Here are a set of houserules called Fields of Honor. I can’t tell whether they’re houserules FOR the Fields of Honor set, or a set of houserules BASED on Fields of Honor. I lean toward the latter. They look like a fairly complete set that bears more than a passing resemblance to the original Fields of Honor set published a decade or so ago by Pinnacle.
Month: August 2020
100 Years War Crecy Rules
Eric Wood offers a set of free wargames rules for playing the 100 Years War battle of Crecy
Uniforms of Norway and Sweden 1500 – 1909
Here’s a large selection of color plates of the uniforms of Norway and Sweden from 1500 – 1909.
Space Station Zemo Print and Play
Space Station Zemo originally was published in Inquest magazine in 1998. It’s very hard to find a secondhand copy these days, so a helpful gamer scanned the game and posted it it for people to read, and perhaps recreate for personal use.
Men At Arms Medieval Wargaming Rules
Men at Arms is a set of one-brain-cell rules from the fertile brain of Jim Wallman. Jim writes:
These are rules for playing a wargame with toy soldiers. It is intended for several players – say 4 or more. Players control significant leaders – the key lords or knights, who in turn have contingents of fighters under them. Why �One Brain Cell�? Well, many sets of wargame rules these days are horrendously complicated, with big thick rule books to read, dozens of additional books to get (at unreasonable expense) and exceptionally complicated rule mechanisms that take ages to work out. My brain is too simple for this, so I tend to write rules that one require a single brain cell to use and understand. This tends to make games easy to learn and play, and, amazingly, are just as much fun as the dense and complicated game rules for which you have to pay a King�s ransom. Odd, isn�t it?