Equality for Elephants!
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Equality for Elephants!
Don't you think Elephants should be treated like "foot" rather than like "mounted" when it comes to bashing their way into a fortified camp? That is, they would sack the camp with a 5-6 like foot rather than with a 6 like other mounted. ( pg 88 )
Terry G.
Terry G.
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My thoughts exactlydeadtorius wrote:I think the mounted class represents the smaller actual number of elephants than foot and I don't believe they would be any better at breaching a fortified camp than any other mounted. Us 2 legged types are better suited for running up and over those earthworks than large slow pachyderms.

Dale
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They were sober the first time...or ever? Surely not all at the same time.philqw78 wrote:wait until one of the authors sobered up enough to do FOG version 2.
Should we hold a poll to guess which is the least sober?
Do they count as sober if they drink enough to stun a Rhino but still appear to be able to tap rules into a key board?
I've been on a trek through the jungle in Thailand. Sorry to dis-illusion you guys, but elephants can go pretty much anywhere a human can. We climbed steep trails on foot in very wet conditions, slipping and sliding, only to come across very large piles of shit. As the guide said "no problem for elephant, only farang".
While mounted on the elephant we passed through a bamboo grove we couldn't have walked through as the bamboo was too close. The Elephants just shoved them aside or ripped them from the ground with their trunks. This was while walking uphill. Struck me at the time as similar to trying to breech a palisade.
Having experienced it first hand I believe elephants should count brush, vineyards and plantations as good going, anything other than very large trees doesn't slow them at all.
The argument for them to be mounted for looting would be the small amount of damage (actual looting) they would do once they broke in not the difficulty in entering the camp.
Andre
While mounted on the elephant we passed through a bamboo grove we couldn't have walked through as the bamboo was too close. The Elephants just shoved them aside or ripped them from the ground with their trunks. This was while walking uphill. Struck me at the time as similar to trying to breech a palisade.
Having experienced it first hand I believe elephants should count brush, vineyards and plantations as good going, anything other than very large trees doesn't slow them at all.
The argument for them to be mounted for looting would be the small amount of damage (actual looting) they would do once they broke in not the difficulty in entering the camp.
Andre
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What did the authors think about elephamts attacking camp? ... well just speaking for myself ..err....absolutely nothing at all.
I don't know if they are any better or worse vs a fortified camp frankly. Don't mind them being mtd, equally wouldn't object to giving them a +1. ...and never yet seen it happen. Not an issue that made the radar really.
Si
I don't know if they are any better or worse vs a fortified camp frankly. Don't mind them being mtd, equally wouldn't object to giving them a +1. ...and never yet seen it happen. Not an issue that made the radar really.
Si
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"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
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Well, it happened in one of our games recently. The elephants had pursued and remained in contact for a couple of turns, putting them deep in the enemy rear and closer to the camp than to any enemy troops, so on they went. They rolled the required "6" on the third try, looted the camp and won the game. It is just my own imagination of elephants crashing through gates or over less stout fortifications that led me to bring it up.
Terry G.
Terry G.
Hey fair enough ... my imagination roams sort of the same way ... although I think Elephants in the wild tend to avoid buildings and prefer trampling smaller items ... they are pretty smart.
My gut feel is they should be a 6 loke toher mounted rather than a 5 but willingto be convinced if anyone has any good historical example of elephnats crushing paslidaes/fences, ditches etc.
Si
My gut feel is they should be a 6 loke toher mounted rather than a 5 but willingto be convinced if anyone has any good historical example of elephnats crushing paslidaes/fences, ditches etc.
Si
Simon Hall
"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
Try reading up on Indian warfare, should get you plenty of examples. Elephants should have 5+, they might not have the ability to climb up on ramshackle ladders etc but then they would not need to as they would barge trough the palisades/gates anyways. But then there is much that could/should be done about the Elephant rules in FOG.shall wrote:Hey fair enough ... my imagination roams sort of the same way ... although I think Elephants in the wild tend to avoid buildings and prefer trampling smaller items ... they are pretty smart.
My gut feel is they should be a 6 loke toher mounted rather than a 5 but willingto be convinced if anyone has any good historical example of elephnats crushing paslidaes/fences, ditches etc.
Si
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Any good examples of them actually doing it rather than us thinking they did it.Try reading up on Indian warfare, should get you plenty of examples. Elephants should have 5+, they might not have the ability to climb up on ramshackle ladders etc but then they would not need to as they would barge trough the palisades/gates anyways. But then there is much that could/should be done about the Elephant rules in FOG.
When I was in Sri Lanka the military guys there with Elephants said they would almost certainly not charge through things any more than a horse would. They are quite sensible and like squashing small things. The impression I got was that this "deadly tank" theory we all have may be a bit mistaken.
Clearly I could read up on all warfare covered by FOG but I would be in the library until retirement ... can anyone who has done so post a few bits that might trigger thinking?
Me very interested if anyone can.
Si
Tx Si
Simon Hall
"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
"May your dice roll 6s (unless ye be poor)"
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IIRC there is a story in Kipling's "Jungle Books" in which elephants towing artillery were too cautious even to approach within artillery range of enemy fortifications, necessitating the use of draught oxen to pull the guns into final position. Presumably this was based on observation of Indian Army practice. Out of our period, but would elephant psychology have changed much? (Elephant training might have.)shall wrote:Any good examples of them actually doing it rather than us thinking they did it.Try reading up on Indian warfare, should get you plenty of examples. Elephants should have 5+, they might not have the ability to climb up on ramshackle ladders etc but then they would not need to as they would barge trough the palisades/gates anyways. But then there is much that could/should be done about the Elephant rules in FOG.
When I was in Sri Lanka the military guys there with Elephants said they would almost certainly not charge through things any more than a horse would. They are quite sensible and like squashing small things. The impression I got was that this "deadly tank" theory we all have may be a bit mistaken.
Clearly I could read up on all warfare covered by FOG but I would be in the library until retirement ... can anyone who has done so post a few bits that might trigger thinking?
Me very interested if anyone can.
Si
Tx Si
Lawrence Greaves
Re: Equality for Elephants!
Disagree Terry.TERRYFROMSPOKANE wrote:Don't you think Elephants should be treated like "foot" rather than like "mounted" when it comes to bashing their way into a fortified camp? That is, they would sack the camp with a 5-6 like foot rather than with a 6 like other mounted. ( pg 88 )
Terry G.
A Fortified Camp isn't just a bunch of sticks, it's a full redoubt. Can you imagine an elephant climbing a 45 degree hill with sticks pointing out of it at strategic places? Sure, they could use their tusks and trunks to clear the sticks, but then they have guys throwing stuff at them as well...
Nah, I don't think it would be as easy for the elephants as it would for the foot.
Additionally (and more a metagaming point of view) the chances of an opponent:
1 - having a fortified camp vs elephants; and,
2 - having the elephants move far enough through for it to attack a camp.
is so remote that I don't think it's worth a special rule for. I mean, it sounds a lot like it's happened to you, but message me next time it happens.
Ian
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I've read that Indian Animal Psychologists were far better in the pre 1500 period than during the period of the Raj.lawrenceg wrote: ...but would elephant psychology have changed much? (Elephant training might have.)
Perhaps a special rule allowing only Indian Elephants the 5+.
No, this post is not meant to be taken seriously.
Ian
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Re: Equality for Elephants!
I disagree.DaiSho wrote: Disagree Terry.
A Fortified Camp isn't just a bunch of sticks, it's a full redoubt. Can you imagine an elephant climbing a 45 degree hill with sticks pointing out of it at strategic places? Sure, they could use their tusks and trunks to clear the sticks, but then they have guys throwing stuff at them as well...
Nah, I don't think it would be as easy for the elephants as it would for the foot.
Additionally (and more a metagaming point of view) the chances of an opponent:
1 - having a fortified camp vs elephants; and,
2 - having the elephants move far enough through for it to attack a camp.
is so remote that I don't think it's worth a special rule for. I mean, it sounds a lot like it's happened to you, but message me next time it happens.
Ian
Its not a full redoubt. And there is not a 45 degree hill. The only guy throwing stuff at them are the ones that can do nothing to protect the camp when it is unfortified.
And, in this forum, things the owners found inconcievable appear to happen quite often.
Re: Equality for Elephants!
http://www.travelpod.com/travel-photo/l ... /tpod.htmlphilqw78 wrote:I disagree.
Its not a full redoubt. And there is not a 45 degree hill. The only guy throwing stuff at them are the ones that can do nothing to protect the camp when it is unfortified.
And, in this forum, things the owners found inconcievable appear to happen quite often.
http://www.uoregon.edu/~klio/im/rr/Roma ... camps2.jpg
http://lh4.ggpht.com/_kY8jkGBXjUc/RkRur ... C_0229.JPG
http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1314/997 ... 8707bc.jpg
Now, that was a quick search, but every single one of them has a 45 degree redoubt. Some of them have lasted thousands of years. These camps weren't exactly 'scratch a line in the dirt and say "don't cross that line"' sort of camps. They were full fortifications - which is why you're spending 25 points in the damned things!
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