Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => Pikes, Muskets and Flouncy Shirts => Topic started by: BillK on July 11, 2017, 03:06:45 PM
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Has anyone played both Muskets & Mohawks and Muskets & Tomahawks?
Comparison? Thoughts?
I'm considering a game along the lines of 15-16 figs vs 20-24 figs with tribes and irregulars.
Thanks,
Bill
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Hi Bill,
Cluck here. I've played both. You saw my post on Muskets and Mohawks so should have a basic understanding of how it plays. It is really designed for small battles rather than skirmishes. The key difference between M&M and M&T is that M&M's 10-man units behave more like units in that all of the soldiers in the unit maintain a formation (even if it is "skirmish") and all perform the same action, whereas in M&T, though the units are similar in size (between 6 and 12 soldiers generally), the soldiers can perform different actions each turn. M&M shines with more units/figures than you are contemplating; M&T may give you a more engaging game experience.
If you like the THW mechanics, check out the man-to-man version for the F&IW, Long Rifle.
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Chris,
Thanks for that added bit of insight.
Bill
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I always say the ideal size for a game of Song of Drums and Tomahawks is about a dozen figs per side. I often pare it down for convention games I run, but that is pretty close to the size you're looking. It is true man-to-man skirmish with no "units"...
Here's a page with scads of AARs from a bunch of different players...
http://www.firstcommandwargames.com/song-of-drums-and-tomahawks/
Mike Demana
www.firstcommandwargames.com
http://leadlegionaries.blogspot.com/
(http://i721.photobucket.com/albums/ww213/mikedemana/Miscellaneous/LPL_bades_zpsl7op2jaz.jpg)
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Mike D., Thank You for the info.
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If your looking for a game with 15-20 or so figures a side go with Song of Drums and Tomahawks. M&T in my experience is for larger games.
Edited for some truly desperate spelling and grammar. That'll teach me to post when I'm dog tired.
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Indeed Muskets &Tomahawks is excellent, but you will have 6-8 groups of 6-12 figures each, so 50 to 80 figures per side.