List of Miniature Wargames - Ancients

Ancients

  • A Fistfull of Miniatures (North Shore Press, 1986; Precis Intermedia Gaming, 2009)
  • Age of Battles (Zvezda, 2007)
  • Age of Heroes - Biblical Era V 6 (Computer Moderated Miniature Wargame Rules) (Computer Strategies, 2007)
  • Ancient & Medieval Wargaming (Sutton Publishing, 2007)
  • Ancient Battles for Wargamers (Charles Grant, Model and Allied Publications, 1977)
  • Ancient Empires (The Emperor's Press, 1991)
  • Ancient Warfare (Milgamex, 1975)
  • Ancient Warfare (A to Z Rules, 1997)
  • Ancient Warfare (Saga Publishing, 1998)
  • Arcane Warfare (Jerboa Development Team, 2002)
  • Armati (Quantum Printing, 1994)
  • l'Art de la Guerre (Onyx éditions, 2008)
  • The Art of War (Doug Larsen & Rocky Russo, 2005)
  • Basic Impetus (Dadi & Piombo, 2006)
  • Battlestandard Ancient Rules (Battlestandard Miniatures and Games, 2004)
  • Casus Belli (Pitts & Hoover, 2009)
  • Clash of Empires (Great Escape Games, 2011)
  • Classical Hack (LMW Works Publications, 2002)
  • Classic Warfare (Gary Gygax, Tactical Studies Rules, 1975)
  • Conquerors and Kings (Peter Pig, 1999)
  • Crusader (Crusader Miniatures, 2007)
  • De Bellis Antiquitatis (Wargames Research Group, 1990)
  • De Bellis Magistrorum Militum (Caliver Books, 2007)
  • De Bellis Multitudinis (Wargames Research Group, 1993)
  • Fast Play Rules for Ancient Warfare (Newbury Rules)
  • Field of Glory (Osprey Publishing, 2008)
  • Gordian Knot (Agema Publications, 2007)
  • Greek Naval Warfare (London Wargames Section, 1972)
  • Hail Caesar (Rick Priestley, Warlord Games, 2011)
  • Holy Hack (LMW Works, 1996)
  • Homeric Hack (LMW Works, 2005)
  • Hoplon (Nicolas A. Protonotarios, 2003)
  • Impetus (Dadi & Piombo, 2008)
  • In Death Ground (Ruga-Ruga Publications, 2010)
  • Justified Ancients (Amazon Miniatures, 2005)
  • King David (Signifer Club Vicenza, 2004)
  • Legion (Fantasy Games Unlimited, 1976)
  • Lost Battles (Philip Sabin, 2008)
  • Macedon and Rome V 6 (Computer Moderated Miniature Wargame Rules) (Computer Strategies, 2007)
  • Melees Gloriosus (David P. Gundt, 1999)
  • Might of Arms (Colonnade Publishing, 1996)
  • Peltast and Pila (Tony Bath, Tabletop Warfare Limited, 1976)
  • PMG Ancients, Portsmouth Miniatures and Games, 1997)
  • Salamis Ad Actium (David Manley, 2005)
  • Shieldbearer (Michel J Young)
  • The Shock of Impact (Tabletop Games, 1981)
  • Tactica (Quantum Printing, 1989)
  • Vis Bellica (Ordered Flexibility, 2002)
  • Warfare in the Ancient World (Newbury Rules, 1980)
  • War Games Rules 1000 B.C to 500 A.D (Ancient War Games Research Group, 1969)
  • War Games Rules 1000 B.C. to 1000 A.D. (War Games Research Group, 1971)
  • War Games Rules 3000 B.C - 1250 A.D (Wargames Research Group, 1976)
  • War Games Rules 3000 BC to 1485 AD (Wargames Research Group, 1980)
  • Wargames Rules - Ancient Period (480 B.C. - A.D. 61) (Athena, 1986)
  • Warhammer Ancient Battles (Warhammer Historical Wargames, 1998)
  • Warlord (Partizan Press, 2007)
  • Warmaster Ancients (Rick Priestley, Warhammer Historical Wargames, 2005)
  • Warrior (Four Horsemen Enterprises, 2002)
  • Warrior Kings (Two Hour Wargames, 1998)
  • Wars Ancient (Magni Games, 2010)

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Famous quotes containing the word ancients:

    We are really so prejudiced by our educations, that, as the ancients deified their heroes, we deify their madmen.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)

    The ancients adorned their sarcophagi with the emblems of life and procreation, and even with obscene symbols; in the religions of antiquity the sacred and the obscene often lay very close together. These men knew how to pay homage to death. For death is worthy of homage as the cradle of life, as the womb of palingenesis.
    Thomas Mann (1875–1955)

    The annals of this voracious beach! who could write them, unless it were a shipwrecked sailor? How many who have seen it have seen it only in the midst of danger and distress, the last strip of earth which their mortal eyes beheld. Think of the amount of suffering which a single strand had witnessed! The ancients would have represented it as a sea-monster with open jaws, more terrible than Scylla and Charybdis.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)