gozerius wrote:Dave, I can't accept the authors would draw examples of play to include in the book and then say, "but they don't really mean anything. Interpret the rules as you choose."
I assume you have spoken to them as I have? I also didn't say "interpret the rules as you choose" but instead "interpret the rules as they are written" so I think you need to read what the response are and stop the hyperbolic conclusions you seem to be grasping from nowhere.
Without those diagrams I choose to interpret the meaning of "turn immediately" as "turn as soon as contacted".
"choose to interpret" that's just another way of saying "guesswork".
In fact the paired examples on 175 are the only reasons that I entertain your claim that immediately means "after all charges are complete." Since according to my interpretation the bases in question would turn immediately on contact 90 vs a flank charge and 180 vs a rear charge, they would indeed be facing the chargers.
Which is exactly why you are wrong as the rules as written do not support this interpretation.
By turning immediately as opposed to after all charges are complete there would be no argument about which direction they turn, nor could a charging BG block the required turn by stepping forward. The step forward would occur after the turn. The only change in interpretation that would be required is that we would have to recognize that a flank charge causes all bases in the contacted file to turn (minus any already fighting to their front), "using the normal rules for turning" on page 45, which says that a 90 degree turn treats the old side edge as the new front edge.
The vast majority of flank charges are at an angle - in that case it is not possible to turn 90 degrees, as has been previously stated in this thread (and absolutely ignored by you) there is no mechanism to move the chargers back to accomodate this turn. This is supported by the diagram on page 175.
This would eliminate the inevitable argument about which bases must turn and whether their comrades block them. This has always seemed to me a very artificial argument based on a fixation on individual bases as opposed to the BG as a whole.
Nope - it's the enemy that would block them. Something you singularly have failed to understand?
This can be seen in the debates about conforming when people desperately want to maintain contact with the base they initially contacted instead of conforming as the examples show. It would streamline the whole flank charge dynamic. Of course, some would see it as cheating the charger out of an even more advantageous position, but I see the current interpretation as unfairly punishing the target.
So you think that cleverly positioning a unit that is about to get charged in the flank is a good thing?
As I said before, according to your convention, the charger can gain a de facto rear charge by stepping forward before the defender turns, pinning him and forcing him to turn 180.
A flank and rear charge are very clearly defined in the rules. The turning to face rules are not governed by the fact the charge is in the flank or in the rear - again something you are failing to understand.
This does not happen when the turn happens before stepping forward. One concession would be that a charge that started with at least one base entirely directly behind the target would count as a rear charge even if the first contact was on a rear corner.This would answer Graham's objections based on his scenario of a charger entirely behind but hitting a rear corner first.
The only way a BG would not be fighting in two directions is if there were not two BGs fighting in different directions. Are you proposing that a single flank charge could force some bases to turn 90 and others to turn 180 so you could claim that they are fighting in two directions? That is not possible because fighting in two directions requires two BGs fighting the target BG on different facings. It can't be done by a single BG because all bases turn the same way to face a charging BG.
???? I am saying that according to your (incorrect) logic that if you can't turn 90 degrees then you aren't fighting in two directions. Again this is very clearly laid out in the rulebook.
The problem we are all having is that you completely refuse to listen to what we are all saying and insist on following the incorrect reading of the sentence on page 75 governing turning to face. If you can't understand written english I suggest you request additional help in understanding what the word "or" means.