phone (+39) 320 073 4588
email CONTACT US VIA EMAIL
Promo Banner Promo Banner
Main Pic
add-wishlist
add-collection
add-alert
7.98
BGG Vote: BGG Stats
LANGUAGE-UK
2
No necessary in-game text

Napoleon's Quagmire

A board game by Kevin Zucker
Publisher: OSG (Operational Studies Group)
video thumbnail
utrade Do you want to sell your copy of this game?
utradestar
Use our marketplace utrade!
Napoleon's Quagmire
Available in an external warehouse.
Shipping in about 3/7 days
Retail price: 99,90€ 94,95€
IT Free
Description Description

Napoleon's Quagmire - The Campaign in Extremadura, March-November, 1809 (battles of Medellin, Talavera, Almonacid, and Ocaña) is the VII volume of the games from OSG's THE LIBRARY OF NAPOLEONIC BATTLES series. The Year 1809 began with Napoleon’s departure from the Iberian Peninsula, to face the Austrian threat on the Danube. He left his brother, Joseph, in nominal command of his armies in Spain, as puppet king in Madrid. Fighting flared on several fronts simultaneously, and the French occupation had some successes, notably at the siege of Saragossa, concluded by Marshal Lannes just before his departure to join the Emperor. In 1809 the French under Joseph nearly mastered the plains of Old and New Castile. However, the Napoleonic magic could not work at such distances (a dispatch sent from Vienna to Madrid, would travel 2,400 km in 12 to 14 days); when dispatches arrived they were often days or weeks out of date. A series of battles were fought during the course of the year along the approaches to Madrid from Portugal, where the future Duke of Wellington had just arrived with a small British Army to second the Spanish Army of Extremadura. COMPONENTS Two full-size color maps (22"x34" each)and two half-size maps (17"x22") Rulebook (28 pages) Scenario Folder (24 pages) Two counter sheets (560 units) Two decks of cards (50 cards each, 100 total) 15 player aid cards Series scale The Library of Napoleonic Battles - formerly known as the Napoleon's Last Battles (NLB) Series: 480 meters per hex, 1 hour per turn, 400-800 men per strength point.

Additional information Additional information
Mechanics: Campaign/Battle Card Driven Dice Rolling Hex-and-Counter Simulation
Categories: Historical War
Alternative names:
In 1 wishlist This was seen 1432 times
Description Description

Napoleon's Quagmire - The Campaign in Extremadura, March-November, 1809 (battles of Medellin, Talavera, Almonacid, and Ocaña) is the VII volume of the games from OSG's THE LIBRARY OF NAPOLEONIC BATTLES series. The Year 1809 began with Napoleon’s departure from the Iberian Peninsula, to face the Austrian threat on the Danube. He left his brother, Joseph, in nominal command of his armies in Spain, as puppet king in Madrid. Fighting flared on several fronts simultaneously, and the French occupation had some successes, notably at the siege of Saragossa, concluded by Marshal Lannes just before his departure to join the Emperor. In 1809 the French under Joseph nearly mastered the plains of Old and New Castile. However, the Napoleonic magic could not work at such distances (a dispatch sent from Vienna to Madrid, would travel 2,400 km in 12 to 14 days); when dispatches arrived they were often days or weeks out of date. A series of battles were fought during the course of the year along the approaches to Madrid from Portugal, where the future Duke of Wellington had just arrived with a small British Army to second the Spanish Army of Extremadura. COMPONENTS Two full-size color maps (22"x34" each)and two half-size maps (17"x22") Rulebook (28 pages) Scenario Folder (24 pages) Two counter sheets (560 units) Two decks of cards (50 cards each, 100 total) 15 player aid cards Series scale The Library of Napoleonic Battles - formerly known as the Napoleon's Last Battles (NLB) Series: 480 meters per hex, 1 hour per turn, 400-800 men per strength point.

Additional information Additional information
Mechanics: Campaign/Battle Card Driven Dice Rolling Hex-and-Counter Simulation
Categories: Historical War
Alternative names:
In 1 wishlist This was seen 1432 times