Well, you didn't actually show a move for the British--but only ONE of the groups could have moved closer to the fort? And the dotted road would support all 4 units, right? So assuming one group had moved, are you limited to ONE combat or could you have attacked like you did AND also attack the fort with the units that moved? And then say the French had all got pushed into the fort, and the Brits had groups on all three adjacent dots. Is that THREE battles OR just one with all adjacent British strength? And now the MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION: Set the blocks up correctly, then determine how much force of a bump by a hip on the table will send them all toppling, and will they scatter so badly you can't recall what their strengths were? Ha ha!
Sorry, I'm a bit confused... The British moved the three units at Lighthouse Point to Island Battery. The dotted road supports four units so if the British had had another unit, they could have moved that one also. Because units from opposing sides were in the same position, they fought. In your turn, you are limited to moving all the units at one location, but you can move them in multiple directions. So if you move units from one location into more than one location that has units of the opposing side, then you would have multiple combats in the same turn. :) That clear things up?
And in reading these comments, it made me appreciate the fact that while you can only move from one location, you can move to multiple locations. This means the French could do a lot with a large force in Louisburg, including reinforcing lighthouse point.😊
Well, you didn't actually show a move for the British--but only ONE of the groups could have moved closer to the fort? And the dotted road would support all 4 units, right?
So assuming one group had moved, are you limited to ONE combat or could you have attacked like you did AND also attack the fort with the units that moved?
And then say the French had all got pushed into the fort, and the Brits had groups on all three adjacent dots. Is that THREE battles OR just one with all adjacent British strength?
And now the MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION: Set the blocks up correctly, then determine how much force of a bump by a hip on the table will send them all toppling, and will they scatter so badly you can't recall what their strengths were? Ha ha!
Sorry, I'm a bit confused...
The British moved the three units at Lighthouse Point to Island Battery. The dotted road supports four units so if the British had had another unit, they could have moved that one also.
Because units from opposing sides were in the same position, they fought.
In your turn, you are limited to moving all the units at one location, but you can move them in multiple directions. So if you move units from one location into more than one location that has units of the opposing side, then you would have multiple combats in the same turn. :)
That clear things up?
@@ZillaBlitz OH--forgot it was a move to make the combat, not just combat the adjacent spot.
@@pterrok5495 Ah, yes. It was probably tricky to see because I didn't want to smash all the units into the same location. :)
And in reading these comments, it made me appreciate the fact that while you can only move from one location, you can move to multiple locations. This means the French could do a lot with a large force in Louisburg, including reinforcing lighthouse point.😊