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Wednesday, 7 December 2022

The Men Who Would be Kings

 I went to play a quick game with my regular opponent Speckled Jim last night, and he cracked open his 15mm collection for a colonial game using the Osprey rules.

I was playing the Beja or Hadenedowa, defending their village against an Anglo Egyptian force, and I didn't do terribly well, not actually getting anywhere near the enemy before being gunned down, so relatively historically accurate.

I learned a few lessons so if we play again I'll try and wait until I can charge him en masse so he can't concentrate his fire.

It was a fun game though.



Initial deployment. Some of my tribesmen in the village, the rest on the table edge nearest the camera.





The Anglo Egyptian force move forward and I try to outflank them with my camelry on the far right.... the Egyptian cavalry although inferior roll some damn lucky dice with their carbine shooting and pin me before I can contact.
Meanwhile I despatched a unit of tribesmen through the oasis , but they again get pinned.


Jim's firing line form a crescent facing the village so any Beja who stirs is targeted.

My casualties.... A sorry sight.

A fun quick game. Years since I played a colonial game, and I'm sorry my generalship didn't do the Beja justice.

As Corporal Jones would say
"They didn't like it up 'em."








3 comments:

  1. Brits gunning down the natives is exactly how that would happen.

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  2. Often the case but by no means always, and in this game both sides were almost exclusively North African ( one unit of British Naval types in the opponent's force) who were quite capable of killing each other without any British help . Killing for land/riches/power is hardly exclusively British as the history of mankind demonstrates...the side with the strongest force/biggest teeth will usually win, whoever they were. Give it a hundred years or so and the British will be being crushed under the heel of some other expansionist empire and everyone can feel sorry for them instead.

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    Replies
    1. Interestingly, one of the main catalysts for the Mahdist uprising in the Sudan, was the Egyptians overtaxing the Sudan and the British banning the slave trade , one of the Sudan's main incomes.

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