William had something like 2500 mounted knights at Hastings. If he only lost 12 horses, he would have had a much higher survival rate among horses than he did among his knights.
12 horses he was riding himself.

William had something like 2500 mounted knights at Hastings. If he only lost 12 horses, he would have had a much higher survival rate among horses than he did among his knights.
Don't mistake modern racehorses for the war breeds of several hundred years ago, or even for today's wild horses. Honestly, if they really were fragile, they'd not have been used for war.
Which is exactly what WFRP corrects [IMHO].
Trouble is, if the bullet doesn't actually hit the character, how come a .45 calibre round fatigues him more than a .22?
Oh yeah. I got some nasty looks in the theater when I commented, loudly, that the cavalry charging downhill into massed pikes was dead meat. Or words to that effect.Edit: Anyway, don't mind me. I have a bee in my bonnet over the scene in The Two Towers where the heroes ride out of Helm's Deep into a solid mass of hundreds of orcs and scatter them with their horses. IRL that's totally impossible. Horses never break massed spear infantry on a frontal assault, they *will not* charge onto spears/pikes. The only times it's happened is when the horse is killed by missile fire prior to reaching the line and momentum carries it on into the spear wall.
Actually, yes, big, loud guns are extremely intimidating, and morale is an important element of combat -- but this effect has very little to do with "hitting" (whatever that means in D&D), and it probably shouldn't ablate a Constitution-based score of toughness (i.e. hit points).Maybe having a .45 pointed in your direction is much more stressful than having a .22?
And it's so easy to fix. If Gandalf's glowing with magical power, and the orcs understandably turn to run away, then the cavalry charge can mow them down.I have a bee in my bonnet over the scene in The Two Towers where the heroes ride out of Helm's Deep into a solid mass of hundreds of orcs and scatter them with their horses. IRL that's totally impossible. Horses never break massed spear infantry on a frontal assault, they *will not* charge onto spears/pikes. The only times it's happened is when the horse is killed by missile fire prior to reaching the line and momentum carries it on into the spear wall.