dptdexys wrote:
But this rule isn't trying to represent a bayonet charge or a charge of any kind.
The rule that tries to represent that situation is the Engage action, which doesn't allow your troops to go off and attack random units, in fact it severely limits your troops to attacking one force/one intermingled force only.
Which counter charge is part of. So your troops should pile into the swirling melee not the random troopy standing off to the side.
dptdexys wrote:
The "counter Charge" rule represents the force being attacked trying to retaliate and possibly getting into better positions to repel the assault.
Exactly, and troops should go with their own to defend.
dptdexys wrote:
There are countless situations through history where "feint attacks" are used to draw off defenders from the real attack or "feint retreats" to draw defenders into an ambush.
Sure there is. But these are specific attacks not random troops standing off yonder. Don't defending forces get to assess the situation? This is my biggest beef - there's not even a test to work it out.
"Sorry lads I think the random artillery gun should be a priority target even though there's a screaming horde charging our front..."
The fact you have no say in it is just a weak representation, not a good one. Particularly when the rules go on to say that an engagement is a swirling melee and are supposed to play out that way. It's a double standard.
I could understand the wording if the closest enemy unit was about to take part in the engagement as a support fire unit, but it doesn't.
Sure you can argue god's eye etc but then that's part of a bunch of situations in game so it's consistent - why remove that element when other situations don't?
dptdexys wrote:
This is what "counter charge the closest enemy unit" represents very well IMO.
No worries, I just heartily disagree with you.
dptdexys wrote:
Does that then mean all the great military leaders through out history must be considered to be gamey if they've managed to draw enemy forces away from the main fight instead of great tacticians or strategists.
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No but then they weren't playing with an ambiguously written rule.
