Thursday, 29 January 2026

State of Play: Commands and Colors Tricorne: The American Revolution - Yorktown

 

 

 

Initial assault on Redoubt No. 9; an inauspicious start.


We had our last game of 2025, and I told T to surprise me. And surprise me he did. For our diversion, he’d set up the Yorktown scenario from the French and More! Expansion (Compass Games, 2018) for Commands & Colors Tricorne: The American Revolution (Compass Games, 2017). The full game of the scenario is Yorktown (Assault On Redoubt #9 & #10)  14 October 1781, the last scenario in the set. It sounds like hard work, and it was.

Seeing French troops set up on the board, I realised this was the first scenario we would have ever played from the French and More expansion. This is an embarrassment as I’ve stated several times here in the blog that C&C Tricorne is probably my favourite flavour of the Command and Colors family, and not just for the eras it covers. It brings a few tweaks that add a little swinginess to the proceedings that I enjoy. The lack of plays from the expansion is something I plan to remedy in 2026.

Opening positions: some manoeuvre required.

T had set himself up to be the British/Hessian defenders manning the stout redoubts, and I took the Continental Army and their French allies. The antagonists have a stronger force going into the game – fifteen infantry units, supported by three artillery formations, against the British eight leg units and one not inconsequential heavy cannon unit – but the two redoubts are tough nuts to crack. Under the Tricorne rules, units behind fieldworks can ignore the first retreat flag in a ranged attack and the first symbol hit of a melee attack.

I was fortunate to start the game with a decently strong hand, offering
some options for proceeding.

But first I had to get my fellas up close enough to make any kind of worthwhile attack at all. This took three turns. The Continental player goes first, and the early turns involved edging Colonial and French units into position to advance on the enemy’s works. Meanwhile British potshots had some success in thinning out my troops. Cannon proved wholly ineffective against T’s lobsters. Whoever engineered the redoubts deserved a commendation.

At turn four I was finally in a position to make a concerted effort against Redoubt No. 10 (Continental Left). Three Brave French Line attacked on a Bayonet Charge order, throwing themselves against the desperate British defence... to an inconsequential result. No casualties on either side. This initial strike set the tone for the whole game.

The initial French assault on Redoubt No. 10, with
the road to Yorktown visible on the right.

Over the course of the next eight or nine rounds, we both took some hits, but neither of us had lost a unit (or gained a banner). Fearing the possibility of the No. 10 Redoubt being overrun, he had begun to T had begun to bring his heavy cannon down to lay fire on the French attackers. It was already a good way toward the redoubt when I saw my chance. I’d moved two Light troops up to the tree-line between the redoubts, attempting to bring them behind No. 9 for a clearer shot – Light units are better at range than regulars, and can move more quickly if they forgo combat, but other issues kept cropping up needing attention.

Mid-game: much blood spilt, with nought to show for it.

At turn fourteen, I had my lightbulb moment. By this time, we’d both taken some hits and scored off one another. I’d managed to get a much-diminished Regular unit behind the No. 9 battlements, and to replace it with another the following turn, when T’s counterattack finished off the first. The tide had begun to turn, but no end to the game was in sight (it was starting to get late by now, and it was a school-night). I’m not proud of my actions, but something had to be done, or we would have to call it a draw short of any clear victory.

I interspersed my following actions between maintaining the gains I’d made (the Continental player gets (or keeps) a Temporary Victory Banner for each fortified hex they occupy) and double-timing my two light units up the road to Yorktown and its two vacated Fieldworks hexes. I held two, and we had by now two legitimate Victory Banners each (T was about to get is third).

I didn’t announce my intentions to take Yorktown, and T was too distracted with the redoubt action to notice until the final move. By the time my Light troops entered the vacated fieldworks at the edge of the occupied city, I had managed five Victory Banners, and this action gave me the last two to win the game.

End state. Yorktown Occupied, but at a cost.

It felt like less of a victory than it might have, but the game had been a twenty-two round slog, and I come back to my earlier comment; the Yorktown defences are a terribly hard nut to crack for the Continental player. I think I may have still won if I’d gone ahead with my original intention of flanking Redoubt No. 9 and likely capturing its attendant officer, but this may have taken another five or eight turns. T tends to feel that a win is a win, but to me this felt a little gamey to take too much pride in the success.

 

 

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State of Play: Commands and Colors Tricorne: The American Revolution - Yorktown

      Initial assault on Redoubt No. 9; an inauspicious start. We had our last game of 2025, and I told T to surprise me. And surprise m...