Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2009 7:08 pm
So what happens?
You are reading lots of things into the situation in all sorts of wrong ways.spikemesq wrote:Moreover, change this part of the scenario. Same positioning of Lancers against two Cv BGs. The Lancers can hit one base from both if it charges straight ahead. This time, however, the Lancers declare a charge that will wheel to hit two bases from the Cv on the left. The Cv on the left evade. The Cv on the right are not a target of the charge because they are not in the declared path. They could intercept but choose not to or are precluded from doing so (FRAG or DISR and fail CMT). Because all targets (under the narrow definition) have evaded, the Lancers roll a VMD of 4 -- normal move.
Where do they go?
If they follow the declared path, the move is illegal because it is not directly ahead and will not result in more bases in combat during the impact phase than a full advance.
Due to your interpretation of the rules all charges must be directly ahead, but at the same time can also exist in any other dimension at the same time.spikemesq wrote:So what happens?
What am I reading into this?Hammy: You are reading lots of things into the situation in all sorts of wrong ways.
The charge is declared as on the left BG such that it avoids the right BG. If the left BG evades then the charge will pass by the right BG and nothing will be hit. That is all perfectly legal and above board.
To suggest that such a charge is illegal leads to some very 'interesting' paradoxes and is clearly wrong.
The issue that seems to be causing the problem is that you are in deed correct that the rules don't need you to declare the path of the charge until such point that it actually makes a difference. The exact path of the charge does make a difference if there are any evades or if it is possible that there could be interceptions. All initial targets of the charge must be contacted by the chargers if they move along the charge path and no BGs evade.spikemesq wrote:The RAW specifically limit what a charging BG can do. See pg. 53. I am not making that up.
Other posters insist that the charge declaration must identify the path of that charge and the target, and that the charge must stay on that path. That part is not so clear in the RAW, but whatever.
Phil's scoffing is in response to one of your earlier posts where you seemed to indicate that a charge could actually be in more than one direction at once so that a BG declares a charge and all potential targets count as being charged even if one needs a 90 degree wheel right and another a 90 degree wheel left.If those specific limitations on page 53 affect the declared charge path, then (to answer phil's dimensional scoffing) all charge paths must be straight ahead but can include a single wheel to avoid friends or to contact the same or more enemy bases.
Now you are losing me.If the move restrictions on page 53 apply at declaration, though, then the other player will not usually need a path at declaration. Unless the charger can hit the same or more bases with a single wheel, the charge direction is straight ahead. Moreover, the rules should not identify charge targets as "can be 'legally contacted'" but should state can be legally contacted within a move defined on page 53 -- two sections later and separate from the section dedicated to "legal contact."
That is a big if and it is not part of the rules.OTOH, if the restrictions apply AFTER all reactions occur (say, like the sequence set forth on pg. 52) then the actual charge can (and often will) deviate from the declared path to conform to the results of those reactions.
The point is not where the charge actuall ends up but where the charge would end up if there is no response or reaction to the charge. The rules do not consider things like what happens if your target breaks. How would you look at a situation where the left cavalry BG is fragmented? If the lancers charge them and they break then the lancers have to charge the other cavalry so theyr didn;t charge the left hand one so it didn't break so they could charge it etc.Thus, the Lancers in the example should not blow past the right BG of Cv. To the contrary, according to the move restrictions, it would have to move directly ahead to contact the BG on the right because a wheel would not result in more bases in contact.
Exactly. If a LH BG has a BG of enemy pike 7 MU to its front and a BG of LH 5MU off to the left. Without a CMT it charges the LH, the LH evade and it cannot reach, therefore the LH must go straight forward and contact the pike, but it did not pass a CMT so cannot, so it did not charge, so the target BG did not evade. Is my cat still dead?hammy wrote:The point is not where the charge actually ends up but where the charge would end up if there is no response or reaction to the charge. The rules do not consider things like what happens if your target breaks. How would you look at a situation where the left cavalry BG is fragmented? If the lancers charge them and they break then the lancers have to charge the other cavalry so theyr didn;t charge the left hand one so it didn't break so they could charge it etc.
But this logic loop does not exist in the rules. Fragmented troops take their test the moment they are a charge target. If they break and rout, the charge proceeds after all other reactions are carried out. Whether or not the fragged BG breaks, the charge is carried out.Hammy: The point is not where the charge actuall ends up but where the charge would end up if there is no response or reaction to the charge. The rules do not consider things like what happens if your target breaks. How would you look at a situation where the left cavalry BG is fragmented? If the lancers charge them and they break then the lancers have to charge the other cavalry so theyr didn;t charge the left hand one so it didn't break so they could charge it etc.
If there is an evade then the path of the charge has to be know as otherwise the evader cannot choose to evade in the direction of the charge. Where is the problem?madcam2us wrote:Besides Spikes hippie-lettuce induced ramblings, how 'bout one of you limey's get RBS to take a break from FoGR and update the FAQ to include evades with interpenetrations as a requirement for the charger to declare there path. Or better yet that the charger declares path upon declaration.....![]()
The problem is: It is simple applied logic, rule lawyers don't care for logic.hammy wrote:If there is an evade then the path of the charge has to be know as otherwise the evader cannot choose to evade in the direction of the charge. Where is the problem?madcam2us wrote:Besides Spikes hippie-lettuce induced ramblings, how 'bout one of you limey's get RBS to take a break from FoGR and update the FAQ to include evades with interpenetrations as a requirement for the charger to declare there path. Or better yet that the charger declares path upon declaration.....![]()
Stop thinking small, Jeske.madcam2us wrote:@ hammy
Neither the turn sequence nor the rules tell us that....(But is how nearly everyone (and 2/3 of SW ohio) I play vs/with agrees it should be played)
Some rule-gits out there (you know who you are) need it spelled out. From its omission in the FaQ, one could say that one doesn't have to declare the path... It gives a small advantage of deciding where/how much wheeling to do to maximize positioning in following turns.
Doubly so since the part in the RaW tells us the charging BG can wheel to go after evaders/routers. With this being an option, some feel they have the choice of their charge path after the other decides what he is going to do....
Madcam.
This is an example where your case law is not up to date. I had a similar question back in the early stage. Two points came back that are sufficient in my view. 1 nothing allows a BG to make more than a single move so therefore a single move must be selected. 2. the author RBS in particular wants us to eschew overly legal convulsions that we may have inherited from the dbx world.spikeathome wrote: Without a path, the rule on charge targets can be read to encompass all who could be legally contacted from the starting position even if they could not be charged in a single move. This may be perverse, as Hammy diagnosed, but there it is.
Yes they are. You commit to a charge its in the rules pretty clearcommitting to a declared path adds another level of charge move restrictions that are not in the rules, even when the declared path would not be valid under those restrictions after responses.
I would suggest that the following would mean that even spike can't argue:i) CHARGE PATH
Do I have to declare my charge path at the time of declaring a charge?
Although this is not normally necessary, you do need to declare the path of your charge at the time of declaration if there
are potential interceptors around, in order to determine whether your chargers will cross their zone of interception.
i) CHARGE PATH
Do I have to declare my charge path at the time of declaring a charge?
Although this is not normally necessary, you do need to declare the path of your charge at the time of declaration if any of the charges targets could evade or there are potential interceptors around, in order to determine whether your chargers will cross their zone of interception.
madcam2us wrote:
Now, how 'bout it, has anyone contacted RBS/Si about this?????