Search Results
7/15/2025, 4:09:21 PM
”...An ancestor of mine was a smuggler too. He carried goods to the Consortium through Hegemony space; and was caught in the middle of a war. He didn't know what he was carrying. But instead of killing him, your Supreme Ruler let him go even though they had no reason to spare a criminal and one working for the enemy at that. Your people always seemed decent in that way. So I thought maybe... this could be my one chance to punish the rich and powerful and beyond my reach. I thought it was at least worth a try. I meant no disrespect.”
”...I'll consider it. In the meantime, if I do decide to destroy Fas'Kon'Anull, you better uphold your end of the bargain. You got that?”
”Wait, r-really? You'll- Yes, your Majesty! I will.”
With this secondary objective in mind, it is now time to rally your troops and prepare your second attack wave! While it isn't as impressive as the mighty first sneak attack, this new batch of fresh troops and ships should allow you to take more territory and get closer to completeing your objectives...
Rules
For the sake of simplicity; please decide where to recall troops first as part of your battle plan. Recalled troops from planets you have already defeated are immediately added to your main fleet force for this round; then you may divvy them up by the prior rules found here >>6270359
The number currently written on the image is your new units. You can use these in addition to existing units still on the battlemap.
During the “attack” phase, you may also send your forces to planets you already occupy to increase their defenses. You will not roll for these, just increase the number on the planet to make it more likely to survive an enemy attack.
Remember; you may only attack sectors with arrows directly to your main fleet number OR adjoining sectors in which you have at least one captured planet. After your forces are assigned, rolling will begin. Because this is your second wave; all enemy sectors that have not been fully conquered will contribute reinforcements to the enemy fleet, which will attack you back. You can reduce the number of enemy reinforcements by fully conquering an enemy sector.
>Recall (Choose how many forces from captured planets to recall back to the fleet)
>Attack Phase (Choose enemy planets to attack and how many forces to send to each)
”...I'll consider it. In the meantime, if I do decide to destroy Fas'Kon'Anull, you better uphold your end of the bargain. You got that?”
”Wait, r-really? You'll- Yes, your Majesty! I will.”
With this secondary objective in mind, it is now time to rally your troops and prepare your second attack wave! While it isn't as impressive as the mighty first sneak attack, this new batch of fresh troops and ships should allow you to take more territory and get closer to completeing your objectives...
Rules
For the sake of simplicity; please decide where to recall troops first as part of your battle plan. Recalled troops from planets you have already defeated are immediately added to your main fleet force for this round; then you may divvy them up by the prior rules found here >>6270359
The number currently written on the image is your new units. You can use these in addition to existing units still on the battlemap.
During the “attack” phase, you may also send your forces to planets you already occupy to increase their defenses. You will not roll for these, just increase the number on the planet to make it more likely to survive an enemy attack.
Remember; you may only attack sectors with arrows directly to your main fleet number OR adjoining sectors in which you have at least one captured planet. After your forces are assigned, rolling will begin. Because this is your second wave; all enemy sectors that have not been fully conquered will contribute reinforcements to the enemy fleet, which will attack you back. You can reduce the number of enemy reinforcements by fully conquering an enemy sector.
>Recall (Choose how many forces from captured planets to recall back to the fleet)
>Attack Phase (Choose enemy planets to attack and how many forces to send to each)
Page 1