I know quite a bit about Napoleonic warfare, but precious little about the earlier century covered by ETW.
One thing that surprised me in the game was the calibre of the artillery. The first mobile foot artillery you have are 12 pounders, which are then surpassed by 24 pounders. However, 12 pounders were the largest guns I have come across in Napoleonic battles - at Waterloo, these were the heaviest French guns, the more usual calibres being 8 pounders while the Brits only fielded 9 pounders. Similarly with horse artillery, the ETW French can have 18 lb monsters while Napoleon's horse artillery managed only 6 lbers (the Brits had 9 lb). Can anyone shed any light on this apparent regression? I suspect Napoleonic era artillery was more accurate, mobile and perhaps faster firing - it was the queen of the battle whereas in ETW I think it is rather more decorative - perhaps smaller calibres were the price of this?
I have not got that far into ETW yet, but my impression is that artillery in it comes into its own with howitzers, mortars and funky explosive ammunition etc. But my understanding of Napoleonic battles is that it was round shot and grapeshot that were the main death dealers - other stuff was used rarely or in special circumstances (e.g. at Waterloo, Wellington used his sole battery of howitzers to get at French troops massing in front of Hougomont, but out of a direct line of fire). Again, Napoleonic artillery seems more "primitive" than ETW artillery. Puckle guns also seem rather powerful - or at least expensive - in ETW but did not survive into the Napoleonic battle.
Can anyone shed any light on the apparent "regression" of artillery from ETWs representation to its Napoleonic form?
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