English pursuit and hesitation on the wings
The English-right pursues the Bretons successfully, wreaking great slaughter. On the English-left, however, their own losses have mounted to the point where they must test morale: and they momentarily fail too. As the French cavalry are virtually scattered and killed as a fighting force, there is no one to pursue the English-left. Meanwhile, the Norman attack in the center is still pounding hard; the English-center is slowly giving way.
Routing units rally
The unpursued English-left rallies on their original battle line. The Breton knights have gotten clear of the English pursuit and rallied also. The Norman attack in the center is petering out.
William leads in his reserve
Again, as in "refight fourteen", the value of a mobile reserve is proven: William leads his knights straight up the hill to reinforce his center attack. Harold's position is penetrated and the "Dragon of Wessex" (one of his two standards) goes down.
A feigned flight and renewed attack
Some 150 French knights of the right have regrouped and now perform a feigned flight. The English geneats and ceorls are drawn out in pursuit. Over on the English-right, the Breton knights go forward to attack again; the Breton spearmen are being destroyed. In the center, duke William's attack with his reserve is overwhelming: the "Fighting Man" (king Harold's other - personal - standard) is captured, and Harold is killed.
A tactical decision: stand or advance?
The Breton knights are again worsted by Leofwin Godwinson and the English-right and withdraw. Gyrth Godwinson, in command of the English-left, sees an open field in front of him: and, what's more, the virtual destruction of his brother Harold's command. So, do the wings stay or fight their way off to the woods? I made a decision based on a morale check: similar to the chances for a pursuit of routing/feigned-routing enemies: and both wings (both Godwinson brothers) went for it: they set off down the hill after their disrupted and scattered enemies. The French-right spearmen are caught and outclassed; the rustics continue their pursuit of the dregs of the French cavalry. The last few English pockets of resistance in the center are surrounded by William's Normans.