For those who have just joined us, I’ve been involved in the playtesting of a new game for a month or so. Because I’m attached (however loosely) to the project, I wouldn’t feel comfortable reviewing the finished product. But I’m going to try something new here; I don’t know if it’s a first in the field, but it’s a first for me. This will be a kind of review of the game as it stands. By the time it gets into the stores, there may be some subtle changes, but I think the current state of the whole thing is pretty stable and robust and the finished product will look a lot like it does now (except for the actual parts that don’t; I’ll explain this further along). So, without further ado, let me introduce…
A note on the
release: For the Hammer was launched on
the CSL web store a couple of days ago (and should be deliverable in a week or
two – the processes used by the printer mean the maps take a couple of days to
cure), just after I’d finished writing the bulk of this post. Rather than
reworking the whole thing, I decided to leave it as it was. Apologies for any
ensuing confusion.
With The Hammer (Conflict Simulations Ltd, 2025) isn’t available yet. It’s a game currently in the final stages of development, but based on CSL’s track record, its publication will be imminent, within days or weeks I would think (I’m hoping some folks get to read this before it’s published).
The game covers an episode of history hereto
untouched by game design; the Peasants’ Revolt in 1520s Germany. Yup, before
With the Hammer crossed my field of vision, I hadn’t heard of the German
Peasant’s Revolt either. You probably have heard of Martin Luther and
the rise of Protestantism in central and western Europe in the early- to
mid-sixteenth century. You may have even played the Protestant faction in a
game of Here I Stand (GMT Games, 2006).
The spontaneous uprising of the peasants through a pamphlet written by Thomas
Müntzer, a clergyman who was destined to become a thorn in Luther’s side. If
you want the Cliff’s Notes, there’s a concise introduction to the German
Peasants’ Revolt on Wikipedia.
At time of writing, With the Hammer is probably only
weeks away from going to the printers, so, here’s a quick take on the game. I’d
like to reiterate that this isn’t a review, per se; I feel that being
involved, however remotely, in the gestation of the game disqualifies me from
reviewing it objectively, so what follows shouldn’t be taken as a purely
critical appraisal. But having said that, I do think the final game will be
worthwhile, and I have enjoyed my plays of it through several stages of
development.
Appearance
A quick reminder that the pictures
included in this post are of a playtest set I printed at a copy-store and built
using left over craft supplies. The final, professionally produced game will
look much nicer.
With the Hammer is an asymmetric wargame about the
aforementioned German Peasants’ War. One side plays the Peasant forces seeking
a better situation, led by several heroes of the movement, and the other plays
the Nobles who want to put the peasants in their place.
All the artwork for the game was prepared by Ilya Kudriashov.
I’m a huge fan of Mr Kudriashov’s work, which can be found in multiple CSL games, but also in games released by
Compass Games, Hollandspiele, GMT, and a host of others. The map evokes the
style of cartographical representation prevalent around the time in which the
game is set, while the illustrations used in the components are drawn from
print materials from the era.
WTH cover art. I'm pretty certain this is final. |
It may take a minute to decipher the gothic lettering used for the character and place names, but it adds a level of verisimilitude to the experience of play. Nothing here is gratuitous; everything works toward making the game run smoothly, from the inclusion on-board of the all-purpose track, to the little reminder illustrations of the starting locations for the Noble Armies.
The components will have a Euro-y feel about them, labelled wooden discs for the Peasant Bands, coloured pawns representing the individual Peasant Leaders. Larger wooden blocks that stand on edge represent the Noble Armies, well trained and equipped, but monolithic and ponderous. Where the Peasant bands and the Freelancers (who we’ll come back to) have fixed strength values, the Noble Armies have a rotating three-point increment strength step system, Like Columbia block games and others. They each begin the game at 6 points but can be built up to a formidable 12.
The bottom of Turn 3. Georg von Sachsen makes his debut in the next round. |
Every other turn, two dice are rolled for a d66
result (one d6 treated as tens and the other as ones). On a roll of 11-56, a Freelancer
counter will be drawn randomly and placed face-down at a random locale. The Freelancers
are a mix of miners and Landsknechts (mercenary companies) that may be of
benefit to either side.
The game includes a sheet of counters, including the
aforementioned Freelancers, a mix of Landsknecht troops and bands of Miners.
Other markers include the Propaganda tokens that indicate a locale’s population
has been swayed by Father Müntzer tract and teachings, Two-sided markers to show
when a locale has been drained of its resources (Depleted) or stripped bare by
a second bite of the cherry (Exhausted), and some individual markers for
recording Victory Points, Artillery Points (for the Peasants) Siege preparedness
for Heldrungen Castle (these are all tracked on a universal point rack on the map),
and a Turn marker for the Turn Track. A fourteen-card Random Event deck and two
six-sided dice round out the contents of the game
Play
The game plays out over eleven turns, in a
straight-forward IGO/UGO format. Each turn, the Peasant player can activate
their Peasant Leaders (there are four to choose from, but if playing one-on-one
or solo, the rules recommend starting with two), which may commit up to two
actions each. The initiative then turns to the Noble player; they may activate
the Noble Army or armies on the board, committing them to one action each. The
Noble player begins with one Army on the board, and gains another in turns 3
and 4. If a Peasant Leader and a Noble Army occupy the same locale, combat is
inevitable.
Playtest cards. Again, the finished product will look much nicer. |
In their turn, Peasant Leaders may move up to three adjacent locales, inspire adjacent Peasant Bands to join them, preach about the injustices of the ruling class (and in doing so, place a Propaganda marker on the location), raid an occupied location for arms and equipment ( in the form of Artillery Points, subject to a roll for success), or parley with a neighbouring Noble Army (essentially – if successful – immobilising it for that turn). If only one or two Peasant leaders are in play, they each get two actions per turn, and may duplicate some actions. If more
In the Noble forces’ turn, they may undertake a single action each. A Noble Army may muster (increase its strength – Noble Armies start at half strength (6) and can build their strength successively through 9 to 12 points over one or two musters respectively), supply themselves for movement (although this has an adverse effect on the locale, leaving it depleted after a single supply draw, or exhausted after a second attempt in that region, which will also earn the locale a Propaganda marker), move, provided they have collected enough supplies to pay for the movement, negotiate with unaffiliated Peasant Armies or Freelance units to dissipate or (in the case of Landsknecht mercenaries, try to hire them to join the Army), preach (roll to try to remove a Propaganda marker), or they can raid, which doesn’t require a successful roll, but leaves one more town’s peasants hatting the nobility even more.
An early two-player game, using the first iteration of the board. |
Noble armies are hobbled by their own might. Slower
to move and to react, they are truly reactionary in every sense. Formal armies
have strength and discipline, but they also have inflexible administrative
structures, tiers of command that decelerate communication, and a voracious
appetite for supply. By contrast, the Peasant leaders and their attendant
forces can live more easily off the land, or the generosity of the like-minded,
but they are limited in where they can go by whether a locale is swayed by Propaganda.
They can preach to an adjacent locale and place a Propaganda marker the, then
move to that location, but that’s their two actions for the turn. Having two
actions in a turn isn’t always the great advantage it may seem.
Combat occurs when a Noble Army and a Peasant leader
occupy the same locale. Combat is relatively straightforward and simple to
execute. The side whose piece has moved into a locale already occupied by an
opposing force is deemed the Attacker, the resident force the Defender. The antagonists
each calculate their own fighting strength, incorporating any freelance units
they may have picked up, and one of two tables is consulted on the Player’s Aid
Card.
The two sides compare strength, establish a ratio
(rounding down), establish any die-roll modifiers at play roll a die and check
the result against the appropriate column on the Combat Result Table (CRT).
Combat can be brutal in With the Hammer. A good negative result is being forced
to retreat. Worse is if your side is routed. There is a separate rout procedure
comes into play for the Peasant Leaders and the Noble Armies. Both involve the
bidding of Victory Points (swinging the pendulum in the opponent’s direction; A
Peasant Leader or a Noble Army can bid up to five VP, then a die is rolled; if
the result is higher than the number of VP bid, that’s the end of the game for that
force. It gets a little more involved with Peasant Armies and freelancers, but a
rout aways carries a cost for the routed party.
A higher weight of force is always better but other
factors can come into play as well. When mounting an attack, a Peasant Leader
may spend an Artillery Point to effect a +1 DRM to their roll. In the reverse
situation, an attacking Noble Army will receive a +1 modifier if the target
Peasant force doesn’t spend an Artillery Point. (This is a really simple,
elegant feature that adds to the sense of the cost of engagement. It’s
the kind of detail I really like to see in a game).
Victory is obtainable several ways by each side. The
most straight-forward (and convincing) way to win is to swing the scoring
pendulum all the way in your side’s favour (“0” for the Nobility, “20” for the
Peasants. This is theoretically achievable before the end of the game, but it’s
unlikely.
If the Peasants can place Propaganda markers on all
the locales (with the exception of Heldrungen Castle, which can never be under
the influence of Propaganda), they win an automatic victory. I haven’t seen
this happen in my games, but it’s possible for the Noble Armies to contribute
to their own demise by creating dissent through raiding locales (although this
can be avoided by only raiding locales who are already dissenting). Conversely,
the Nobility can win if they manage to reduce the number of locales under
Propaganda to five or less. This may be achievable, but it will be a lot harder.
Finally, either side can win the old-fashioned way,
by eliminating a majority of the other side’s forces, three of the four Peasant
Leaders or two of the three Noble Armies. I did say some fighting as inevitable.
Twelve to Fourteen puts the ratio clearly in the 1:1 column. Sippel has paid his Artillery Point to deny Johann a +1 to his roll, but it still doesn't look promising for the defender. |
Johann rolls a 5. That's a bad result for everyone. Both sides are thrown into disarray. The Peasants must rout, while the Noble army may take significant damage. |
Assessment
This has been a very quick-and-dirty look at (not
even the actual) With the Hammer. I hope it’s conveyed some idea of how the
game works and what you can more or less expect in the finished product.
It’s been fascinating to watch the game evolve from its original state to an essentially finished, ready-to-go product. At its rawest, With the Hammer was an interesting game covering a nugget of history that deserved more sunlight. I wasn’t sure it would have the replayability that I’d look for in a game like this, but before I had a chance to express this opinion, we play-testers received word that Fred Serval would be working as developer on the game. Things started to move very quickly after that. I believe it was M. Serval’s idea to introduce the random event component to the game with the addition of the small card deck. There were successive changes to the rules and some tweaking of the CRT, but with each change the game has got incrementally better, with much richer replay value. All the parts of the game work well together; the
After nearly two dozen plays – mostly solo, a couple
with my brother-in-law – I think I can say that, while it might look like a "real" wargame to some, With the Hammer is a historical conflict game of deep strategy. The limits on just what
either side can accomplish in a single turn makes every decision important, and
every choice will have an impact on ensuing rounds. I found myself thinking for
a day or two (or more) about how some of my games played out, how a different action
may have made a difference for the victor or the vanquished. To my mind, any
game that takes residence in your thoughts after the session has ended has something
to offer.