Second, some observations. Somewhat surprised that the Campanian Triarii (p29) are not given the option of being Armoured; their cities were after all wealthy. To some extent, ditto for the earlier Hoplites - presume this relates to the (in my opinion always dubious) decision in Immortal Fire to rate all hoplites post-460 BC as only Protected. The problem is that you hit a bit of a fault line here in early Italy: call the Campanians hoplites, rate them protected; call the Romans, Latins and Etruscans "infantry of the 1st class", and rate them armoured right up until 280, even though most people consider them essentially hoplites... The Umbrians get the best of both worlds: armoured hoplites
Wonder about the generosity of Drilled amongst the early Italians, eg Samnite infantry exclusively Drilled.
Also, something that I wondered with the Arab Conquest list, and doubly so with the new Pre-Islamic Arabian and Bedouin lists - rating all Arab cavalry and light horse as Lancers. Can understand it to some extent with the Conquest list, since they were clearly by then able to take on East Romans and Persians in a straight fight. But I should have thought that there was a case for at least options of Light Spear, or even Light Spear, Bow*, especially amongst the Bedouin influenced by both the Romans and the Sassanids. (Now, the Lydians in Immortal Fire probably should be Lancers if one regards Herodotus as reliable.)
All that said, a very welcome volume. Thanks.










