lunes, 9 de marzo de 2020

Scenario C- Parias Wars Early 1086, One More Time

Once again, a disclaimer.
English is not our first language, so this AAR will be far from perfect, in its writing nor in the gameplay. You’ll probably find many mistakes we made, some of them we noticed just after playing, or when it was too late to fix them, but we may have missed many mistakes, please tell us where we messed up the rules,we would love to play the game properly. You’ll also find many misplays, some of them we acknowledge during this AAR, some others we’re not experienced enough to have noticed, as with the rules mistakes, feel free to comment on anything you’d have done differently, we’ll take note of it.
I tried to record as many dice rolls as I could, but as we tried to play as fast as possible not all of them are here, any of those we have recorded are between brackets [ ] . 

We decided to try again the same scenario, mainly because as we messed up with our coin management, we wanted to try it again to see if it was really balanced whenever the players didn’t go nuts and end up wasting all the money and loot. I also decided to try to survive without calling the Almoravids, just to see how far the Taifa kingdoms would be able to stymie the Christian onslaught. Julio (that´s me, the bold guy) was mainly focused on making all of his lords fight through the whole campaign, and as such he played a bit more carefully. (No gung-ho cristians this time)

Turn 1

Arts of War

The Christians drew Mesnada (C12) that went to Álvar Fañez (a bit later in the game the christian player reflected that putting in on Sancho might have been a better idea, thus having 3 Lords with 4 command in play) and Cavalgadas (C17) which was attached to Sancho.
The Muslims drew Aqqara(M12) which went to Al-Mustain II and Count of Barcelona (M23) which went to Al-Mundir. The catalan lords seem to be fans of the muslims.(Those frankish traitors)

Pay

Sancho and Alfonso paid 1 coin each in the christian side, while all but Al-Mutamid did the same in the muslim side.

Muster

Alfonso unluckily failed twice to muster Pedro Ansúrez, but got him out of his castle with his last levy action [6,5,3]
Álvar, more convincing than his king, mustered García Ordoñez in the first attempt [1] and brought up some of his vassal reinforcement, with Pelagio Pelaez (1 sergeant and 1 militia)
Sancho bought some new weapons from his neighbours, now having Ballesteros (C2), and called Armengol IV of Urgell with his knight and men-at-arms units to his banner.
Abd-Allah made the Guadalquivir(M19) fleet available to the muslims.
Al-Mutawakkil trained his men with Harbah (M5).
Al-Mutamid decided to pick up some bowmen Alrama (M4) and made the best breeds of horses available to his brethren Andalusians (M10)
Al-Mustain II, seeing the more than probable attack from the infidels, decided to muster some Ribat Monk (M6) to protect his frontiers.
Al-Mundir used his levy action to muster the Count of Barcelona with a coin (as we seem unable to read the rules properly, even though we both have read them half a dozen times, we somehow missed that mustering forces without markers don’t cost any levy action…)

Call to arms

The Christians, decided to Reconcile with Rodrigo, granting the muslims 2VP. 
The Muslims decided to Uphold the dynasties and send off the Almoravids for now, earning another VP.

Campaign

García Ordoñez activated first, moving to Calahorra and supplying himself to feed the troops.
Al-Mutawakkil marched to Mérida, also supplying to feed the troops. It seemed that each player decided to start the offensive on opposite sides of Iberia.
Sancho I supplied twice and the ravaged Barbastro thanks to Cabalgadas, thus shifting once Al-Mundir.
Al-Mutawakkil marched to Coria, ravaging the land and starting a siege, feeding the troops from the provender obtained. (somehow I messed this up, even though we did this right in our previous game, I ravaged at the same time as Istarted a siege, which is not an option as the command ends at the moment you start a siege)
Pedro Ansúrez marched south to Tranduero, preparing to defend Coria in the future. He also supplied himself to make sure his troops were well fed.
Al-Mustain II moved to Tudela, in preparation for a defence of the castle there, supplying his troops.
Álvar marched to Nájera, supplied there, then went to Calahorra, where he foraged with his remaining command, ensuring the provender for his army.
Al-Mundir marched to Huesca, this time not willing to risk a fight with Sancho as he was better prepared than in previous games, he just stood nearby to go wherever he would best support his nephew, grabbing some supplies for his large contingent.
Alfonso marched to Calahorra, gathering his hosts.
Al-Mutamid marched to Mérida, preparing to aid the western offensive and supplying from there.
Sancho  cautiously decided to wait and not throw his troops against Al-Mustain, he decided to tax his people.
Al-Mustain II supplied twice, seeing that he might need to hold for a long siege… or at least escape to Zaragoza
Alfonso then foraged and marched to Tudela with his entourage, where Al-Mustain II decided that Tudela might not be such an important place… Alfonso bypassed the fortress there and was only prevented from ravaging the lands thanks to the Ribat Monks [4].
Al-Mundir decided that supporting his nephew in defence of Zaragoza was the best plan, he moved there and supplied his troops.

At the end of the campaign, wastage took 1 provender from Alfonso and Sancho, while Al-Mutamid left 1 cart behind.
Somehow at this point we had a collective brain fart and we decided that we were only allowed to have a card in play for each lord on the map. Not 2 “this lord capabilities” plus up to the total number of lords in “side capabilities”. As such I discarded Ribat Monks and Alrrama, convinced not only of that limit, but also that it was enforced at this point, not at the beginning of the campaign phase… We might have to stop playing just after lunch, either that or buy some better brains in the black market...





Turn 2

Arts of War

The Christians drew Drought (C5) and decided to use it immediately, as the memory of the effect camels had on the previous game was still fresh. (That was outrageous) The other card was held.
The Muslims drew Fatwa(M9) adding a Jihad marker to Talavera. As the Christians, they held to the other card.

Pay

No one got paid.

Muster

Alfonso, Álvar and García were unable to muster because they were in enemy territory.
Sancho brought some carts with him to ensure good supply lines.
Pedro Ansúrez levied Martín Flaínez (1 knight, 1 sergeant and 1 men-at-arms) and took some Adalides(C7) with him.
Al-Mutawakkil was in enemy territory so he couldn’t muster.
Al-Mutamid trained his men in the ancient rock slinging arts Slingers(M7), and built some Battering Rams (M14) wanting to see Coria fall. (Somehow, I totally missed the Arrada(M1) capability, which would’ve been much better for the job…)
Al-Mustain levied his Tudelan sergeants.
Abd-Allah brought bows for all his men Alrama(M20)
Al-Mundir levied his Tortosan sergeants.

Call to arms
The Taifa Lords cried out “¡Al-Andalus va bien!”, and the Almoravids stayed in Africa for a bit more.

Campaign

Pedro Ansúrez supplies himself and marches to Tormes.
Al-Mutamid supplies twice and moves to Coria
Sancho supplies and then moves laden to Huesca, where he sieges and the christian player uses the Surprise(C10) card to storm the fortress. This was our first storm ever, but we thought ourselves mentally prepared for the massacre… This whole game demonstrated that we were never prepared for this.
1st round of storm:   
The Muslim garrison hits twice, one of those hits was avoided by the hastened siegeworks of Sancho (1,4) the other one hit a unit of men-at-arms that held strong [1]
The Christian ballesteros responded in kind, but the shot didn’t get over the walls [1]
In the melee 2 Muslim hits surpassed the siegeworks [2,4,5] but once again the men-at-arms held firm and avoided routing [1,2]
In the Christian melee, as they were better prepared, 4 hits weren’t avoided by the walls [1,3,5,6,6,6,2] but it seems that this was the day of great defense for men-at-arms, and no routing happened [3,3,1,2]
    Sancho decided to keep pushing
2nd round of storm:   
    This time, muslim missiles are more accurate, both going over the siegeworks [4,6] and one routing a men-at-arms unit [1,6]
    But this shooting let them exposed as the christians also routed one men-at-arms with their shooting with a [6] trespassing the walls and a [4] sealing the deal.
    The muslim melee is luckluster once again [1,6] and [2] with men-at-arms still strong.
    The Christian melee wasn’t better, as the walls stopped most of it [1,1,2,3,4,5] and the men-at-arms shrugging off the remaining hit [1]

With the storm a failure, Sancho isn’t able to recover his routed men-at-arms[5], so he prepares to keep the siege.
Al-Mutamid, jealous of the eastern storming, decided to try his luck on the business.
1st round of storm:   
The Christian garrison hits twice, the siegeworks don’t stop of the shooting [4,5] and a sergeant unit routs [1,6]
The Muslim shots are all avoided by the walls [1,2]
The Christians seem to be doing well in the melee at first but after avoiding the siegeworks [6,6], no one routs as the men-at-arms stand their ground [2,2] (at this point in our brief Almoravid “career” I think that men-at-arms have saved more hits than knights have… the true heroes of the game)
The Muslims demonstrate their prowess failing to do anything in the melee [1,1,6] and [1]
The sergeant isn’t able to regroup [6] and Al-Mutawakkil shifts, as he clearly wasn’t prepared for the “Stormy Weather”


Pedro Ansúrez forages twice, as he wasn’t totally sure of being able to confront the missile superiority of the muslim forces sieging Coria.

Al-Mutawakkil keeps up with the Stormy weather.
1st round of storm:   
The garrison shoots decently over the walls [1,3] and rout a light horse unit [,6]
The muslim javelins work quite well [1,1,5,6] and rout some men-at-arms and a militia [4,3]]
The remaining militia fights fiercely and routs another light horse [2] [5]
And the remaining muslims troops are unable to hit through the walls [1,1]
In the aftermath no light horse recovered [2,6], and both muslim lords shifted, paying up some coin from Al-Mutamid to avoid Al-Mutawakkil going home. 

García Ordoñez, ravages Tudela and supplies himself
Al-Mundir isn’t sure what to do, surrounded by too many Christians, decides to just supply himself (I should have tried to go against Sancho here... but I was a bit nervous about the huge army in Tudela)
Álvar Fañez marches to Jaca, and forages there.
Al-Mustain, as nervous as his uncle, decides that only a bath full of coin would make him at ease, and taxes his citizens.
Alfonso decides that this isn’t the correct time for a fight in Tudela and retreats to Calahorra, to prepare for the next campaign foraging a bunch.
Al-Mundir still, far too nervous, supplies himself, while hiding...
Sancho supplies for future storms and ravages Huesca and Lérida.
Abd-Allah takes some supplies and goes to Tortosa taking some boats in the port of Almería.


At the end of campaign, as it was the final spring turn, we took out ravage tokens from Barbastro, Tudela, Huesca and Coria.
The wastage took a cart from Al-Mutamid and Al-Mustain and 1 provender from Al-Mundir.
Julio decided to discard Mesnada from Álvar, as it could be used elsewhere and I also decided to discard Guadalquivir, as I thought that I’d not need the naval transport anymore, at least at this point it was a conscious decision…




Turn 3

Arts of War

The Christians drew Berbers(C9) avoiding muster from Al-Mutawakkil and Abd-Allah. The other card was held.
The Muslims drew Fatwa(M9) once again… Putting a Jihad marker in Trujillo I promise we shuffled thoroughly, but we seem attracted to some cards. The other card was also held.

Pay

Pedro Ansúrez, García Ordoñez and Al-Mutawakkil got paid. The christians from their own coinage, Al-Mutawakkil from the taifa box.

Muster

Alvar Fañez mustered some Battering Rams (C1) and Fernando Díaz with his retinue of 1 knight,1 sergeant and 1 men-at-arms.
Alfonso mustered 2 carts and Froilá Bermudez who also has a big retinue of 1 knight,1 sergeant and 1 men-at-arms.
Pedro mustered Martín Alfonsez with 1 sergeant and 1 men-at-arms, and took his Mesnada (C11) with him.
García Ordoñez mustered 1 knight, 1 sergeant and 1 men-at-arms from his vassal Gonzalo Nuñez.
Sancho was sieging in enemy territory, so no levy for him.
Al-Mundir levied his Denian light horse.
Al-Mustain II called his Huescan sergeants to arms
Abd-Allah, forgetting totally that he could not muster because of the previous event, took Hassam(M11)
Al-Mutawakkil and Al-Mutamid were sieging Coria, so they couldn’t levy.

Call to arms
Almoravids? We don’t have them here… Once again the muslims decided that they didn’t need the help… Clearly a mistake...

Campaign

Álvar Fañez, gets some supplies, moves to Huesca and uses Surprise (C10) (we did shuffle… we promise)
1st round of storm:   
The muslim garrison routs a sergeant thanks to their crossbows[2,3,6] [3]
They fare similarly in the melee [2,5,6] and rout a sergeant[4,2]
The overwhelming strength of the christians is noted at this point and the dice weren’t very affectionate… [5,5,5,5,6,1,6,1] 6 hits going over the walls, and the with [6,2,5,5] everyone died in the fortress.
The only good thing for the muslim was that none of the sergeants recovered after the routing.
Abd-Allah moves to Lérida and supplies three times there. Preparing for a siege
Pedro Ansúrez,  supplies twice and marches to Coria, where the muslims decide to retreat, as with the previous losses from storms made them too fragile. Pedro bolstered by the muslim cowardy, moves to Alcántara to siege. Al-Mutawakkil fed his troops with loot he should have left behind… but at this point we were playing a bit too quickly and didn’t notice until afterwards, and Al-Mutamid shifted.
Al-Mutawakkil, moves to his seat in Badajoz and supplies himself, preparing for the possibility of Pedro going towards the city.
García Ordoñez supplied himself
Al-Mutamid seeing that for this campaign he would not be able to confront Pedro’s forces, decides to forage to ensure supplies for the future.
Alfonso supplies twice and marches to Tudela with García to start a siege
Al-Mundir picks up some supplies. He was waiting for the Christians to divide their forces, but it seemed that they would not do so…
Sancho goes to Barbastro to siege.
Al-Mustain II supplies twice, the muslim player lamenting his command order choice, as this would have been the perfect moment for Al-Mundir to hit Sancho or Alvar alone.
Álvar advances to Barbastro, to support Sanchos siege.
Al-Mundir seeing that there would not be a really good opportunity, decides to go for a suicide attack on Barbastro.
1st round of battle:   
    Christian missiles rout a sergeant [6]
    The muslim player used Spear Wall(M15)to absorb 3 of the cavalry hits and the christian Cavalry rout 2 men-at-arms [1,2,6,2,6,3]
    Muslim cavalry rout just a serf, as the knight shrug off the hits [2,1,1,4,3]
    Christian infantry hits hard and a muslim knight falls [2,4,3,5]
    Muslim infantry rout 2 men-at-arms [4,5]
2nd round of battle:   
The muslims seeing that they had too much damage, decide to concede the field, in a good moment as the cavalry hit hard, routing everyone [6,6,4,4,1,4]
Al-Mundir goes to Lérida and there he recovered 2 men-at-arms [1,1,6], 2 sergeants [2,3], 1 knight [2,6] and 1 militia [1] he paid some taifa coins to avoid disbanding.
    The Christians recover 1 militia [1] and 1 men-at-arms [2,4] and feed with no problem.

Pedro Ansúrez,  stormed Alcántara.
1st round of storm:   
The garrison downs some men-at-arms, once again thanks to the crossbows[2,3] [3]
In the melee they fail to take another men-at-arms down [4,4] [3,3]
The Christians then smashed the defenders [1,2,3,3,5,6,3,3,4] [1,4,2] conquering Alcántara. We here misplayed once again, there should only have been 6 hits as this was a Castle.
The men-at-arms recovered and the troops fed with the spoils from the storming.
Al-Mutawakkil, seeing his taifa attacked by the Christians did the best he could… taxing his citizens to ensure enough money to run away.
García Ordoñez stormed Tudela
1st round of storm:   
Between shooting and melee the garrison fell 2 sergeant and a men-at-arms [5,6] [1,5] [3,3,4] [3,6,4]
The Christians were unable to pass over the walls
We didn’t record whether the routing troops recovered or not.
Al-Mutamid took some more supplies



At this point we did the end of campaign but didn’t record anything, as we were not going to continue playing. The muslims were winning by 1 ½ VP, but it was clear that they could not confront the huge Christian armies without the Almoravid support, so we awarded the Christians the victory.

Our Storming attempts where pretty bloody and gave questionable benefits. You need to prepare during several cards to build up your siege markers so your troops are not decimated for nothing. Meanwhile you have to provide your lords there and force your opponents to do the same if they have lords involved. It seems to us that Storm is a job for an unique contingent maybe with screening from friendly lords in nearby locales because each siege action would force them to feed if they were at the same locale aswell. All in all it makes perfect historical sense and we like the rule but we hate the effect.

domingo, 23 de febrero de 2020

Scenario C- Parias Wars Early 1086

First of all a disclaimer.

English is not our first language, so this AAR will be far from perfect,
in its writing nor in the gameplay. You’ll probably find many mistakes
we made, some of them we noticed just after playing, or when it was
too late to fix them, but we may have missed many mistakes, please
tell us where we messed up the rules,we would love to play the game
properly. You’ll also find many misplays, some of them we aknowledge
during this AAR, some others we’re not experienced enough to have
noticed, as with the rules mistakes, feel free to comment on anything
you’d have done differently, we’ll take note of it.
I tried to record as many dice rolls as I could, but as we tried to play
as fast as possible not all of them are here, any of those we have
recorded are between brackets [ ] . The same day we played this
scenario we received a rules update so some of the things will be
incorrect by now.
Julio played Christian side and the Muslims were controlled by
Ganix. After the deployment the Muslim player started complaining
and trying to “solve” the more than probable supply problems of the
Almoravid lords, thinking how he could prepare to manage their
movements without getting in too much trouble for the lack of provender.

Turn 1


Arts of War

The Christians drew Bishoprics(C22) and García Jimenez (C10). This
second card went to waste as both lords able to use it were not in play
at the moment. Bishoprics were put under the map as it’s not a “This
Lord” capability .
The Muslims drew Harbah (M5) which was granted to the emir of
Badajoz Al-Mutawakkil and Count Of Barcelona (M23) which Al-Mundir
took thinking about a quick campaign against Aragón.

Pay

The Chistian player paid one of Sanchos coins to shift him to the right
so he would be on par with the other lords.

Muster

Sancho mustered García Ordóñez with a roll of 2 and levied Sancho
Armengo IV of Urgell, getting 1 knight and a men-at-arms with him
Álvar Fañez mustered Pedro Ansurez with a 3 and got the Cabalgadas
capability to ensure good ravaging.
Alfonso levied 2 carts and Pedro the bishop of León (provided by the
bishopric capability) for a knight and a men-at-arms.
Abd Allah got some Siege Towers with the idea of discarding them to
bring in Yusuf later.
Al-Mundir mustered the troops from the count of Barcelona capability,
getting 2 knights and 2 men-at arms.
Al-Mutawakkil got an additional cart.
Al-Mustain levied 1 sergeant from his Huescan vassal.
Al-Mutamid got 2 capabilities Andalusians and Guadalquivir.

Call to arms

Yusuf was called at this point, discarding the aforementioned Siege
towers capability.

Campaign

Álvar Fañez activated first march to Calahorra and then foraging and
ravaging Tudela thanks to Cabalgadas, he fed his troops with the loot
provided by the cabalgada.
Al-Mundir supplies his troops with 3 provender.
García Ordoñez marched to Tudela and started a siege there.
Al-Mustain supplied and marched towards Tudela, while the muslim
player said “We’ve come here play”, expecting a disaster in the
upcoming battle.
1st round of battle :
The Christian cavalry inflicted 3 hits, the hits were assigned first
to the light horse [4], then to the men-at-arms [5,5], routing all
three units.
Muslim cavalry inflicted 2 hits, routing the serfs and light horse [2]
Christian infantry inflicted 1 hit routing the muslim militia.
2nd round of battle 
The Muslim player seeing that he had succeded in the combat
as predicted, decided to concede.
The Christian cavalry then hit twice, routing a sergeant
The Muslim then hit ½ and at this point we noticed that we
messed up the whole combat, because we didn’t round up
the half hits, even though we did so in both our previous games…
Playing while both being sick made us a bit too prone to
mistakes. We decided to ignore the mess up and continued
the game remembering to do this correctly in any other battles.
The muslim hit routed one militia from García.
Al-Mustain, defeated had to retreat to Zaragoza, thinking
about his bad command choices… luckily for him, all of his
troops but a militia were recovered after battle. He rolled
a 4 and shifted 2 times getting him to the 8 box (he shifted
once before this turn “thanks” to ‘Álvars previous ravage)
García was not so lucky and none of his troops recovered
from the battle. 
Before feeding Al-Mustain paid 2 coins to go back to the 10 box,
trying to avoid dying so soon.
Álvar Fañez seeing García’s success moved to Tudela, leaving
a provender behind, and foraged twice [1,2] and feeding his troops.
Al-Mundir seeing his nephews battle prowess decided that his
death would benefit him in the long run and instead of marching
to help him, got some supplies and marched to Huesca, wishing
that his Barcelonese allies would give him the upper hand against
Sancho.
García Ordoñez sieged at this point, failing [3,4], both he and Álvar
fed his troops without problem.
Al-Mundir marched to Jaca where Sancho decided to defend his
land.
1st round of battle :
Christian cavalry got 4 hits, only routing one men-at-arms.
Muslim cavalry with its 5 hits routed 2 knights and a men-at-arms.
Christian infantry hit twice and nothing routed.
Muslim infantry inflicted 3 hits, and due to bad luck routed all remaining Aragonese
troops.
Disaster ensued in Aragón, as Sancho was unable to recover any of his troops
thus dying defending Jaca. 
Al-Mundir, clearly having a lucky streak, recovered all his losses and started
sieging the mountain fortress.
Álvar Fañez sieged Tudela failing, and as García didn’t have enough to feed his
troops, making him shift once left.
Al-Mutawakkil started his campaign supplying twice, seeing an opportunity in the
west, as the attention of the Christian kingdoms seemed to be on Zaragoza.
Alfonso marched to Calahorra, seeking to support the eastern offensive.
Al-Mutawakkil marched to Coria and started a siege there.
García Ordoñez finally got Calahorra to surrender [1,4] and fed all his troops and Álvars
with the loot from the siege. Here we mistakenly awarded the besiegers with the sacking
loot when there should be no such loot, as this was a surrender
Yusuf decided to start supplying himself for the next campaign, which later proved not
to be a very wise decision as he had to drop some later in the wastage phase.

At this point the campaign ended and we proceeded to the wastage phase… seeing
that we made some dubious decisions at the beginning, our excess coins forced us
to leave some of them in this phase, when we could’ve paid some of our lords to ensure
their loyalty for some more turns. In some cases the coinage was the only reason why we
had to get rid of some of our assets, and both of us managed to decide, once again not
very wisely, to leave coins behind. 




Turn 2

Arts of War

The Christian player drew 2 held cards, but decided to use one of them immediately
Cluniacs (C15) to shift García once to the right. The other held card was Arid Terrain (C4). 
The Muslim player drew an event that really messed up the Christians plans, as the
Galician Revolt (M22) shifted García twice to the left, making him unable to do anything
to avoid going back home this turn. The muslim also held an Arid Terrain (M4) card.

Pay

García paid the coin he had, at least thus avoiding death.
Al-Mustain used a taifa coin to maintain himself on the board.

Disband

García went home to Nájera to enjoy some decent wine.

Muster

Álvar Fañez mustered his vassals Pelayo Pelaez and Fernando Díaz, adding
2 sergeants, 1 knight and a man-at-arms to his forces.
Pedro Ansurez took the Mesnada capability and levied Martín Flainez for a knight,
a sergeant and a man-at-arms.
Yusuf decided to bring on some capabilities to aid with his supplies, making camels
available for the muslim side (thus, unknowingly making the held card from the
christian side unusable) and bringing Dawud ibn Aisha with him.
Al-Mustain levied his Tudelan vassals for 1 sergeant.
Al-Mutamid took 2 carts.
All other lords couldn’t muster anything because they were on enemy territories or
were affected by event cards.

Campaign

Pedro Ansurez supplies himself and marches to Tranduero.
Al-Mundir forages thrice [2,5,5], seeing those rolls a successful siege of Jaca
seemed difficult.
Alfonso moved to Pamplona, supplying himself three times there.
Al-Mundir foraged twice [2,4] and ravaged Jaca. Noticing that he should have done
that in the previous turn.
Pedro Ansurez marched to Coria, Al-Mutawakkill thinking that his javelin armed
troops would be enough decided to stand his ground.
1st round of battle :
Muslim javelin hit 5 times making a serf and a men-at arms rout, while the
other men-at-arms heroicly withstood the volley [5,2,3,2]
Muslim cavalry inflicted 1 hit, the men-at-arms, again avoided routing[3]
The Christian cavalry hit 7 times, a lone light horse unit survives at the end
of the slaughter (militias roll 2,3,5 and light horse roll 5,3,2,2)
The Christian infantry routs the remaining light horse [6]
Al-Mutawakkil retreat to Mérida, where a light horse recovers avoiding disaster and
shifting twice to the left.
Pedro’s both units stay routed after the battle.
Al-Mutawakkil retreats to Badajoz, seeing that his opportunity of a successful campaign
vanish, and wishing to be able to keep his seat.
Alfonso, seeing himself unable to confront Al-Mundir’s forces in Jaca, decided to stand
his ground.
Al-Mundir attempts to siege Jaca and fails [6]
Álvar Fañez marches to Zaragoza, where Al-Mustain, expecting reinforcement retreats
behind the city walls.
Yusuf, supplies himself and takes a boat to Tortosa, preparing to teach some real
warfare to those decadent eastern lords
Álvar ravages both Lérida and Zaragoza, shifting both taifa lords one to the left.
Yusuf seizes his opportunity and marches to Zaragoza, but his heathen killing desires
are trumped as Álvar seeing all those moors incoming decides to run back to a better
position in Tudela, losing some of his provender, which the almoravids quickly used to
feed their horde.
Alvar marched to Jaca where Al-Mundir decided to present fight.
1st round of battle :
Muslim cavalry hits 5 times, 1 serf, 1 militia[4] and 1 men-at-arms [2,3,4] rout
Christian cavalry rout 1 militia, 3 men-at-arms and 1 knight
2nd round of battle 
Seeing that the losses were too high, the muslims decided to concede.
Muslim cavalry hit twice, routing 2 sergeants [6,6]
Christian cavalry hit 5 times routing a sergeant, while the lone surviving knight withstood
the brutal charge.
Al-Mustain retreated to Barbastro, where all but a militia regrouped. Al-Mustain used
2 taifa coins to avoid disbanding.
Álvar regrouped only his men-at-arms
After the battle, Álvar ravaged Huesca, and fed his troops with the loot.
Al-Mutawakkil decides that being at the safety of his “pacense” fortress is the correct
option and passes.

At this point, we looked at the board, and all of the Christian Lords would leave play
next turn except Alfonso. The early coin mismanagement, combined with the fact that
we forgot that we could use loot to the same effect during the pay step (even though
it is clearly stated everywhere...we seem to be unable to read properly) was disastrous
to the Christian player, while the Muslims were less affected because of the safe stash
in the Taifa box. Seeing this, the Christian player decided to concede as even with a
lead of 4 VP, having only Alfonso and the possibility to muster Eudes seemed not
enough to defend the Christian Kingdoms.



We enjoyed quite a bit the game, but found a couple things that made the game
too favorable to the muslim. The fact that the Galician Revolt (M22) occurred was
devastating, more so as it nullyfied totally the effect of the event card just used,
being unable to muster anything with Alfonso for a turn left the Christian war effort
maimed and unable to counteract properly the eastern front. And that ignoring the
fact that a vassal with all his army had to disband because of the same event, this
event might be a little bit too powerful. The fact that Camels (M16) affects all of the
muslims was also brutal, as with the decision to play that card, with just the idea of
giving the almoravids better supply management, nullified the second event card
drawn by the Christians. The other card with a similar effect that cancels an event
card is if I remember correctly Adalides(C7), and that card only affects the lord that
takes the capability. We found that having Camels(M16) affect all the muslims lords
might be a bit too strong, as it makes 2 quite powerful Christian events worthless.
We say all of this having only played short scenarios, we acknowledge that all of
this would be less noticeable in a full game. Anyway, as we just received the latest
update of rules, we are already thinking about a replay or advancing to another scenario. 
To anyone that was able to read this tedious block of badly written text,
thanks for your patience.

G.