was poised.
After lunch, all hell broke loose! Kienmayer, with the O'Reilly chevaux legers, put an almighty spanner in the French works by routing Soult's Dragoons, and when Davout's came up in support, they did for them as well! Thus, the messive French assault ground to a snails pace (a real demonstration of what B class cavalry are all about).
In the centre, Kev and Nod finally got going (Nod was being a little too slow in producing attack orders for my liking, so I put on my Tsar's hat and told him to drive the French from the field forthwith!).
By chance, they had hit on the weakest Corps on the French side, Bernadotte's, and their heavy guns blew holes in the wavering French line. However, the goldbach proved difficult to cross, plus the poor commanders throwing a d4 meant co-ordinated attacks were proving difficult. At this point, Nod unleashed Bagration, supported by Leichtenstein's reserve cavalry.
Lannes was in the way, and was proving stubborn. With the Allies on the offensive, and the French right hook stalling, were we going to see a reversal of history? Finally (I wouldn't like to play poker with Mother!), Murat was deployed along side Davout and Soult. With the Guard Chasseurs a cheval leading the way, the wriing was on the wall for the Allied southern flank. The Russian imperial guard would have been a useful formation to deploy to stop this. But they were on the other flank, with no orders, Kutuzov having been hit by the "poor commander" card 4 turns in a row!!!
That's where we left it- probably a hard fought victory for the French, but a moral victory for the allies, who did so much better than their historical counter part
See Kev's report on the Fat Wally website!
Initial Deployments using  LFS "blinds". Allies Red, French Blue
Soult begins his attack. The Pheasantry is in the background
The Russian Guard awaits orders, whilst Kutuzov lunches with the two Emperors.
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