My army was Ancient British, in order of march:
2 x 4 base Chariots: light chariot, superior, light spear
1 x 4 base Cavalry: LH average unprotected javelin light spear
1 x 10 base Families: Mob poor
1 x 4 base Cavalry: LH average unprotected javelin light spear
1 x 6 base Cavalry: LH average unprotected javelin light spear
1 x 8 base Warriors: MF average protected impact foot sword
3 x 8 base Slingers: LF average unprotected sling
2 x 12 base Warriors: MF average protected impact foot sword
1 x 8 base Warriors: MF average protected impact foot sword
IC + 3 x TC
(all troops are undrilled)
Game 1 versus Thorsten and Thomas with Ptolemaic. Technically this was a singles comp, but Thorsten couldn’t make it for the second day, so he was teaching his (very inexperienced) second day stand-in how to use the army on the first day.
I won initiative and picked Agricultural land. We ended up with open fields on my flanks and on the Ptolemaic base edge, a gentle hill on my base edge, and a plantation in my front right. The light green area in the centre of my side of the table is just to hide a rip in the underlying table surface.
I deployed with a view to skirmishing the front of the enemy while attacking on the flank with all the terrain. My opponents simply lined up to push me off the table, but also sent 1 BG of cavalry on an outflanking march aimed at my camp. This entered the table on turn 3. Meanwhile the Galatian cavalry (superior armoured light spear swordsman) had forged ahead, absorbing everything my LH could throw at them with impunity, and the lancers had swung out to the flank. I had sent one BG of chariots over to the same flank help out. On the other flank, the Ptolemaic MF had come forward towards the plantation, but now decided to turn round and retreat back to the field. They had tempted my warriors out into the open and the elephants began to swing round towards them through an ineffective barrage of sling stones. Some of the pikemen also headed across to protect the flank of the elephants. In the centre my slingers fell back in good order under the IC, inflicting occasional cohesion and base losses on the phalanx.

Events unfolded largely independently in each area.
On my extreme left, the lancers charged my light horse in the open field and were then charged in turn by the chariots, which had a POA at impact for light spear because the lancers were not in the open. In melee, he had a POA for swordsman, but I had 2 dice per base and a commander in the front line. In due course the lancers broke. The pursuing chariots drew off a BG of pikemen that had been left behind to bolster its morale earlier.
The Galatians eventually caught a BG of light horse and routed it off the table. They then turned round to fight the other LH that were now shooting at it from the rear, but lack of time prevented any further resolution of this situation.
One BG of pike caught some evading LF near the table edge. Only one base was in contact and both its ++ impact dice missed, while the LF rolled a 6 on their one dice. The cohesion test saw the pikemen ( already disrupted from shooting) drop to fragmented. In melee I was at a single - but had 4 dice against 2. However, I lost the melee and dropped to fragmented myself. Next turn the slingers fed in more bases so it was still 4 dice versus 2 and the pikemen broke.
The outflanking cavalry reached and looted my camp, but were then routed by the 12 bases of warriors that I had moved across to deal with them.
The fight near the plantation was won by the elephants and pikemen, not surprisingly. My attack on the thorakitai started well when I disrupted them at impact and killed a base. However, I was still a POA down in the melee, and even with 8 dice versus 4 I lost and went fragmented. In the longer term I would probably have lost the game on this flank, but time was called. I had lost 9 AP out of 13 needed and killed 6, also out of 13.

Reflections: I was rather surprised at the ineffectiveness of all my shooting. The skirmishers broke only one BG, and that was in close combat and against the odds. On the other hand, by the end of the game the phalanx had been separated into isolated BGs, but I had nothing in place to exploit this. My lack of caution with the warriors not staying in the terrain where the elephants and pikemen couldn’t get me proved costly. I should have allowed more time for the skirmishers to do damage and reserves to arrive.