Hi Guys
Not sure where this fits in but I want to just say that victory in Napoleonic battles was not really determined by how many of the other guys you kill. More the breaking of morale or overall cohesiveness 'the will to fight'. I recall Napoleon summed it up with 'Once the equilibrium is broken the rest is nothing'
Not sure if this matters in context of the possible rule you describe but it needs to be thought about. For example Napoleons numerically inferior army at Austerlitz would have a majority of A grade or better infantry, with famous regm's like the 57th perhaps A++. Would this disadvantage the French under such a rule?
Perhaps the solution is VP goals need to be set carefully depending on the quality of the armies. Which does seem to defeat the purpose of changing the unit kill vp’s.
The thing to also remember is that the holding back of the guard by Napoleon was often a political act hard to replicate in our games.
His guard literally guarded his ability to rule his Empire. This was the primary reason he did not commit them at Borodino. Namely his throne was really only created through his military might unlike the inherited rights of Alexander, Francis etc. In later campaigns when everything was on the line such as 1814 and 1815 he used the guard liberally. The somewhat flowery Anatomy of Glory is a useful reference on this. (and full of beautiful plates as well [:D]).
The guard was generally held back to attack in the 2nd half of these later battles not so much for political reasons as in the earlier battle but more because of the operational method Napoleon employed.
Namely he would fix his opponent across the front then seek out the decisive blow. This blow being delivered by elite troops.
At Austerliz Vandamme and St Hilaires Divisions were of such high quality they could do the job. By Waterloo the Btns of the guard formed the strike force.
Just some thoughts for the discussion.
Salute
General de Brigade Knox
Baron de l'Empire
2e Regiment Gardes d'Honneur (the regaled pheasants)
La Jeune Garde
CO. 1er Brigade, III Division Cavalerie Legere, III Corps Armee du Nord
http://www.aspire.co.nz/colinknoxnwc.htm
