Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Ten Warbands, Ten Players, Lions & Dragons Rampant, oh my!

  Pictish spearmen prepare to form Wall of Spears as the Vikings advance ever closer in Lion Rampant
We had a friend who visits only about once a year coming into town and he wanted to join our Sunday Night Gaming crew. I messaged him to see what he'd be interested in doing and Anthony said he would like to try Lion Rampant. With everyone coming, it looked like we'd have nearly a dozen people, so we decided to stage two multiplayer games. Anthony would join Tom, Joel, Mike S, our host Mike W, and myself in a giant game of Lion Rampant on a 10' wide table. Meanwhile, the 6' wide table would hold a 4-player game of Dragon Rampant. I was in charge of bringing all the battle mats and terrain, in addition to three 24-point commands of Picts, so it was quite the load to set up.

Three warbands of Picts & Vikings each clash on a 10' wide table for a huge game of Lion Rampant
To fill the forces for three Lion Rampant commands of Picts, it took up a big chunk of my 28mm Dark Ages miniatures. Our side would field 20 units and more than 200 miniatures. My friend (and as it turned out, cross-table opponent) Mike S would be bringing 17 units of Vikings, I believe he said. It would be an epic clash as the Vikings launched an invasion of Pictland, hoping to secure northern Britain as their base for raiding. We played a straight up battle rather than a scenario, since it was some players' first game of Lion Rampant. In addition, we used our usual "no crap out" variant of the activation rules. A failure by one unit did not end a command's turn. We use that across the board for all of Daniel Mersey's "Rampant" series and believes it provides a much more enjoyable and entertaining game.

    My 2 units of Pictish light cavalry swing wide right and prepare to pepper the Vikings with javelins
I gave all 20 unit cards to Tom and declared him the overall Pictish commander. I asked him to divide them into three commands, left, center, and right. He took the center and I was given the right with six units under my command. I had two units of Pictish spearmen (light infantry), one of Warrior Infantry (wild chargers), one of archers, and two of Pictish light cavalry. Facing me were six frothing at the mouth units of Vikings -- or at least that is how it looked to my Picts! I sent the two cavalry units to the far right, supported by the archers. In the center, the Pictish spear intended to advance to tempt the Vikings to advance, and both units formed their schiltrons (Wall of Spears) to resist the Viking charge. Meanwhile, the Warrior Infantry would try to race into the woods on our left and chase off their archers.

    Viking battle line, led by a fearless and battle-hardened shield maiden in the center
It was a good plan, and early on it seemed to be working. The one unit of Vikings (Warrior Infantry) that entered the large field of crops opposite my archers began to waver under the archer's arrows and the cavalry's javelins. They began to fall back, battered, which encouraged my two mounted units to circle around the field. The lead unit of cavalry charged the Vikings while their morale were still battered and inflicted enough casualties for them to fail their courage test and rout from the field. The cavalry looked ready to encircle the Vikings and attack them from the rear!

    The battle lines of Picts & Vikings begin to edge towards each other as arrows fly overhead
On the left, my warrior infantry charged one of their opposite numbers from the Viking's center command. Joel's Viking warriors had surprisingly been driven back by Tom's Pictish archers. My warriors struck the disheartened Vikings and slaughtered enough of them to drive them from the field. Elated, they rushed towards the woods where the Viking archers were firing upon my spearmen and inflicting casualties. The warriors were cut off, though, and charged by a unit of Viking axemen (heavy infantry with bloodthirsty). Luckily, my warriors rolled high enough to counter-charge. We inflicted more casualties, and more importantly, Mike had a second drastic morale failure. The axemen ran from the field. 

    My warrior infantry, having chased off one unit, ready to face down more Vikings with impunity!
Emboldened by their success, the Pictish warriors charged their third foe -- the Viking archers. Their numbers were thinned by two combats already, but they inflicted enough casualties to rout the archers, as well. Good rolls on Courage tests were a scarce commodity on this flank! My Pictish spearmen were also failing their tests vs. the one or two casualties Mike's archers had been inflicting. Unfortunately, that third charge was it for my good rolling for the night! From this point on, I failed nearly every courage test and rolled poorly in every combat. The warriors decided they'd done enough for the day, so they also decamped from the field. Good on them, though -- three enemy units driven from the field!

    My Pictish spearmen are thinking, 'That sure looks like a lot of Vikings...! Are we sure about this??'
That was indeed the Pictish "high water mark" on the right flank. Mike's remaining three heavy infantry units began to advance on my wavering Pictish spearmen. Just in time, I rallied one unit and was even able to form Wall of Spears before the Vikings charged home. On average rolls, this should have been a victory for the Picts. However, over the next several turns, three times Mike's Vikings charged my cowardly and intimidated spearmen. Three times they were driven back by the Vikings. When my commander's spear schiltron eventually failed morale and broke and ran from the field, it unleashed a string of 2d6 rolls that never came close to average or succeeding. One of the cavalry units became battered upon hearing the warlord was dead, and proceeded to fail their next two tests, as well. The other spear unit steadily failed and retreated backwards four more times over the next four turns, until they backed off the field.  

    No two units failed more morale checks than these two units of spear -- it was maddening!
The cavalry unit and archers, although passing their courage test when the warlord fled, proceeded to fail their activation rolls time after time. When the archers did shoot, I rolled way under average and did not cause any casualties to a Viking unit that was at half strength and ready to crumble. It was a miserable ending after a spectacular beginning. Thankfully, Tom in the center had routed Joel's entire command, and began to send help my way. One of Mike's Viking heavy infantry broke under Tom's pressure, leaving him with just his general's heavy infantry and the half strength unit. That unit refused to charge my archers, who themselves failed to inflict enough casualties to get the Vikings finally running. Time after time, Mike's Viking heavy foot unit with his commander passed morale checks while mine failed them. In the end, I still outnumbered him in units, but my troops just wouldn't fight!

    Beers, snacks, and lots of orcs & goblins raging about on the Dragon Rampant battle table!
Fortunately, Anthony had finally won on the left flank, outlasting Mike W's Viking wing and driving it from the board. Tom crushed Joel in the center, losing no units, while Joel's entire command fled the field. Seeing this, we called it a Pictish victory. My wing was wavering at best, but Mike's was hanging on by a thread, too. My Picts could console themselves by saying they'd driven off more enemy units than we lost, but honestly, their "second half" performance was shameful! It was certainly the most frustrating run of failed courage tests I've ever had in any of the Rampant style games we've played. 

    The arid plains of the DR! battlefield were soon drenched with blood (fortunately no spilled beer!)
On the Dragon Rampant board, Andy and Allen's orcs and goblins had a bloody battle with Bob's and Keith's armies. The orcs fled the field in the end, with Bob and Keith holding on for the win. I didn't get over there much to watch the battle, but it sounded brutal. They were fighting on a smaller width battlefield (6' wide for four armies, two per side). I had brought over a folding table to add 2' to their width, but the table heights were too mismatched. There would have been a weird drop off three quarter's of the way across the table! So, the orcs and their foes fought in close quarters that evening. Still, it was impressive to have 10 players and 10 warbands clashing all at once. It was fun, but a LOT of work to set up and pull off. Thanks to Mike S for bringing three warbands of Vikings and Mike W for hosting such a throng of gamers! Lots of dice were flung and good times were had!! 

MINIATURES Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Miniatures acquired in 2026: 179
  • Miniatures painted in 2026: 141

TERRAIN Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Terrain acquired in 2026: 12
  • Terrain painted in 2026: 29

SCATTER Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2026

  • Scatter acquired in 2026: 21
  • Scatter painted in 2026: 62

1 comment:

  1. Looks like that was a lot of fun Mike, super looking games, well done on putting it on, lot of work required I would have thought.

    ReplyDelete