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In this episode of Tales & Tactics Beyond the Book, We ask one of tabletop design’s oldest questions, how do you capture the chaos and decisiveness of close combat at the table? Inspired by the charge and shock mechanics of GMT’s Men of Iron: Norman Conquests, we explore how wargames and roleplaying games have approached this challenge from fundamentally different angles. From the momentum driven charge tables of hex and counter wargames to the action economy of d20 systems, the granular sword fight simulations of Rune Quest and WHRP, we examine what each design philosophy reveals about what close combat actually is in action; a physical contest, a psychological breaking point, or a dramatic moment. Along the way we ask why morale, arguably the decisive factor in real close combat, remains the thing most games handle least confidently.
By Neonlithic4.3
33 ratings
In this episode of Tales & Tactics Beyond the Book, We ask one of tabletop design’s oldest questions, how do you capture the chaos and decisiveness of close combat at the table? Inspired by the charge and shock mechanics of GMT’s Men of Iron: Norman Conquests, we explore how wargames and roleplaying games have approached this challenge from fundamentally different angles. From the momentum driven charge tables of hex and counter wargames to the action economy of d20 systems, the granular sword fight simulations of Rune Quest and WHRP, we examine what each design philosophy reveals about what close combat actually is in action; a physical contest, a psychological breaking point, or a dramatic moment. Along the way we ask why morale, arguably the decisive factor in real close combat, remains the thing most games handle least confidently.

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