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Made in se
Member of a Lodge? I Can't Say




'Murica! (again)

I had the fine pleasure of playing a threeway (giggity) game of AoS Monday while these creazy Swedes have their post-Easter holiday We didn't do a Triumph & Treachery treatment, though we are thinking about the cards and bribes and seeing what we can import. Fyreslayers and Ogres the mercenary thing is pretty easy to fix up. So, I want to do a batrep from this amazing game we had. I took pics and jotted down highlights from each turn. Then at the end I recorded an brief discussion between the three of us for inclusion of ep 139 Combat Phase podcast which will go up Sunday night. Still, reflecting on this I think it needs more than the brief recap on the podcast.

I've seen batreps from minimal to elaborate productions for which I have neither the time nor skill But, I want something. So I figure you all encounter a wider variety of batreps than I so I'm looking for any input at all on how to do a milder batrep for this forum. I want to cover not only action in each turn but we discuss how AoS works (I know Realmgame Wars book 3 Godbeasts next week has rules for 3-4 player games, clearly they copied from us ) with combats every player turn up through turn 5 (15 close combat phases) and how it worked against us in hero phases. Most notably was the objective to hold the chaos shrine in the center but that pesky Runemaster kept turning it to lava and no one wanted risking death. Unfortunately for them, I went first round 2 and last round 3 so they had 5 player rounds of keeping away. This also happened with other command or hero abilities.

Thanks for your input!

co-host weekly wargaming podcast Combat Phase
on iTunes or www.combatphase.com
 
   
Made in us
Omnipotent Lord of Change





Albany, NY

I can probably point you towards some good examples of written AOS reports if you want, possibly including my own (as sketchy as those have been, as I haven't taken notes on any AOS matches yet). I'm also happy to help develop a template with you, and I'd also be willing to help edit if you'd like another set of eyes before publishing your report

- Salvage

KOW BATREPS: BLOODFIRE
INSTAGRAM: @boss_salvage 
   
Made in se
Member of a Lodge? I Can't Say




'Murica! (again)

 Boss Salvage wrote:
I can probably point you towards some good examples of written AOS reports if you want, possibly including my own (as sketchy as those have been, as I haven't taken notes on any AOS matches yet). I'm also happy to help develop a template with you, and I'd also be willing to help edit if you'd like another set of eyes before publishing your report

- Salvage


Yeah man, that'd be great .

co-host weekly wargaming podcast Combat Phase
on iTunes or www.combatphase.com
 
   
Made in us
Omnipotent Lord of Change





Albany, NY

Here's a selection of standout reports posted on Dakka, by author:

The Shadow - An early report but still one of the best, including both photos and breakdowns by phase. Probably the most note intensive to write, and could easily have a section added at the end of every turn for additional commentary, in italics or something to set it apart.

Malduran - Collection of his Throne of Skulls experience playing O&G. Likewise broken out into phases, but with a bit of writing and fudging where needed. Photos abound but don't run the thing.

DiscoKing - Last stand of the Von Carsteins, told almost entirely in photos with summaries of turns. Not bad if you've got a lot of photos to work with, and of course could be expanded with specifics if you have them.

Charles Rampant - Fresh recap of an AOS tournament. Brief game summaries accompanied by photos as available, not intended to go into great depth due to multiple games.

Boss Sausage - My own recap of an AOS event. Without many photos I made BC maps of deployments, followed by turn by turn breakdowns, without really setting phases so strictly apart. I'd note that I was using bold for ability names and italics for spells, with brief explanations in parentheses for what they do. Made sense to me

It sounds like you don't really want phase-by-phase breakdowns, but could do turns, probably with a comments section following that turns action? Might look like this:

Turn One
Army 1 does stuff.

Army 2 does stuff.

Army 3 does stuff.

We talk about the stuff we did, why we did it, etc.

Turn Two
Army 2 does stuff.

Army 1 does stuff.

Army 3 does stuff.

More talking about what happened, why AOS is whack, etc.

And so on. (Not sure how you handled turn order, but we can probably figure out in context, if each army is separated out clearly. Or you could preface with "Orcs: Blah blah", "Chaos: Blah blah", etc.)

- Salvage

KOW BATREPS: BLOODFIRE
INSTAGRAM: @boss_salvage 
   
Made in gb
Foolproof Falcon Pilot





Livingston, United Kingdom

I've done a fair number of battle reports in my time, often from tournaments, covering 8th, AoS and 40k. I prefer to read heavily photographic reports, so that is the style that I write; the photographs also help me to remember what happened. Unless you have a good memory, you will need notes if you want to be really specific about what happened in the game - this is particularly notable for Command Abilities and spells in Age of Sigmar, which are important but frequent enough that you can forget them.

Other general comments:

- Make sure to explain (succinctly) what each army had. Like, people don't care whether your Reavers have two or three special weapons, but they do want to know how many knights your opponent had. A photograph of each army, with a listing below, is probably the quickest method.

- Pick and stick to certain ways of describing the action. Using phrases like 'the left flank' repeatedly on different turns will help the reader to understand the spatial relationship of the units; don't expect the reader to have remembered who the paladins are and what they did last turn, unless you keep this kind of recurring description.

- Photographs of dice rolls are not really that interesting. This works better in certain styles of video reports, where part of the fun is seeing the action unfold; in written reports showing the dice doesn't really add anything.

- Something that is easy to forget - add your thoughts and analysis. Why did you deploy the way that you did? What were you expecting to happen when your knights charged that bloodthirster? How did the combats benefit you? As Boss Salvage says, the end of turns can be good places for this. But really, add that analysis; it is far more interesting than the simple events, as it allows the reader to understand what you were planning, and whether they want to follow your army selection/whatever.
Something that is cool, but is harder to pull off, is to have your opponent do the same. Their pre-and-post analysis on the game can be really interesting.

- There is a balance between photographs and text. Old White Dwarf reports were mainly text, with a few explanative pictures and maps to accompany. I always aspire to match this, but tend to have way more photographs and less text (even after filtering out photographs that I took for memory purposes). Their reports tended to have very clear descriptions in the text - partly because they gave different units fancy names, so that the three units of archers were all easily distinguishable. Anyway, it is worth noting that entirely textual reports, with no photographs, tend not to get many replies; while purely photographic ones are pretty but confusing. You should pick your own poison in this regard, but be aware of the consequences of that choice, and tailor your writing/photography to suit.

Anyway, just a few thoughts. Here are a couple of my own reports, which show the sliding scale of text-to-photographs:

Immense team game in 8th edition, mainly photographs

40k Orks, more text but still lotsa photographs

[edit]This may all be a bit uselessly general for your action question, but I hope that there is some value here and that it helps!

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2016/04/01 10:15:29


 
   
Made in ie
Norn Queen






Dublin, Ireland

Might be of some use for general batrep tips and tricks

http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/491936.page


Dman137 wrote:
goobs is all you guys will ever be

By 1-irt: Still as long as Hissy keeps showing up this is one of the most entertaining threads ever.

"Feelin' goods, good enough". 
   
Made in se
Member of a Lodge? I Can't Say




'Murica! (again)

thanks guys
Since the audio 12-13 minutes after the game will be in this Sunday's podcast episode I think I can take a stab at working with what I've got and post that in DakkaDakka when the show is released. I post it in warseer since its been brought up they could use some game play examples on their forums.

Obviously, any tips on improvement once it goes up are welcome.

co-host weekly wargaming podcast Combat Phase
on iTunes or www.combatphase.com
 
   
 
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