Are the rules "awesome" or "broken"? I don't think they can be both.
Maybe I was being a bit too brief with my words. I think the concepts are awesome and relative to other rulesets DBMM is awesome, but certainly some aspects of the game are broken.
Fair enough, but in reply #9 you said, "The more I play the more I think the rules are actually broken given the number of outstanding issues, the need for the clarifications by the committee, some of the gamey mechanisms and the lack of formal, not group-think, progress on a number of issues." I took the words "actually broken" literally.
Take for instance the need for 40-odd pages (something like that) of clarifications?!?! That is a pretty big indicator that something isn't right.
I agree, but I don't think the problem is quite as bad as you make out. Firstly, many of those pages have only a few lines on them, and secondly a few of the clarifications are for things that IMHO people have to be pretty obtuse to get wrong. Having said that, there are still many concepts in the rules which either haven't been fully thought out, or have been poorly explained.
Take another example being Spear - they are *broken* under DBMM. No two ways about that!
Hey, don't knock my poor little Spearies! I'd seriously challenge the idea that Sp are broken. I've used Sp-based armies quite successfully, particularly my Sub-Roman British, and I've lost games against Sp-based armies despite using armies which were full of Sp-killers. You might like to have a look at a few of my battle reports elsewhere on this forum. I suspect the problem is that Sp-based armies have to be used in a particular way which is slightly different from the way other infantry armies are used, and that these tactics haven't been fully worked out.
I could name other examples but the point being I think the rules are 90-95% of the way there, but certain aspects are broken. By broken they either don't work, don't work as intended, or are too unclear.
Fair enough. I agree with this comment.
P.S. Actually, re-reading my post, I wasn't brief with my words at all - you elected to take my comment out of context! I stated the reasons I thought it was broken in my earlier post........
Andrew, I don't want to get into a semantic debate, particularly as we seem to agree on the major issue - that there are problems with DBMM which need to be addressed. I've explained above the basis for my question, and I'll leave it there.