Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Souther Region Army Practice - April 2023 - Field Battles

 Hey all,

Just a quick blog post with some thoughts from last Sunday.

We ran a series of field battles with about 15 heavy melee fighters per side plus an additional unit of 6 heavy combat archers that would swap sides every battle or so.  The objective was to kill everyone on the other team.  Each battle had a different unbelt captain chosen, some with no command experience at all.

In a nutshell, I think everyone figured out the basics.  Split your non-archer units into two to three different units, one covering the left flank, one covering the right, and if there's a third unit, they cover the middle.  Sometimes a person or two would be left in reserve, with a fighter or two who's job was to protect the archers, or to hunt the archers depending on what team the archers are on.  The team that did not have the archers knew that they needed to press the attack so that they don't die from archers' fire, while the team that had the archers were not in as much of a hurry.  



Both teams pretty much had a unit run right, and a unit run left, which is pretty common as neither team wants to get outflanked.  There were usually some people hanging out in the middle as well.  The formations were mostly what I would call a "mob" rather than any sort of organized unit.  Mobs, or packs, or prides, or swarms (whichever analogy you want to use) tend to be more flexible and move faster than strict formations.  With a 15 v 15, skirmish tactics become more effective.  If we had, say, 700 on a side, it might make sense to have some large blocks of units in formation.



Once units got engaged it pretty much came down to deciding what the best tactic to employ would be.  The options are to engage or deny (deny means to refuse the engagement, and hopefully draw the opponents out of the fight).  If an engagement is decided, then do you engage at range, or press the attack with a charge?

Generally speaking, assuming equal skill, you attack if you have the numbers, and deny if you don't.  If you attack, then you charge if the other side has the range advantage, or you attack aggressively with your spears if they don't.



F.L.A.N.K.S.

I personally teach the FLANKS mnemonic to help remember what to do.  Consider this with each unit of 4-6 fighters in the diagram above.

F - Control your flanks, usually with your strongest shields (rarely with a spear or archer).  Don't let anyone get behind you.

L - Leg 'em and leave 'em

A - Assess which team has the range advantage and act accordingly (charge if they do, stab if you do)

N - Never fight a fair fight.  Always look for an advantage, or refuse the engagement

K - Know who are your killers and who are your supporters.  Are you charging with your shields?  Or are you stabbing with your spears?

S - Spread out your talent.  Don't group your spears together, or put all of your new fighters into the same unit, or same part of the unit.  


Special Plays

Sometimes it helps if you come up with some special tactics, like taking a person out of the fight, or having a team run right at the archers.  These clever plays can work, but there must be a foundation of good fundamental tactics laid down first.


The Team with the Archers Often Lost

Strange.  I think what happened here is that teams were picking too many people to guard the archers, which pulled them out of the fight.  Or they were not being aggressive with the engagements and ended up losing to more aggressive attackers.

Keep in mind, archers are not as deadly as you might think in a field battle (while they can be incredibly deadly in a static fight).  In battles like these, I'd expect most archers to only get off 1-2 shots before it's over, and with each team so heavy on shields, the entire archery unit may not get many kills.  Don't get me wrong, I ALWAYS want the archers on my team, and find them to be a critical part of the army.  But don't expect them to kill everyone in a small team field battle. The rest of the unit has to do much of the killing as well.





Sunday, April 9, 2023

Joint Kingdom Melee Practice (Atlantia/East)

 Hello all,

Tegan of Anglesey and Alric O'Connor put together yet another amazing practice with closer to 40 heavy fighters just south of Baltimore, MD.  Much fun was had, swords were sharpened, rust was knocked off, and lessons were learned.  


Format

We mostly stuck with the same teams all day, with the East Kingdom on one team, the Barony of Storvik and "The Bog" on the other, with the remaining Atlantians shifting around to keep things mostly balanced.

The numbers were not always even, nor was the skill level, but the fighting remained fairly competitive.  In my opinion as long as one team isn't just getting run over all day, there's not really a need to rebalance teams, though it's always important to ask and get a feel for how people are doing.  Sometimes the losing team wants a chance to redeem itself by switching up tactics, while other times people get discouraged and either give up trying, or quit for the day.

In a nutshell, we fought a scenario several times, let each team figure out how to change their tactics, and then would get together and discuss some key points about the scenario.  There was enough experience on the field that there wasn't a need to stop any scenarios and give a grand lecture. 


List of Scenarios

Single Death Field Battles (large teams)
3 Life Broken Field Rez Battles
Kill the King Broken Field Rez Battle
Control Point Timed Bridge Battles
Single Death Field Battles (medium sized teams)


Single Death Field Battles (large teams)

We started off the day by splitting into two teams of 15+ fighters.  Our team had a rally call ("blue") and picked a commander.  Both teams decided to split into two units, one being a faster flanking unit, and a slower infantry unit.  This set both teams up for a basic "hammer and anvil" tactic.

From Wikipedia:

"The hammer and anvil is a military tactic involving the use of two primary forces, one to pin down an enemy, and the other to smash or defeat the opponent with an encirclement maneuver."

Our team (blue) really struggled in our first three battles.  The opponent offered to send a fighter to our team to balance the forces, but we elected to keep the same teams and try to improve our tactics.  Initially we were relying on our flanking force (where I was) to make a bigger impact than we were capable of because we kept running into units that were out matching us.  It seemed that we split into about a 6 fighter hammer unit, and a 10 fighter anvil unit, while our opponents were 8 and 8.  So our flanking unit kept finding ourselves at a disadvantage.  Additionally, despite electing to "deny" the engagement (this is a tactic where you attempt to merely stay alive, rather than engage and die quickly as the result of a numerical or skill disadvantage), the commitment to that denial was weak and our flanking unit was losing too quickly.

The anvil/infantry unit was (if I remember correctly) running a standard shield wall and attempting to rely on using its long weapons to do the killing.  It appeared that the shield wall was slow to engage, and that it was outmatched on range weapons.  The tactic they were using is often not a bad tactic as the anvil, but we needed to rely on it to do the killing as the hammer was not able to get the job done.

We changed our tactics up and made a bigger commitment to the denial by just running away from our opponents and taking them out of the fight while our shield wall charged into the unit they were facing against.  As a result, last two fights were very close, with our team actually winning one of them.


Additionally, in one of our battles, we managed to get around both flanks and get our enemies to turn back into each other.  As a general rule of thumb, it's better to fight with your backs to the boundaries while facing the center of the battle rather than to be facing the boundaries with your backs to the center of the battle.


I was really happy with how we managed to improve our results by making these changes.  


Lessons Learned:

  • Commit to the tactic, whether that's killing or denial.  Tactics can change throughout the course of battle, but once the decision is made, full commitment to that tactic should be implemented.  
  • Commit to the attack when numerical superiority had been seized.  Commit to denial when the opponent has seized numerical superiority (though skill should also be considered).
  • Always consider which side has the range weapon advantage and strategize accordingly.
  • Fight while facing the battle field, not with your back to the battle field.

Final note; is it a good idea to put so many poles in a flanking unit?  No.  But we wanted to keep our units together, and that's what we brought.  


3 Life Broken Field Rez Battles

These are pretty straight forward.  After 3 deaths, you're out of the battle.  The team that runs out of people first, loses.

The main tactic that we discussed was the advantage of fighting close to your rez point instead of away from it.  Often in these battles people get stuck in the mindset of controlling the middle of the field, so they try to take and hold ground.  Since this is an attrition battle, it's actually far better to fight close to your rez point so that your dead fighters respawn more quickly.

In the picture below, blue has the advantage.


Additionally, the small groups of fighters need to use those choke points to their advantage.  If possible, it's better to create a kill pocket and entice your opponent to fight into it.

Pictured below, red creates a kill pocket in the choke point.


It's also a good idea to control the left most boundary with a solid shield fighter to prevent the opponent from punching through that position and into your backfield.

In the first picture below, red tries to form a small shield wall in the center of the gap.  In the second picture, there is a shield with his foot on the border to prevent penetration by the blue team.



Lessons Learned:

Try to make the fight happen closer to your own rez point.

Use choke points to your advantage.

Protect the left flank with a strong shield


Kill the King Broken Field Rez Battle

This battle is similar to the scenario above, except that the lives are unlimited.  The goal is to kill the "secret king" of the opposing team.  This was a fun little game to break up the day.  It still teaches you how to work together in teams, but also to pay attention and communicate with your teammates.  Gradually, as you kill each of your opponents, you have to communicate to the rest of the team who has been killed and who you think might still be a potential king.

On our team, we had a strategy of having one of us behave like a king.  That was me, and all I did was play a little more passively than usual, and then when people would attempt to charge me, I would run away really quickly.  Ultimately it worked out for us.


Lessons Learned:

Observe and communicate.


Control Point Timed Bridge Battles

These battles had unlimited resurrections.  The goal was to control the middle of the bridge after 90 seconds.  There was a miscommunication in the first iteration, and the marshal never stopped the battle.  Instead he was counting a point for each team that controlled the bridge at 90 second intervals, yet kept the clock running.  After about 5 minutes we were all pretty certain that far more than 90 seconds had elapsed.  

Regardless, it was good practice for moving a unit forward on a bridge.



Both teams had archers.  The red team had 5 spears, while the blue team had only 2 spears. 

The most common successful tactics in bridge battles, from my experience, is to bring the spears out in front of the shields to duel the spears on the opposing side.  At some point, one side should realize that they are losing the spear fight and call a charge, which brings the shield rushing out of the second rank, past their own spears, and into the opponent's spears.  If the opponent is well trained, their shields will come out of the second rank to oppose the charge.  At this point, normally the poles will move into the second rank, with the spears looking for opportunity kills from the third rank, either over the top, or at about the waist line looking for belly shots when the shields come up.

Eventually people will either get tired, or the dead will pile up.  Either way, the charging stops and the battle becomes static again, which brings the spears back to the front.  

In this particular battle, we (the blue team) recognized that we only had two spears and would be facing 5 veteran spear fighters, so we never brought our spears to the front.  We had to rely on, instead, keeping our shields in the front rank as long as possible.  The shields would either hold their position, advance slowly to take ground, or charge.  


Lessons Learned:
  • Commanders are necessary to coordinate the units to either, "stay the line and maintain position," bring "spears to the front," bring "shields to the front," "step forward," "charge," or "fall back."
  • When charges are called, it's the shields who lead the charges so they should expect to move past their own spears when charging.
  • Charges are best called when the other team has their spears in the front rank, while your own team has enough shields ready to implement the charge.
  • Avoid solo charges, unless a really good opportunity presents itself.
  • Keeping track of time and coordinating a big push past the objective near the time limit is a good strategy.
  • The longer a battle lasts, the more advantageous range weapons become.  Shorter battles give the advantage to the units with more shields.

  • Weapons mix relative to the opponent should always be considered when forming a strategy.

Single Death Field Battles (medium sized teams)

We finished off the day by breaking up the group into three equally sized units of roughly 10 fighters each and fought two round robin fights.  So team A fought team B.  Then A fought C.  And then B fought C.  We repeated the whole process again so that each team fought each other team twice for a total of four fights each.

There was an interesting amount of variety in the different groups.  Team A was young and fast and comprised of two poles while the rest were shields.  Team B had a lot of old veterans, many with a very hight level of skill, and contained two spears, a few poles, and a lower proportion of shields.  Team C was a collection of fighters who don't practice together very often, and had a low number of shields, but no spears.  

As for tactics, team A would typically want to perform a coordinated and cohesive charge in each fight.  Team B would normally want to spread out, keep their spears alive, protect the flanks, and try their best to draw their opponents into a kill pocket.  If team A would go for a flank, team B would need to drag out that flank while attempting to envelop on the other.  Both tactics are good.  The winner would be determined based on skill, commitment to the initiative, and whomever performs more effectively in that battle.



In theory, Team C should be able to play the envelop tactic against A, and the charge tactic against B.  I was on team C, and we struggled with either tactic.  Our best showing was in our last fight where Sir Tash had asked me and Galfred to be a flanking kill team and commit to hitting the flank hard and scoring some kills.  We were actually fairly successful.  We ran hard and found two quick 2v1 opportunities, which we won, and then were able to get back into the fight behind our enemy.  


Lessons Learned:
  • Groups that train together and train often will have an advantage regardless of the tactics used.

  • Weapon mix should largely determine what kind of tactics you'll use.

  • Sometimes you have to think outside of the box and look for mismatches to take advantage of.

  • I really need to build an Atlantian legal polearm that is longer than six feet!

Final Thoughts

I really like this style of practice, and it is very similar to what we do up in the East Kingdom.  Many years ago I attended a practice where we got in half the amount of fighting, and each side was micromanaged and told exactly what tactic to follow.  Yes, sometimes you do need to take some time to work on a specific drill or technique, but I also strongly believe that there needs to be a certain amount of free play.  Let each team figure out what to do on their own.  If they lose, maybe they'll adjust.  If they keep losing, give them some hints.  And with the limited amount of melee practice that any of us actually get, helmet time is really important.

I'd also like to add a big thank you to our commander, Baron Cormac.  Being commander is a thankless job and it tends to take on all the blame (we lost because of a bad plan) and none of the credit (we won because Me/Myself/&I got so many kills!).  I personally don't think I'm a great commander, but rather a better analysts and teacher.  I can tell you what you should have done after you already did it, but not always what we should do.  Regardless, every army needs an executive decision maker and I'm always happy when someone steps up to take on that role.

Finally, I'd like to thank absolutely everyone who helped make this happen.  That includes the organizers, the marshals, the people who came to watch and socialize, the fighters, the people who helped set up, break down, pick up trash, etc. etc.



Until next time!

Sir Bari of Anglesey, East Kingdom









Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Central Region War Practice - January 2023

Hey all, 

Happy New Year!!!  War is only 6 1/2 months away and the time to prepare is NOW!!!

I'm half joking.  I'm willing to fight in a melee anytime there's a good one available.  Last weekend we had a long day of fighting in New York state.  It was, quite possibly, the highest average quality of fighter I've ever had the pleasure to fight with.  We had 25 fighters, which included 10 knights, and 6 additional members of the Order of the Tygers Combatant, all melee specialists.  

The Format

It was pretty simple.  Run some scenarios.  Let each team figure out on their own what strategy to adopt, who to command, etc.  Run through several iterations and then regroup and discuss.  Rinse and repeat.


The Scenarios

3v3s, 4v4s, 5v5s, 7v7s, 10v10s, etc.  all single death field battles. 
Breach battles with a single resurrection for each fighter.
Breach battles with a "goat path" with a single resurrection for each fighter.
Control point timed bridge battles with different numbers of lives.
More small team single death field battles.


Looking for Mismatches

One of the problems early on was that a number of fighters were finding matched, 1v1 situations and fighting them as if they were in a singles practice.

What you want to look for in a melee, particularly in fast paced single death field battles, are mismatches where you have a clear advantage.  Examples of these are:

- Numbers Advantage; You have more fighters than them at the point of contact
- Skill Advantage; You have a BIG mismatch in skill
- Range Advantage;  ie a spear hitting a shield, or a shield within striking distance of a spear
- Positional Advantage; Hitting them on a flank, or when they are distracted by something else
- Momentum Advantage; They are on their heels


So in the flow of the battle, the goal is to identify when you have these advantages, and when the other side has them.  If you have an advantage, execute quickly.  If you don't, then deny the engagement and look to find an advantageous situation.  

The only time you should really fight without a clear advantage is when your team has no better options available.  

Note:  This is only one piece of field tactics.  I don't want to leave the impression that fighters should run out onto the field and look for mismatches without a cohesive strategy for the entire unit.


Don't Fight with Your Back to the Fighting

If at all possible, position yourself so that you are facing the main fighting with your opponent's back to the fighting.  In the diagram below, each blue fighter can see the entire arena of battle, while each white fighter cannot.  When possible, try to turn your opponents so that their backs are to the fighting.


Field Battle Tactics

The tactics in the field battles, in general, can be summed up pretty simply:

- Everyone run to one flank or the other
- Most people run to one flank while leaving a small number to deny the other
- Split into two units and run at both flanks

There were also some specific tasks given to individuals:

"You, run down the archer/spear in the backfield."
"You, don't get caught in a spear duel with their spear."
"You, hang in the middle and try to hit these internal flanks."
etc.

The above list is not the only way to execute a field battle, but they were all good ways to do it given the level of experience and weapons mix.


Shield Wall vs Mob

A shield wall provides a (mostly) impenetrable front to lead your forces into action.  When it moves, there's not really any opportunity kills from the enemy as everyone is very well protected.  In theory, a shield wall can move into position and crash through a less organized group of fighters.

Pictured below is a shield wall that is charging hard to its right flank, well protected, with the expectation that it will have a numerical advantage once it arrives (9v5 on the flank).


The benefit of the mob is that it can move faster as a tight unit cohesion does not need to be maintained.  It also allows the fighters the flexibility to avoid the front of the slower moving shield wall.

Pictured below you can see that the white mob move's around blue's flank while avoiding the front of the wall giving them a flanking advantage as well as greater numbers at the point of contact.  Moving as a mob allows them to move faster than moving as a wall.


Note:  This is not an either/or situation.  A unit can move as a tight shield wall, a loose shield wall, a tight mob, or a loose mob.  To what the degree the shields are in the front or a different mix of weapons are in the front is also variable.  

In most of our engagements this weekend, the units moved in what I wall call a shield lead mob.  The right tactic entirely depends on a lot of variables including the abilities of both your team and the opponent's team.  


Hope you enjoyed reading!

- Sir Bari of Anglesey, East Kingdom