For the next few evenings, though, I”m likely to be busy playing the game rather than writing about it. I still mean to write some thoughts about the Dickens novels I read and soon I’ll probably go into more detail about why, in particular, I enjoy this game. Actually testing out the strategies and moving armies and units around in a system that simulates a battle or a campaign is a pretty nifty way to get an even better grasp of what a story might require, or how a general might marshal troops. I’ve spent a lot of time over the years reading about ancient campaigns, but reading is one thing. There are a lot of adventure novels out there with complex battle scenes that aren’t very well described,or thought out (or simply devolve to a siege - although I should say that there also are some great novels about sieges). The game simulates both strategy and tactics during the age of Napoleon… which, oddly enough, has never especially interested me. But I ended up regretting the exchange and traded for another. I traded an earlier copy of it away, thinking it wouldn’t be tactical enough for me to enjoy. The last few evenings, rather than reading, I’ve been conquering various parts of Europe or North Africa in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century.įield Commander: Napoleon is a solo war game from Dan Verssen Games.
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