Persei-Aries War Resumes
Battleship at Avezzano (99 Hercules Gamma), Anglo-Japanese vs. Russo-Romans
FROM: ADVISORY OFFICE, UN HERCULES SCS REGIONAL COLONIAL CENTER
20:20 SOL GMT, 29 APRIL 2522
BREAKAUTH: 181072.18J
CLEARANCE: NATIONAL COMMAND AUTHORITY
SUBJ: ANGLO-JAPANESE ASSAULT ON CATANIA (99 Hercules Gamma)
The situation in the Third Hercules War is reaching a breaking point.
The Americans, previously humbled and sidelined by the British, have regained their footing and are about to “cash out” of the conflict with new holdings both in 99 Hercules and Gliese 649. The latter may be particularly bad for the British, as an American shipping stronghold in Gliese 639 would allow them to bypass the 99 Hercules, thus deflating the tariff revenue the British hoped to squeeze from the Americans with their 50-year lease so graciously granted by the British in the Treaty of Zubrin.
The Americans have also thrashed the Japanese at the recent Battle of Bleeding Edge (Gliese 649 Gamma-19), thus weakening Britain’s staunchest and most powerful ally in the Third Hercules War.
Britain’s other ally, the Arab League, has also been bested by the Holy Russian Empire. The Russians now have an entrenched foothold in the Khaizan Caliphate, and any immediate Arab League naval action will have to be directed toward ejecting this Russian presence before they can help the British against the Russians directly.
Perhaps most ominously, the Russian Orthodox Patriarch of Krasnaya Nadhezda and New Roman Archbishop of Catania have reaffirmed their new alliance, with Russian warships now staged in the Catania colonies (Gliese 623). Russian destroyers and torpedo corvettes have also been detected in the UN “Redemption” Mandate at 99 Hercules, specifically at the Avezzano Colony (99 Hercules Gamma). This is obviously a move to threaten British possession of Kayashenko, the 99 Hercules gas giant the British took from the Russians after a protracted campaign earlier in 2521-22.
In short, the Russians continue their efforts to forestall the inevitable British hammerblow on their Krasnaya Nadhezda (Red Hope) colonies at 72 Hercules by creating as many distractions as possible among British allies and problems along British flanks.
Finally, the British have had enough. Pairing two of their most powerful warships in the Hercules Rim with two of the most powerful Japanese ships currently operational, an aggressive move is made directly for the heart of New Roman holdings in 99 Hercules. For the British this includes the heavy cruiser HMS Agamemnon and light cruiser Retribution. For the Japanese it is the heavy cruiser IJN Kama and light cruiser Sendai Byo. The mission is simple, smash into the heart of the New Roman holdings at 99 Hercules. Cripple, destroy, or drive off any naval presence there, thus clearing the way for two Fearless class planetary assault ships to drop in elements of 3rd Marine Commando Brigade and 5th Para Brigade, outright seizing the colonies and installation on the terrestrial planet of Avezzano (99 Hercules Gamma) and its two moons.
Clearly the British aim is to crush any threat posed by the Coalition of Eagles in 99 Hercules once and for all, while also dealing a heavy blow to the blossoming Russo-Roman alliance and shutting down any additional danger to the rear of a final attack on 72 Hercules.
Unfortunately the New Romans have been building up for a climactic entry to the Third Hercules War for some time. While the Americans, Russians, Japanese, British, and Arab League battered each other senseless, the Romans were quietly bringing in ships from the Core and other sectors of Known Space, only opening hostilities when they felt they had an overwhelming force. Most significantly this includes the gigantic 347,000-ton Constantine class battleship NRS Leo Magnus, arriving at Avezzano three weeks ago after a Darkstar voyage of 117 days. Now screened by aforementioned Russian destroyers and torpedo corvettes (CPK Syekyra, Rusalka, and K-98, all part of Task Force “Admiral Lazarev”), the Roman dreadnaught’s presence unmistakably underscores this renewed Russo-Roman cooperation in the Hercules Rim.
For now, however, this hideously-powerful Russo-Roman force is alerted to the rapid approach of British and Japanese Darkstar waves, and raises steam to meet the threat. The New Roman battleship and her screen will meet the Anglo-Japanese cruiser force at the second moon of Avezzano, joining what is the largest battle to date in the Third Hercules War.
BRITISH: @damon
JAPANESE: @rasmus
RUSSO-ROMANS: @oriskany
ASSAULT VICTORY CONDITIONS (595 points)
Fun game! Talk about a NARROW victory though. I love battle ships, but the danger is so many points are tied to one ship. That is one of the reasons why I never upgraded from a Heavy Cruiser.
The problem, @gladesrunner , is that battleships are played so infrequently that we’re still getting used to them. After eight years of Darkstar they’ve appeared in maybe 15-20 games. The killer omission is an ESCORT fleet. Usually by the time a game gets big enough to include a battleship (280-400 points), few want to add another 200+ points for an escort fleet. I was actually really happy with the result of this one. As reviewed in the description, the balance on this game really game down to the last moment, the last turn, the last hex, the gravity effects WITHIN… Read more »
Thanks Jim, I emailed you about trying desperately to get a little payback against those Russians! Third times the charm.
No worries, @muakhah. Cool deal, I will set up a Skype call for my 8PM Wednesday / your 8AM Thursday. We’ll give Battlegroup Mutamid a chance to oust these Russians from the Holy Space of the Khaizan Caliphate! 😀
All ships will be ready, even those crippled last time, because TWO games have passed in the interim.*
*rough campaign rules, if a ship was crippled but survived last time, it has to “sit out” the next game while in drydock undergoing repairs.
It was a good game, at first I thought the battleship would wipe the floor with us. With most of her big guns at the back, it made the usual tactic of stern raking too dangerous, so withering her down across the front arcs and trying to stay out of her broadside seemed the most viable tactic. My doubt was the lack of punch from the British guns, accurate, but not really heavy damage with each hit. Still, it worked out in the end and was a challenging game.
Thanks, @damon. Indeed I am very very glad the battleship “seemed scary.” In previous Battleship games (including one at the end of Duchess Annabel’s War where you and @gladesrunner positively stomped a Tirpitz class) battleships often came across as lumbering white elephants … which I guess they were in naval history … unless they have a proper escort fleet and aerospace cover. Of course aerospace cover wasn’t much of an issue in this one since there really wasn’t a powerful aerospace wing. But with two upgraded Sovnya class destroyers and a K-56 class, I tried to give Leo Magnus at… Read more »
Finally, my laptop allows me to comment!
Its always beautiful when the big ships make it onto the table!
As Jim has said we have seen the Destroyers and light cruisers in tons of games but rarely the battleships. And when we do they are usually upgraded which pushes their points up even more!
Thanks, @muakhah – Indeed battleships are rare. Only one player, @aras – has progressed his commanders to take command of one (admittedly, @Gladesrunner passed on it, preferring to stick to her Iron Duke class heavy cruiser). @aras has the Scharnhorst class pocket battleship KMS Von der Tann. The only “player” battleship in the Darkstar ‘verse at the moment. Also the fasted battleship in Known Space (can keep up even with KMS Agamemnon. Honestly I think my favorite ship type is the light cruiser. Most of my favorite classes are all light cruisers, US San Antonio class, Russian Kutusov class, Japanese… Read more »
Maybe it’s just envy but I seem to always be looking at what heavy cruisers can do with the right upgrades.
Excellent, nail biting finish had me on the edge of my seat. Well played all participants.
Epic, @gremlin! Glad you liked it, and glad you’re following this project!