12 | 02 | 2012
Main Menu
Rules
Variants



Visitors

Today: 12
Yesterday: 151
Last Week: 1169
This Month: 2110
Last Month: 4769


JoomlaWatch Stats 1.2.9 by Matej Koval
010 Castulo (211 BC) Print E-mail
( 5 Votes )
37.5 %
Record a victory for BOTTOM ARMY 62.5 %
Total Plays 48 - Last played by ElwoodJohnson on 2012-02-02
Written by GMT Games   

11

May

2008

Castulo 211 BC

Carthaginians vs Romans

Historical Background
Time runs out for Publius Scipio. After several years of unbroken successes, the Scipio brothers rashly divide their armies to defeat the Carthaginians in detail. As Publius’s army nears Castulo, he realizes he is facing superior Carthaginian numbers and is in danger of being surrounded. Marching all night, his troops attack a small detachment of 7500 Celt-Iberian warriors under Indibilis blocking the Roman line of retreat. They hold long enough for the Numidian Masinissa and his elite Numidian cavalry to join the fight. Scipio’s army is not strong enough to defeat both forces quickly, and now the Carthaginian armies of Mago and Hasdrubal arrive on the field, surrounding and destroying the Roman Army. Publius Scipio is killed in the fighting. Shortly thereafter, Publius Scipio’s son comes to Spain, rebuilds and retrains the Roman army, and wins the battles of Baecula and Ilipa, avenging the deaths of his father and uncle.
The stage is set. The battle lines are drawn and you are in command. The rest is history.

War Council

Army: Carthagian
Leader: Hasdrubal Gisgo
5 Command Cards

Army: Roman
Leader: Publius Scipio
5 Command Cards
Move First

Victory
8 Banners

Special Rules
If the Roman leader Publius Scipio is lost, Carthage wins at once.

A Roman unit the exits off the Carthaginian side of the battlefield, from a center hex or a hex on the Roman right section, counts as one victory banner. The unit is removed from play.

Last Updated on Monday, 12 July 2010 15:50
 
Discuss (2 posts)
010 Castulo (211 BC)
Dec 20 2010 01:34:20
A win for Carthage. The Roman center rolled forward, annihilating and pushing back the Carthaginians in the way while pulling back the weakened units and keeping Scipio safe. The Romans had a clear road in front of them, when the Carthaginian cavalry swept around the flanks to pick off enough weakened Roman units for the win.
#1016
010 Castulo (211 BC)
Nov 13 2008 02:30:12
Solo Play

Very interesting scenario. The Carthaginians are effectively trying to stall the Roman army and also seek out and kill Scipio. The battle started well for the Romans who had several cards that allowed them to rapidly advance to towards the Carthaginian side of the battle. This was going very well as they repulsed Mago's and Masinissa's attacks. There was some damage, but Scipio held his forces together and protected the army. The slow advance would be stopped, however, once Hasdrubal pushed his contingent into conflict. His heavy infantry sliced through the Roman line almost eliminating Scipio himself. Their final banner came when they eliminated a full strength heavy unit.

Carthage 8 - Rome 5

Rome was holding their own for most of this battle. Nearly destroying the entire Carthaginian left early in the battle. They tried to push their forces forwards again, but Carthage managed to push back any units threatening to exit the field. Mago was completely useless during the battle. His entire group managed to only inflict two blocks worth of damage. The bulk of kills again came from Hasdrubal's expertly led heavy infantry who again cut the Roman line apart. However, it required a desperate gamble of flinging his unit into the power Roman line to pull off the victory.

Carthage 8 - Rome 7
#388

Discuss this item on the forums. (2 posts)

Other battles in Second Punic War (218-202 BC)

004 Ticinus River (218 BC)
005 Trebbia (218 BC)
C3i08 Cissa (218 BC)
C3i10 Umbria (217 BC)
EPIC07 Lake Trasimenus (217 BC)
006 Lake Trasimenus (217 BC)
JD88 Geronium (217 BC)
007 Cannae (216 BC)
X12 Deluxe Cannae (216 BC)
EPIC01 Cannae (216 BC)
X05 Ambush of Litana (216 BC)
JB07 Grumentum (215 BC)
008 Dertosa (Ebro) (215 BC)
EPIC06 Dertosa (215 BC)
C3i13 Caralis (215 BC)
GB05 Caralis (215 BC)
C3i07 Iliturgi (215 BC)
X47 Second Nola (215 BC)
009 2nd Beneventum (214 BC)
GB06 Third Nola (214 BC)
C3i09 Castrum Album (214 BC)
JD51 Tispasa (213 BC)
GB07 Acrillae (213 BC)
X48 Defeat of Syphax (213 BC)
X16 Herdonia (212 BC)
JD52 Siga (212 BC)
JD53 Tingis (212 BC)
JB08 Herdonia 1st (212 BC)
C3i04 Orongis (212 BC)
AC22 Ilorca (211 BC)
C3i14 Himeras River (211 BC)
JD54 Himeras River (211 BC)
X20 Second Capua (211 BC)
JB09 Herdonia 2nd (210 BC)
X02 Numistro (210 BC)
GB08 Numistro (210 BC)
JR02 Canusium (209 BC)
011 Baecula (208 BC)
012 Metaurus (207 BC)
GC01 Metaurus (207 BC)
JB06 Grumentum (207 BC)
AC23 Grumentum (207 BC)
X43 Celt-Iberia (207 BC)
C3i05 Celtiberia (207 BC)
013 Ilipa (206 BC)
EPIC02 Ilipa (206 BC)
X06 Hippo Regius (205 BC)
AC24 Crotona (204 BC)
JD113 Crotona (204 BC)
C3i11 Agathocles Tower (204 BC)
X78 Tower of Agathocles (204 BC)
014 Great Plains (203 BC)
X08 The Great Plains (203 BC)
C3i12 Cirta (203 BC)
GB04 Cirta (203 BC)
X17 Po River (203 BC)
C3i06 Po River (203 BC)
GB15 Po River (203 BC)
015 Zama (202 BC)
EPIC04 Zama (202 BC)
X22 Deluxe Zama (202 BC)

By A Web Design