Ginger wrote:
Neal, while I think I understand your point on intermingling, I am not sure that RAW supports this perspective
That's exactly what it says. If the rules didn't say exactly that the Scout/behind problem wouldn't exist in the first place.
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indeed the answer that has been formulated above still handles the situation.
Aside from the Scout/behind issue, the RAW handles the situation without any confusion. That means this would not be a clarification but a change. There's no need to change it.
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The "screening from behind" effect would still apply to nomal formations where units from the "screening" formation are staggered 1/2 base depth behind those from the target formation; and we now have the answer for this: where the target units are nearer to the assaulters, the "screening" ZoC can be ignored if the assaulting units move into B-B.
And that's exactly the effect that I think is a bad idea.
First, it's unnecessary, as the rules are clear and functional. The attacker can declare intermingled targets to be intermingled if the attacker wants to reach base contact. They don't have to, but then they are actively choosing to stay at a distance.
That makes perfect sense, as a charging host isn't going to distinguish between Company A and Company B when they rush the treeline. They're going full out. If the squads are next to each other, both squads are getting hit regardless of which company they are from. And on the flip side, both squads are defending to the best of their ability against troops that are an imminent threat, i.e. countercharging if appropriate.
Second, that change would wipe out a mutual support ability. CC troops
should be able to guard shooty troops by staying close to them. Because the rules separate formations into discreet actions, you have to leap-frog formations instead of moving them together, with the result that it's hard to coordinate that kind of "bodyguard" role. There's no reason to make it more difficult by introducing a "gotcha" effect into the mix because a protected unit is 0.5cm closer than the bodyguard unit.
Being intermingled is bad enough that most people avoid it universally. This situation is one of the very few where it makes sense. Retaining that option is a good thing for tactical depth.