I had earlier seen messages posted by other members in which they reported really disastrous battle results. It hadn't happened to me before, and so I usually accepted the answers they received (terrain, entrenchments etc.). Well, it has now happened to me. My opponent had left a single corps under Jackson in Alexandria while moving the rest of his Potomac army down to the Peninsula to contain Butler in Norfolk. I used this apparent opportunity to strike at that lone corps with my oversized corps under Hooker in Washington. If my intel was good, I had a 4 : 1 superiority in actual strength (>2000 to ca. 500), yet my attacking corps was wiped out. Wholesale. 60,000 men just eliminated in a stroke, and for a loss of a staggering 19 NM in a single battle.
Yes, I realize I was attacking over a river, and this was Jackson, and he was probably dug in over the top of his hat. But still, does this feel historical? How often, even under the worst of circumstances, was a huge force completely wiped out in a single battle? My opponent said "think Cold Harbour". But at Cold Harbour Grant attacked an army nearly the size of his own, and still he lost only 7,000 out of 60,000 engaged. And this was one of the worst historical examples of large-scale attacks on prepared positions. Other than that? Longstreet loses half of his ca. 9,000 men engaged on the third day at Gettysburg, another notorious example of a disastrous frontal assault. I can accept that the losses in the situation I described here should be really bad if the attack does not succeed (there is the river problem), but does this not seem a bit excessive?

[color="Gray"]"These Savages may indeed be a formidable Enemy to your raw American Militia, but, upon the King's regular & disciplined Troops, Sir, it is impossible they should make any Impression." -- General Edward Braddock[/color]
Colonial Campaigns Club (supports BoA and WiA)
[color="Gray"]"... and keep moving on." -- General U.S. Grant[/color]
American Civil War Game Club (supports AACW)