This battle had some interesting points.
Every player had a corps to command. Mitra and Asid were on the allied side while me, general sandman and colbert the french side.
There were two objectives to take. One in the east and one in the west. The french started from north and the allied from south.
Sandman and colbert were more or less in the northeast, sandman with the bigger corps (Reille) and colbert with the smallest one (Lobau) which had no cavalry in it. Then I had a heavy cavalry corps to the north made by two divisions and D'Erlon corps in the northwest both under my control.
The plan was to attack the eastern objective with sandman corps while colbert, supported by a detachment of heavy cavalry division, moving in the centre of the map and then converging to east to take the enemy on a flank or in his rear. With the other heavy cavalry division and D'Erlon corps, I moved to the western objective trying at least to contest it in order to avoid the enemy raising points from it.
Nearly fifty thousands men started to march, everyone with his task.
I went to the west to establish a contact with D'Erlon corps while the heavy cavalry division was following me down the road.
When I was in view of the objective I noticed that the enemy was holding it. From distance I recognised Brunswick flags and saw heavy batteries deploying in front of me.
At this point I realised that it was impossible to march directly on the objective and decided to position my artillery while infantry and cavalry were deploying just behind it.
I created a sort of grand battery detaching all the divisionals artillery and protect it with light cavalry division.
I was also looking for any other enemy coming from east/southeast. Sandman and colbert confirmed me that the eastern objective was in our hands but they still not saw enemy cavalry. Colbert told me that the heavy cavalry division I sent to support him was delivering a lot of damage to the rear of the enemy column marching east.
In the meantime I saw a big heavy cavalry corps marching from south to north a mile southeast of my position.
Asid tried to outflank my position with Picton's division on my right so the situation was becoming very hard for me.
I moved a division to my left with the idea to cover my flank with squares. I hadn't enough cavalry to counter mitra's cavalry corps. Then I moved a light cavalry brigade just behind the southern squares facing south to prevent enemy infantry firing or charging them. The enemy artillery was on the opposite side so too far to be dangerous for the squares.
With this tactical deployment I stopped all the cavalry corps and secured the left flank.
But Picton was knocking on the right helped by Brunswick cavalry brigade...
Derlon light cavalry engaged Brunswick cavalry. I think the outcome was a draw. Anyway this permitted me to deploy an infantry brigade facing west to delay the enemy attack. I recalled a heavy cavalry brigade to the right to support the infantry. Counter Picton's division with only one brigade left me the space to deploy all the cuirassiers brigade in a single line.
The charge on the Picton's right was awesome!
With the second brigade of the division and two horse artillery batteries I organised an attack in the enemy centre which asid promptly reinforced with Nassauers.
I still had to commit an entire fresh division behind the grand battery but the time ran out.
We had a victory because sandman and colbert easily destroyed the other corps on the eastern objective. Well done my generals
I had no more communications with them because Mitra and Asid blocked any possible road connecting our two forces.
Talking about my battle, I think that the turning point was when I blocked Mitra's cavalry with squares. Maybe if they concentrated more on destroying them the outcome could be very different.