玩家评分: 7.4

拥有
Jours de Gloire Campagne IV: Allemagne 1813, de Lützen à Leipzig

桌游极客排名: 9422

本月排名变化: 82

玩家评分: 7.4

玩家人数: 2 - 5 (最佳: 2人)

时长: 120 分钟

难度: 3 (重度策略)

适合年龄:

专业评分: 5.56

语言依赖:

少量依赖

出版年份: 2011

出版商:

| Canons en Carton | Hexasim

设计师:

| Frédéric Bey

美工:

| Pascal da Silva

桌游类别:

|拿破仑时期 |战争

暂缺

Jours de Gloire Campagne is a game series designed to simulate the great Napoleonic campaigns, at the operational level and at that of the Army Corps. The rules are deliberately simple, because of the scale and with the aim of giving the players the wherewithal for relatively short and fluid games. The campaign of 1813 is the theme chosen for the revival of the Jours de Gloire Campaign series (Vae Victis n°41, n°47 and n°52), whose rules have been upgraded to a Version 2.0 for this. occasion. This game has 5 scenarios, focusing on the Germany campaigns of 1813 : Scenario 1: Waiting For the Emperor (March and April 1813) Scenario 2: From Lützen to Bautzen (April and May 1813) Scenario 3: The Spring Campaign (March to May 1813) Scenario 4: The Campaign of Leipzig (September to October 1813 Scenario 5: The German Campaign (February to November 1813) There are also specific and optional rules or "what-if ?" situations for each scenarios. The game includes one map (size A1 : 84cm * 59cm - 33in * 23.5in), 216 die-cut counters, a booklet containing rules and scenarios, player aids and 24 playing cards. Historical context: After the disaster of the Russian campaign, the debris of the Grande Armée had abandoned Berlin and retired behind the left bank of the Elbe. Napoléon was able to reconstitute an army of 300,000 men by summoning to the colors those young soldiers who soon came to be called by the name « Marie-Louise ». Europe formed a coalition against France: Prussia and Russia wanted to crush Napoléon permanently. Despite his victories during the spring and summer, Austria soon joined the side of the Empire’s enemies. Gigantic maneuvers and great battles followed one after the other within the triangle formed by Berlin, Leipzig and Dresden. Whereas his victories were no longer decisive, Napoléon knew now that a single defeat could pull down his Empire !