Until recently, this has mainly involved looking at the rule book thinking I should read through the rules a few times. I stayed in this state of inertia until I read a post by Alan Cutner on the UK ADLG Yahoo! group. He posted a two page quick reference sheet with a twist:
"I created these as a result of teaching ADLG to someone completely new to wargaming of any kind."This sparked something in me. The previous Sunday I had played FOGR and used my own reference sheets and they helped enormously. Anyway, I downloaded Alan's QRS to see if his would do the same.
It didn't quite; good though it is. I wanted something more "process focused". In Alan's QRS all the information is there but it's grouped and not separated by the different phases of the game. Nonetheless Alan's work did spur me on to read the rules and begin to create my own reference sheets. So thank you Alan for making me read the rules (many times).
I wanted the ADLG sheets to mirror the design of my FOG sheets and do three things:
- Present all the key tables for each phase with all the necessary definitions and exceptions.
- Outline the sequence of play for each phase especially set up & routing.
- Do all of this in a maximum of two sides of A4 per phase.
As an example the first two A4 pages for the game setup are shown below:
With this page the blank left hand side is important. The page covers the sequence of play for the set up and the first mini phase in the set up: choosing the region and selecting the terrain. This is good break point and it sets up the second page:
This page covers deployment dicing, terrain adjustment, ambush possibilities, troop deployment sequence, ambush zones and troop deployment restrictions: all on one page. The flow isn't perfectly linear but it's close.
In use I would look at the first page to refresh my memory of the set-up sequence and then use the table at the bottom to choose my terrain. Then I would switch to the second page which has everything I need to deploy the terrain & my troops.
This is why the sheets are more "process driven" and not really quick reference sheets:
- I'm not trying to get everything on two sides of A4,
- I am trying to summarise information for each phase of the game,
- As the game moves on I will use the next sheet(s).
If I get enough time I will prepare a sheet, or sheets, for shooting. I've already done my homework on this and I not sure I will enjoy this quite as much as the sheets presented here.
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