Agent Smith
04-11-2007, 16:59
Ok, I'm not quite sure if someone has already devised this strategy before or used it elsewhere, but I tried it last night and it worked wondfully in a battle I felt was pretty even overall. I call it "flank overloading."
First, the forces:
MONGOLS (I could be wrong about the exact numbers, but this is roughly what they had):
1 General
4 Mongol Archers
4 Mongol Infantry
2 Heavy Lancers
3 Light Lancers
4 Horse Archers
RUSSIANS:
1 General
1 Druzhina
2 Kazaks
2 Horse Archer Mercenaries
1 Catapult
5 Peasant Archers
8 Spearmen
I had numerical superiority, but I was attacking and they were uphill at a decent angle. They started in a rather standard formation with archers up front, Mongol infantry behind, followed by cavalry. Their horse archers were slplit in two far on each flank.
Obviously, I tried to use the catapult to whittle away at them for a while, but it isn't necessary. I placed my archers in loose formation up front with my line of spearmen directly behind. However, I placed all four horse archers and my other cav on my right flank.
The key is keeping the horse archers busy on the one flank and opening up a flanking front for your other cav. Have the horse archers immediately engage the enemy horse archers on the overloaded flank (in loose formation to prevent casualties). Usually, the enemy horse archers will be outnumbered 2 to 1 on that flank and take a beating. At the same time, have the heavy cavalry march quickly to the flank of the main enemy line. By the time they reach the enemy horse archer position, the horse archers will probably fall back in skirmish mode while trying to hit the closer heavy cav. Keep the pressure on with your own horse archers.
While that is happening, I had my archer and spear lines march quickly forward together. They will take some arrow fire from the exposed flank from the other horse archers, but the loose formation will keep casualties down while the spearmen directly behind will prevent charges from the flank. Once they stopped within good arrow range, have them stop and begin firing and send your spearmen full speed at the enemy line. Once they are getting close to meeting their targets, wheel the archers to the exposed flank to concentrate on the other horse archers and to avoid firing into the melee. Charge the heavy cav to hit the flank when the spearmen hit.
The result was devastating. Half of the enemy horse archers were kept busy and out of the battle, while the main force was crushed and the other horse archers were kept at bay by my peasant archers. I had around 100 casualties, and the enemy army completely routed. I think that isn't bad, even for fighting uphill against the enemy.
Thoughts?
First, the forces:
MONGOLS (I could be wrong about the exact numbers, but this is roughly what they had):
1 General
4 Mongol Archers
4 Mongol Infantry
2 Heavy Lancers
3 Light Lancers
4 Horse Archers
RUSSIANS:
1 General
1 Druzhina
2 Kazaks
2 Horse Archer Mercenaries
1 Catapult
5 Peasant Archers
8 Spearmen
I had numerical superiority, but I was attacking and they were uphill at a decent angle. They started in a rather standard formation with archers up front, Mongol infantry behind, followed by cavalry. Their horse archers were slplit in two far on each flank.
Obviously, I tried to use the catapult to whittle away at them for a while, but it isn't necessary. I placed my archers in loose formation up front with my line of spearmen directly behind. However, I placed all four horse archers and my other cav on my right flank.
The key is keeping the horse archers busy on the one flank and opening up a flanking front for your other cav. Have the horse archers immediately engage the enemy horse archers on the overloaded flank (in loose formation to prevent casualties). Usually, the enemy horse archers will be outnumbered 2 to 1 on that flank and take a beating. At the same time, have the heavy cavalry march quickly to the flank of the main enemy line. By the time they reach the enemy horse archer position, the horse archers will probably fall back in skirmish mode while trying to hit the closer heavy cav. Keep the pressure on with your own horse archers.
While that is happening, I had my archer and spear lines march quickly forward together. They will take some arrow fire from the exposed flank from the other horse archers, but the loose formation will keep casualties down while the spearmen directly behind will prevent charges from the flank. Once they stopped within good arrow range, have them stop and begin firing and send your spearmen full speed at the enemy line. Once they are getting close to meeting their targets, wheel the archers to the exposed flank to concentrate on the other horse archers and to avoid firing into the melee. Charge the heavy cav to hit the flank when the spearmen hit.
The result was devastating. Half of the enemy horse archers were kept busy and out of the battle, while the main force was crushed and the other horse archers were kept at bay by my peasant archers. I had around 100 casualties, and the enemy army completely routed. I think that isn't bad, even for fighting uphill against the enemy.
Thoughts?