
A is a LH BG
B and C are Knights
Red are Knights
Red declares a charge on A, A is going to evade when it gets to that point in the turn sequence, what can B and C do?
Bonus question
Does Red roll a VMD?
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they are obviously highly evolved knights of the Order of Santa Claus, dressed in traditional manly, martial and totally, like, powerful red. So B and C, dressed in the ruddockian nancy-boy green of the Order of Santas Little Helpers, will sit there quivering in fear as the Santa Clauses thunder towards them. Also that dodgy glass of unpasteurized milk someone left out on the table last night, which they really should not have drunk, will have given them dysentery. Frankly it couldn't be worse, so with the Santa Clauses about to charge down their dribbling chimneys, they will both rout in total and abject fear before contact, throwing 12 on the VMD and fleeing off table. That's the last time Santas Little Helpers will steal the milk for sure.Red are Kingihts




You would allow a step forward even if there is no contact with a unit at the end of the normal charge distance? Page 54 says the step forward happens after legal contact is made if it will get more bases into contact.If the LH now evade, red charges full move, and I think steps-forward into C with the right-hand base(odd!).


Ah yes, good point, thought it was odd. For the purposes of determining targets, as we don't know if the LH will evade, C is a legal target when the charge declaration is made.bbotus wrote:You would allow a step forward even if there is no contact with a unit at the end of the normal charge distance? Page 54 says the step forward happens after legal contact is made if it will get more bases into contact.If the LH now evade, red charges full move, and I think steps-forward into C with the right-hand base(odd!).

You can't step forward unless there has been a legal contact. Which there isn't if the LH evade.peterrjohnston wrote:Serious answer:
At the point in the game sequence red charge, the LH haven't evaded (they could test to stand). It's hard to tell from your diagram, but if C is contactable by red stepping forward the right hand base from the "theoretical" line of contact with the LH, C is also a "legal" charge target, so cannot intercept. No VMD as per usual if not all targets evade.
If the LH now evade, red charges full move, and I think steps-forward into C with the right-hand base(odd!).
B could also possibly intercept this, I think you intend this from your diagram (in which case more bases from red would step forward).
Santas Little Helpers will now rout as per my previous answer

Crikey, your basing of the reds is rubbish. Oh, and I take it you meant the LH are actually at 4MU and not the 4MU plus GT that you've drawn?philqw78 wrote:The front of C is less than 30mm, a base depth , further than the front of A from red.

If they were further than 4 MU there would be no charge Graham.grahambriggs wrote:Crikey, your basing of the reds is rubbish. Oh, and I take it you meant the LH are actually at 4MU and not the 4MU plus GT that you've drawn?philqw78 wrote:The front of C is less than 30mm, a base depth , further than the front of A from red.

Only those bases that make contact by step forwards may move forwards. So the centre does not need to move, in fact cannot, just the right hand base, which will make contact and slide less than two and still be in contact with its BG.grahambriggs wrote: You can't step forward unless there has been a legal contact. Which there isn't if the LH evade.
A picky person would suggest even if the LH stand to take the charge there is no steps forward:
"To step forward after initial contact, slide any files of your battle group not yet in contact straight forward until the front base makes contact with enemy bases, subject to the following conditions:
No bases can be stepped forward more than 2MUs from the original line of contact.
Every stepped forward front rank base must end in contact with an enemy."
It kind of depends what you mean by "any". If you mean 'all of them that aren't in contact with the enemy' you could argue that no step forward occurs here. As the centre two bases hit no-one, which breaks the second bullet.
