
At the mo the plans are quite small with 3 tiles of town and 6 tiles of countryside.
Given there will be approx 25 British and 75 German minis that does make for a fairly packed 90 cm square of board but it's intentional to avoid the temptation of spread out forces, flanking moves, and other such space-requiring tactics. With say 25 BEF defending a 90 cm front, there'll still be open areas as a 12 man section will fill about 30 cm of line. Essentially what I'm aiming for is approx one diminished platoon on each side's part in a bigger battle. Rather than a skirmish wargame, the intent is to zoom on at a platoon level of an imaginery battalion-level wargame.
I do have reserve plans for extra tiles for a bit more variety but they might not happen for a while.
I therefore expect that most games will comprise columns of Germans bearing down on the British in their hasty defences. That said, there were plenty of British left behind in the retreat so there's also opportunity for more skirmish-like escape and evasion games.
Posters I've pondered but in the Belgium towns I can't see much evidence of their widespread use - in France yes but not so Belgium (if anyone could further enlighten me on this it'd be appreciated).
Lampposts are an easy later addition but only if I can find or make some I like. In the smaller towns they don't seem to have been that widespread so I think it's best to finish the board before deciding on distribution. I'd also prefer that they worked so plenty to think about there.
Ah, the Boer War table. That's at the painting stage which I really want to do all at once when I have a big chunk of time and space to work. Could be a few months yet

The advantage of these WW1 tiles is that they really need to be worked on one at a time, which works for me at the mo.
