Monday, 17 July 2023

Developing the Portable Ironclads Wargame….Part Umpteenth


Action on the High Seas (and on squares) as a Confederate raider attempts to evade a Union patrol. This particular scenario was based on the WW2 Battle of the River Plate.

Against the backdrop of the impending arrival of several metric tons worth of 20mm WW2 kit I have been busy beavering away at what will become the follow on title to the Portable Ironclads Wargame - the rather unoriginal title you see at the header of this post!

It was moving along at a rather sedate pace but is now most certainly heading into the final lap. The provisional chapter list looks a little like this:

1. Introduction

2. Acknowledgements

3. Thoughts on Initiative and Movement

4. More Thoughts on Movement

5. Thoughts on Firing

6. More thought on Firing

7. Using Squares

8. Expanded ACW Ship Specs

9. A Battle Report using some of the above optional rules and fought on a square grid

10. The War in the Pacific - An Overview

11. War in the Pacific Ship Specs

12. Final Thoughts and Next Steps

13. The Portable Ironclad Wargame - An Errata (surprisingly small but included to tidy up a few things)

Once again it is very much a collaborative effort and will be published by Eglinton Books as part of the Portable Wargame stable. The Editor in Chief - Bob Cordery - will be penning a chapter for inclusion in the book and David Manley has supplied some pictures along with both sets of ship specs (that I have then amended into the Portable Ironclads Wargame format). It should be available soon(ish) in the same formats as previously so PDF, Kindle, soft and hardback.

I have a few pictures to organise for the chapters on movement and naturally the battle report needs to be written - once I have decided what to do and have written it up!

14 comments:

Archduke Piccolo said...

Sound very promising, David!

David Crook said...

Hello there Ion,

I am hoping that this volume will tie a lot of loose threads together together and offer something that is playable, grounded in sensibility and above all, fun!

Arguably a lot of it could have gone in the first book but I think it would have made for a rather indigestible lump!

All the best,

DC

Robert (Bob) Cordery said...

David,

I LOVE the squared grid. I think that it suits naval wargaming far better than the hexed grid, possibly becuase it reminds me of Fred Jane's Naval War Game and partly because it gives the feel of a naval chart.

All the best,

Bob

David Crook said...

Hello there Bob,

I must admit that my preference was always for a square grid but for a variety of reasons I simply could not make the system stick. After a break away and revisiting the subject with a fresh pair of eyes it now seems so much clearer! For the reasons you mention along with many, many happy memories of playing age of sail games with Ship ‘O the Line, the use of a square grid will feature prominently for me going forwards.

All the best,

DC

Simon said...

It would be nice if you could release the Errata section as a separate freebie.

Cheers

Simon

David Crook said...

Hi Simon,

That is not something I had thought about - but will do so now! There is nothing major that I can see so far - a couple of ship specs need amending, a ship name is wrong and a couple of the historical pictures have been incorrectly identified (as advised by John Wallis - author of an excellent book on Southern Ironclads) but that is about it.

All the best,

DC

Simon said...

Hi David.

If you are collating errata, I may have found a couple but it could be that I am working from an old pdf or just missing the point - the latter being the more likely!

On Page 38, point 14 says that the lowest penetration factor is used when a ship mis firing at a target from more than one gunnery arc. The firing example on Page 51 of CSS Virginia firing uses the higher penetration factor.

Also on page 51 USS Minnesota fires with 2D^ but gets three results!

If you are doing some clarifications, I dont quite get how Log pilings and block ships "attack."

Cheers

Simon

David Crook said...

Hi Simon,

You are quite right on all counts! I must have had a brain fade at that point…. For a variety of reasons this example is wrong and as certain aspects of this will be changing ever so slightly it will be covered in the errata and the optional rules.

Log piles and block ships ‘attack’ or rather ‘fight back when rammed in the same way as a ship can. The wording is a little clunky with this….. :-)

All the best,

DC

Simon said...

Do let me know if you need any testing/proof reading done.

Simon

David Crook said...

Hi Simon,

I certainly will - in fact I will drop you a line tomorrow evening!

All the best,

DC

Simon said...

I look forward to hearing from you!

Cheers Simon

David Crook said...

Hi Simon,

Email incoming!

All the best,

DC

johnBoy said...

Hi David, I just ordered your book on Amazon! can't wait to receive it. I have Bob's other book too. Luv the acw naval wars.

David Crook said...

Hi johnBoy,

Thank you kindly sir! If you have any questions about anything therein please let me know and I will be happy to help!

All the best,

DC