Terrible Swift Sword: Battle of Gettysburg Game

Terrible Swift Sword: Battle of Gettysburg Game

Richard H. Berg (1976)

5.8
BGG Rating 417 votes
2-6 players Best: 2, 4-6+ 420-4200 min 12+
Complexity Expert — 4.2/5
View on BoardGameGeek

About

Three full days of Gettysburg at a small-unit level including counters for individual leaders and horses. Many short scenarios are available but its appeal is the 125-turn 60+-hour full game. Inspiration for the Great Battles of the American Civil War series of games. The name Terrible Swift Sword is taken from the Civil War era song "Battle Hymn of the Republic," which has in its opening lines "He hath loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword." (from first edition,soap box side of box:) TERRIBLE SWIFT SWORD: The Three Days of Gettysburg is a grand tactical simulation of one of the most decisive battles of all time: Gettyburg. Three days of cataclysmic combat saw 50,000 Americans lost. The game utilizes colourful cardboard playing pieces that accurately represent the size and strength of all the Union and Confederate units actually involved in the battle. The beautifully illustrated map effectively portrays the unusual waves of ridges and scattered forests that criss-cross the battlefield. The units move,position,and engage for battle across the map through a super imposed hexangonal grid,which functions like a chessboard's squares. Simple probability charts determine each exciting confrontation's outcome. Contains: 32 page rules booklet; three 22"x34" soft map sections; 2000 die-cut cardboard playing pieces; and various play aids.

Publisher Tactical Studies Rules (TSR) , SPI (Simulations Publications, Inc.) Artist Ivor M. Janci, The West Point Museum, Redmond Aksel Simonsen, Tom Darden, Larry Elmore
Recommended: 2-6+ players Moderate in-game text - needs crib sheet or paste ups

BGG Community Intel

5.8

Weighted Avg

417

Ratings

1.2K

Owned

116

Wishlisted

Std Dev: 1.61 Wanting: 35 Trading: 33
Reviews

Reviews

0 reviews

No reviews yet. Be the first to write one!

Table Talk

Table Talk

Log in to join the conversation.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!