For once, I haven´t played Chain ofCommand… at least Second World War :-)
Today I have played for the first
time Fighting Season, the incoming rules for Modern Warfare by TooFatLardies.
Our gaming group signed for the play testing a couple of months ago but only
today we have been able to put a more or less decent table (with houses, walls and fully painted minis...) to play the rules.
This is a full brand new and self
standing set of rules, not just a Chain of Command with some adaptations; therefore,
those familiar with the Second World War
rules won’t have (I least I didn´t have) much problem in mastering the game.
However, from the tactical point of view there’s very little resemblance between
the two sets.
The approach taken by the designers
(Richard Clarke and military historian & wargamer Leigh Neville) was to go from bottom up and in a full
Lardista style, study the key drivers of the small/skirmish combats in Iraq and
Afghanistan and then develop the rules.
Once upon a time in Helmand... |
In this sense, the rules include
full new terrain features typical of the area of combat (irrigation ditches, crop
fields, flat roofs in the compounds’ houses…) in addition of course to the very
different weaponry. Each army participating in this conflict has its own
specific chapter (not just OOBs and supports) to enable a reasonable simulation
of their intrinsic fighting conditions and tactics.
In that sense, for example, the same
terrain feature (for example, climbing a hill) affects in a total different way
to the Taliban (who can move freely due to its better knowledge of the
geography) than to the coalition forces
(being broken ground due to the burden of weight carried by the modern soldier).