![]() And thus 6 stands could equal a Battalion amounting to 768 men. His rules, totaling six pages over the two issues have the distinction of being the first published rules for a medieval miniatures wargame. We then come up with 8 stands equals ONE INFANTRY COMPANY (representing 96 men). Each model soldier represents 3 historic men (1:3 ratio). ![]() So, for our Table of Organization we mount 4 model infantry soldiers to a stand, and call this a SQUAD. The TABLE at the end of the rules is self-sufficient and is based on gluing model soldiers onto moving stands, and counting each such stand as "one" (unit, or company, or squad as you wish).įor African Colonial warfare we picture war games as Tactical, not Strategic, and most of them (except perhaps Omdurman) were small scale affairs as to numbers of men involved. These rules are designed for use with N-gauge troops, although of course they can be used for all scale models. This time we have Jack's follow-up to his Basic War Game RulesĪfrican Colonial War Game Rules for the African Colonial period, 1880-1910
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