My little boy had to write an essay about the Battle of Stamford Bridge this weekend and mentioned that it would make a great wargame. Quite right too! I am sure that some of the magazines have had scenarios before and maybe it was covered in one of the WAB supplements (Shieldwall?). Can't check as I am in Dubai at the moment. At least there is no temptation here to start up another army just becuse I am visiting somewhere!
So maybe I will have to put my Early Saxons on hold and paint some late Saxons! For wargaming purposes I split the Saxons into three periods: Early Saxons from the Romano-British period (Musketeer make the best ones by a mile), early Anglo-Saxons to take on the Vikings (Kind Alfred period) and late Anglo-Saxons (1066 period). Unfortunately they all look different and finding figures I like for the later period isn't easy. Gripping Beast do some but the range isn't very large. Crusader have a nice range but they are from one of his shorter figure ranges. I have some Black Tree Design ones but they are very variable. I quite like the new Foundry figures but they don't have any kite shaped shields (although GB do them). Maybe I will get some of the Foundry Saxons and give some kite shields (I have a few anyway) as the look stylistically similar to my Foundry and Artizan Vikings.
I have a WAB Stamford Bridge orbat/scenario at home somewhere I think - at least I used to, as I started building up a Crusader/Gripping Beast Saxon army at one stage and I have loads of painted (but unbased) Foundry Vikings from years back. I'll try to dig it out for you. From memory, if came from the old Wargames Journal website.
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I make my second year undergrads design a board wargame as their coursework and it works as a teaching tool, but I guess using miniature wargames to teach history to younger kids would be good too - in fact, I remember seeing that some gamer in Virginia does a kids summer camp based around miniature gaming, but I can't remember the exact reference right now. I blogged my own experiement at mikecosgrave.com
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