miffedofreading wrote:As your arguement appears to make no sense to me, I suspect I have misunderstood your arguement. Assuming this to be the case could you please explain it again from a different angle?
Andy,
Rest assured that no offense was taken.

Perhaps I am not expressing myself very clearly. So with everyone's indulgence, I will take another shot at it.
My first example was, to be perfectly candid, modeled on DBM. The points system appears to be seriously 'skewed' to me, to the extent that historically powerful armies such as Alexander's Macedonians and Caesar's Romans have been notoriously unpopular in tournament play over the years. And the rules and points values actually encouraged players who did field these armies to load up on cavalry and skirmishers, and minimize the use of legionaries or pikemen. That seems fundamentally wrong to me, at least for a rule set that claims to be historically based.
As I hope is clear by now, I do think that wargaming rules and army lists should, as much as practically possible, reward historical tactics and discourage 'cheese.' IMHO, DBM has done a less than optimal job in that regard over the years. I also think that all 'official' armies should have some chance at victory, although they may not all have an
equal chance at victory.
Again, I do think that a points system should accurately reflect the historical strengths and weaknesses of various troop types and combinations. This in turns means that it will indeed be somewhat easier to win with those armies that were historically successful than with those that weren't. I see nothing wrong with this, provided that 1) it is not impossible for any particular army to win, even under optimal circumstances, and 2) that those who do win, tend do so because the players make skillful use of historically valid tactics, and not because of rules-specific 'cheese.'
Does that make sense to you? Do we agree, or are our respective definitions of 'balanced' armies really as far apart as you seem to think they are? In any case, thanks for a thoughtful and stimulating conversation. I hope that you did not delete your post because of me, and that we can converse more in the future.
Cheers,
Scott