Monday 5 January 2015

Meridian: An Alternative Gaming History

H.G Wells is often lauded as being the father of modern hobby war gaming, with his Little Wars published in 1901. It's an interesting rule-set and very much a-kin to the idea of playing with toy soldiers. Combat is largely resolved by kinetic means - literally firing things from toy cannons, not unlike the 1980s classic Crossbows & Catapults.


He finished the book with an appendix on Kriegspiel, originally by Georg Leopold von Reiswitz in 1812 adopted by the Prussian army as a training mechanism for officers. Some of the key factors are maps, tables, random factors and a games master - usually in this case a high ranking officer who has field experience and will adjudicate based on that in-the field experience (not simply his opinion of rules interpretations, something to think on in terms of RPGs).

Immediately we're faced with one of the fundamental divisions within gaming discourse, the separation between hobby and serious wargames. Finding the fun in something like Phoenix Command can be a bit of a challenge for some, but as Wounded Ronin put it,  "if people played more games like Phoenix Command, the IQ of our collective society would go up."

In my opinion Kriegspiel looks significantly more like wargaming, role-playing and online-gaming as we know it today than Little Wars does. This could be down to journalistic oversight on the part of the commentators- an unfamiliarity with contemporary and historical wargaming, and taking a non-critical view of the materials at hand, perhaps confusing Wells Appendix on Kriegspiel  following the suggestions of Colonel Mark Sykes with the content of Little Wars itself. Possibly taking at face value Wells criticism of Kriegspeil as being "complex", many versions of it is in fact far, far simpler than any contemporary wargame, and absolutely no where near the IQ pushing levels of Phoenix Command. However I'm not sure any distinction regarding the rules themselves is as significant as promoting a British Science Fiction Author as the founder of all Gaming as we know it, rather than a Prussian Military Scientist.  History: it's political.



Kriegspiel itself developed into two forms, the Strict (rules-orientated) and Free (games-master orientated, General Julius von Verdy du Vernois 1876 ) - a division which still dominates the discussion of open ended and simulation based gaming today, in Tournament and Open gaming, playing by-the-book or house-ruling - the discourse is right there in the development of Kriegspiel, the territory mapped, positions laid out, strategies developed and systems deployed. But the general psychic lethargy of gamers towards the history of gaming beyond "that one game I like" means these approaches to game design are endlessly debated rather than being documented and understood. These were the two main forms of playstyle, as Kriegspiel was adopted by armies around the world, and multiple variants developed and expanded.

Beyond the game mechanics and playstyles, there's another significant duality which opens up. H.G. Wells is much better known as a Science Fiction author for works such as The Time Machine and War of the Worlds than his limited repertoire as a game designer. Yet he never crossed the streams and transformed his historical (Napoleonic level tech) wargames into Science Fiction gaming. It may have been a simple technological issue, in a similar way the Beaker People couldn't have invented malware, the cultural building blocks weren't in place to achieve it, or a product of his increasing pacifism in the face of the horrors of WW1 or simply a matter of not having the time or inclination. Yet the Historical / Fantasy (yes, including Space Fantasy here) divide in wargaming was long and persistent.

Whatever the cause, Wells didn't game his Martian Tripods taking over some alternate Europe, nor the skirmishes of the Eloi and Morloks, in their grim dark caves of the far future, and it has fallen to others to make the game, and envision the material cultures of H.G. Wells. And here is where Steampunk and/or Victorian Science Fiction steps in, and opens up another duality and something of a false dichotomy.

If I search for Steampunk I invariably get images like this:



via 
 If I search for Victorian Science Fiction I invariably get images like this:

via

via

I don't really need to point out the dualities in those sets of images do I? I have to reign it in a little and not go off the deep end about the image, society of the spectacle and all that. However that may be part of the reason for the development of Victorian Science Fiction, whilst Steampunk started out as a genuine attempt at retro-futurism, things took a slow and gradual expansion into the realm of the Burlesque. Ultimately they are different approaches to the same territory, both have a dedication to craft and spectacle, both present historical ideas of the future as their basis.

yeah. tangents.

Which reminds me of how the original Speculative Fiction -punk game, R Talsorians Cyberpunk, was originally set in 2013, which is now history, which makes this extremely 1980s vision of the future also retro. The stunning black and white illustration hugely reminiscent of the work of Peter Nagel and Hajime Sorayama. The American government treat the early release of a Japanese corporations entertainment products by an unidentified group of hackers, as cause for economic sanctions and according to some sources blacking out the communications infrastructure of North Korea. And that's just yesterdays news. is there any doubt we are all living in a William Gibson novel?

Meanwhile, on the other edge of psyberspace, we've pulled the levers, cranked the handles adjusted the aetheric tubes and published the Meridian Miniatures Webshop! 

British Steampunk Miniatures

Prussian Steampunk Miniatures

The initial wave of releases center around the Steam & Aether range, a wargame set in a post apocalyptic 19th Century Europe, where strange, alien technology has ripped open the time-space fabric that was once France and spewed all sorts of strange otherworldly technology and creatures across it. Battling for control of the region and scavenging for technology in the wreckage are forces of British and Prussian troopers. The models are multi pose war gaming figures, with a vast array of head and pose options, bringing variety to massed, marching troops and skirmishing warbands.

What seems strangely significant that a game-world that centres on alternate history gives us an alternative vision of gaming history itself. The British (Little Wars) vs. Prussian (Kriegspiel) take wargaming into its origins not only as a game design, by setting it in the period Wells was gaming in, but also bridging the chasm between  H.G. Wells hobby wargaming and his Science Fiction writing. Had Meridian been around in 1901 and been producing these kind of red-team / blue-team gaming pieces, no doubt Wells would have spent his time fighting his Kriegspiel with Stroboscopic Prismatoniums and Telesisted Kinetomats instead of rifles and cannons, expanding his Prussian Empire to the Moon and beyond.


11 comments:

  1. Great read, actually reminds me that at the start of most interesting games/tales lies one question : What if ?

    That's one question Wells and Talsorian must have asked themselves and we can agree they answered dreadfully close to the truth.

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    1. For some reason, that makes me consider the kind of work Gygax originally did with D&D and Mike Pondsmith did with Cyberpunk was in codifying and expanding a literary genre. So whilst for Kriegspeil the GM relies on battlefield experience and passing down that knowledge to trainee officers, with RPGs it's largely genre tropes.

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  2. I think it is pointed out in "Playing at the world" (one of the most elaborate works on the history of wargaming and roleplaying), that the idea of playing historical periods with wargaming (instead of just using contemporary soldiers) is relatively recent, i.e. after WW2. Before WW2, almost all published wargaming rules assume that a battle takes place in the contemporary world.

    It is only with the likes of Tony Bath that the exploration of wargaming in other periods started.

    Hence, I don't think that even Wells would have contemplated the use of totally imaginary worlds for wargaming, let alone fantasy elements.

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    1. Ah, you'll see Jon Peterson's blog is linked over on the right. I haven't read all of Playing at the World, and I think perhaps I should get around to it. It's nice to see that unlike the BBC Jons history of the wargame fully acknowledges its roots instead of using Wells as an arbitrary watershed. Of course Wells is monumentally important in VSF & Steampunk, so important in that perspective. I thnk Jon also notes that Robert Lewis Stephenson was also a kinetic wargamer who wrote speculative fiction.

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    2. The observation that 'period' wargaming didn't start until the 1950s is interesting.

      IMHO Tony Bath's "How to Set Up A Wargames Campaign" is almost as extraordinary as Gygaxs Dungeon Master Guide in it's creativity and scope. And his Hyboria campaign possibly the first 'fantasy' war game or perhaps "literary genre war game".

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    3. Exactly. The Hyboria campaign and the developments in Lake Geneva are very similar. Jon Peterson's book is very interesting in that respect. It traces a very interesting lineage from the more serious professional wargames in the 19th century to toy soldier games at that start of the 20th century to the development of roleplaying in the 60s and 70s. Contrary to what many people think, Gygax and Arneson didn't think of D&D from scratch, it has form roots in wargaming.

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  3. I find it interesting and a little sad that there are constant attempts to update games like Cyberpunk and Shadowrun to better reflect our understanding of future technology. Not only because such attempts are doomed to failure but because for me the draw of these settings is in part because they're a 1980's view of what 2013 would be like; to me they're akin to the 50's rockets-and-rayguns view of the future and no less interesting for their after-the-fact inaccuracy.

    All of which has almost nothing to do with your post, sorry.

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    1. Seems entirely relevant to me :-) retrofuturism is catching up with the cybergeneration.glitchkrieg vapourwave. Steampunk is pertinent as it's futurism with an origin of wargames, in a similar mode to how Swords & Sorcery is at the origin of RPGs.

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  4. I never realised when I read it as a child, but the wargame Gerald Durrell describes in Fillets of Plaice is almost certainly "Little Wars".

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    1. Did it get interrupted by lemurs?

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    2. Surprisingly not! Apparently as a relatively small child he met some chap in the street who had tons of toy soldiers at home and went and visited him...

      Certainly a sign of a very different age!

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