If you read articles about battles in this period of history, cavalary is known to have their own mind and do suicidal attacks, look at the battle of waterloo.
I can't speak for other people's experiences of the demo, but I've seen this behaviour apply to a single cavalry regiment going off on its own. To compare this situation with the unwise use of cavalry at Waterloo is to compare apples with oranges. If we look at the Union Brigade's attack against I Corps we see that:
- It involved three regiments (seven, if you include the Household brigade).
- It was ordered by the Army commander or possibly his second-in-command.
- It was highly successful in its mission: to break up the I Corps attack.
So this is no way comparable to a single regiment mounting a unwished-for charge off its own bat. The fact that this is what happened after the initial success of the Union Brigade doesn't alter this. In fact, if a feature of the game was that British cavalry were to tend to carry successful charges too far, I'd be delighted, because this would tally with the historical accounts. A single regiment mounting an unprovoked, unordered charge against an intact enemy line isn't something I've ever read about. If such an accounts do exist, I'd like hear about them.
To continue with the Waterloo comparison, if we look at the French massed cavalry attack we see that:
- It involved several cavalry divisions.
- It was ordered by the local battlefield commander.
Again, not the same thing at all.
Coordination was also not what you expect on todays battlefields, you had smoke, commands where shouted over the noise of battle etc. So a certain amount of confusion is expected.
Granted , but I don't think it was quite so bad as to produce the kind of confusion that players are reporting here. Again, if the accounts confirm it to be so, I'd be grateful for some references to check out.
Holdit