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Post by Srrom4 on Apr 19, 2019 10:52:09 GMT
Hi, here we go again Let us suppose that, a Group A (3 figs.) moves into sight of the Group B (4 figs) Group A can view all figures from Group B, two of the Group B figures, Including its Leader, are concealed at the edge of the woods, the other two not. By Purpose of "In Sight Test", the Group A suffers a -1d6 penalty for enemy concealed? Cheers RomÃ
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Post by Ed the Two Hour Wargames Guy on Apr 19, 2019 19:31:39 GMT
Hi, here we go again Let us suppose that, a Group A (3 figs.) moves into sight of the Group B (4 figs) Group A can view all figures from Group B, two of the Group B figures, Including its Leader, are concealed at the edge of the woods, the other two not. By Purpose of "In Sight Test", the Group A suffers a -1d6 penalty for enemy concealed? Cheers Romà So the other two are in the open, correct? You can do it two ways, your choice. Choose to count the figures not in concealment as the targets you will shoot at and there's no penalty. You could not shoot at the concealed guys. Or take the -1d6 penalty and fire at all of them. I would go with the first as it makes more sense to me.
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Post by Srrom4 on Apr 19, 2019 20:46:31 GMT
Yes, two figures are in the open. Ok, at your choice seems well. Thank you Ed.
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