Tuesday, 15 October 2024

The Other Partizan 2024, Trojan War, Durham Wargames Group


And so it came to be; The Other Partizan and Durham Wargames Group's valiant effort at pulling off a  small piece of Homer's epic with the Siege of Troy, or rather the battle as the Greeks made their first assault.

Normally at Partizan I would be running around taking pictures of games that particularly struck me as eye catching, dramatic, epic etc. but thanks to an eight hour rowing couple directly above me in the B&B, the dizziness and exhaustion that ensued etc I was unable to find the energy nor mettle to push onward with my camera and capture the show in pixels to share with you lot. I do apologise for this situation; the blame lies firmly with the rowing couple and the management of the B&B who's only response was "sorry dude!" and a flimsy promise that they would contact booking dot com! Farse. Mucho apologies to everyone who put such wonderful games on deserved every pixel of coverage and of whom I didn't manage to get around to taking any snaps due to exhaustion and dizziness!

OK, back to the toys! The actual city of Troy had been hanging out on a shelf at our club for as long as I can remember but was in need of some serious refurbishment to make it ready for the game. Given the age of the model and a good refresh it did really well to act as a centre piece for the game and is still, to this day, an amazing construction as a model made to the standards of Ian Weekly of yesteryear. 

The battle started out with a clash between the main protagonists, Menelaus, Achilles, Patroclus, Hector etc battling it out to raise the morale of their armies. As per history, Hector fought Ajax and won, Hector fought Menelaus and won, Hector then fought Achilles and lost then Paris shot Achilles in the heal and he died which gave the Trojans an extra main Character with the Greeks lost 3 Characters to the Trojans single chap!

The battle then began in earnest with the Greeks smashing the Trojans. Needless to say, the wooden horse did not remain on the beach but was scavenged and taken home! 

All the images are "clickable" should you wish to enlarge them. Just right click then hit "open Image in New Tab".































The icing on the cake for the whole game had to be Martin Gordon's beautifully done vignettes which were placed here and there in Troy itself. Again, the images are clickable if you want details:









Many thanks to Martin for organising pretty much the entire game and for the transport too. Very much appreciated buddy. 

18 comments:

  1. Great job guys. You are true ambassadors for the hobby and WAB! I didn't get back to see how the game progressed, sorry for that! I missed so much at the show. Looking forward to next year.

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    1. Cheers mon ami. We had a lot of fun- like you I didn't get to see very much of the show.

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  2. Excellent photos and a good AAR, mate. The vignettes were a nice touch.

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  3. Old or not, that's one of the best 'Walls of Troy' that I've seen. Sound slike a good game too, what rules were used?

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    1. Thanks Rob. The reason I mentioned they were old is that only one member of the club, present on the day, seems to have any idea who made the model and I didn't want to claim the glory in the event that the actual model maker was reading the blog! LOL We were using Warhammer Ancient Battles; they worked very well for this kind of "heroic" warfare. Especially the clash of the "heroes" at the start of then game.

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    1. Thanks Ray, I didn't see you at the show, were you around?

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    2. No, I've been ill and the Mrs said I wasn't allowed to go!

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    3. The boss knows best matey. I'll see you in May no doubt?

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  5. That citadel is really bugging me - I'm sure I've seen it, or at least a sketch of it, somewhere before. I've been looking through my old magazines but not found it yet - has anyone else seen it in the wargaming press of days gone by?

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    1. You might well have seen it before Rob as it's been sitting on the shelves of our club since I can remember. It must have been built for a display game of sorts- it's too good a model not to have been.

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  6. I was looking forward to watching this in action but my chest infection lingered too long so I missed the show.

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    1. Sorry to hear that David. Anything "chesty" comes with much more anciety than it used to. Hope you're fully recovered now?

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