I've been thinking that my Middle Earth armies have been big enough that moving single figures is impractical for some time now.
I've been pondering different configurations of sabot bases and probably would have bought some at Hotlead if it had happened.
Then I saw on the Wargaming in Middle Earth Facebook group a game with these nifty flat card movement trays. I inquired and was told they were magnet glued to MDF then painted.
I've been using magnet sheets to line my figure boxes already. This seemed a natural progression. A couple of 12"×12" magnet sheets cost me $8.
I did a test with some scrap bits. So far so good.
A 12"×12" sheet gave me 12 of these 4"×3" pieces.
Which I glued to 4"×3" pieces of stiff card.
I then spray painted them and here they are doing a demo.
Happy to see that 4"×3" is one size fits all.
For the second sheet I'm going to make some more 3"×2" for elite infantry or units of 12 that I want to have in a wider, 2 rank line, and the trolls like them too it seems.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Vendel Goblins
"Watza din boz?" Grablotz the goblin asked, climbing onto my painting bench, leaving a trail of dirt and things I hoped were just dirt behind him.
"Yeah" chimed in Snakz, "watza din?" Snakz grabbed the rim of my brush holder with dirty, ragged clawed fingers, tilting it to look in. "Got anayfing for etz?"
"Oh yeah" said Grablotz, licking pointed teeth. "Oi cud murda a noice bit o rancid bacon!"
"Wif fresh maggots!"
"What can I do for you boys?" I asked patiently, brushing mud from their boots into the garbage. Setting the brush holder firmly back in its place I added "No bacon today. You helped me eat it all this weekend with the Padre, remember?"
"Oh yeah.... dat geezer wot wif a' da fancy words 'n such. You member 'im Snakz?"
Snakz picked his nose thoughtfully. "Yeah... he brought dem Isengard boyz. Tough buggers dem."
"But we done arrit, dinnit we, boz?" asked Grablotz sheepishly.
"Oh yes!" I replied heartily. "Much better than I expected for brand new troops with their paint barely dry." I was rewarded by a pair of snaggle toothed grins.
"Grablotz, your mob caught a lot of arrows and stuck it out longer than I expected." Grablotz danced about, slapping Snakz on the back, and tossed his dirty red cap in the air.
"What about my mob, boz?" asked Snakz, straightening his red hood so he could see again. "We stuck a few arrers of our own into dat mob, dinnit we?"
"Yes you did" I smiled, full of benevolence. "And for that you get both lovely banners and grass tufts on your bases!"
The two goblins began capering about, waving their caps and knocking over paint bottles.
"Alright, alright" I chided. "Now get on the back drop so I can take pictures of everybody for my blog."
"Gunna put us on Tweeters too boz? " asked Grablotz as he hurried to form up his mob. "Datz where all da kool kidz are!"
"Yes, yes. Now everybody fall in and say 'maggots!'"
Some extras to lead wagons or baggage animals. Although I may just get 8 more each of spears and bows, then field 2x 12 figure units of each. Until then I've got 6x extra Oathmark goblins who can join them to make another 12x figure unit.
Labels:
Dragon Rampant,
Fantasy,
Lord of the Rings,
Painting Bench
Saturday, June 20, 2020
Giving Oathmark a Spin: Game Review
My Oathmark plastic goblins take Mike's Orcs in the flank. |
Pandemic restrictions are being slightly eased here in Ontario, so the Mad Padre came down for a quick overnight visit to eat Indian take out and have a game or two. Mike was keen to try Oathmark, the shiny new rules that all the cool kids are playing. So Friday night, stuffed with curry, we did a small game just to work out activation, combat and shooting. Saturday morning we gave it a bigger spin around the table with bigger armies using equal points.
My army of evil. Left flank. |
Right flank. New Vendel goblins in the foreground |
Not coming from the Warhammer Fantasy background, these rules are a bit problemmatic for me and my Dragon Rampant armies. They require frontages of 5 figures and multiple ranks, so big WFB armies that have been languishing, can get out and play again. 10 figures is the maximum size for cavalry and 20 figures is the maximum size for infantry units, and small units really just shouldn't bother, they don't seem to have much resilience. So my troops organized by 6s and 12s have issues.
Mike's army of evil. His right wing. |
His left wing. |
There are some subtle nuances in the design which are interesting. Champions can do some cool stuff, but they aren't overpowering. Generals have interesting command rules. Units within 6 inches of the general's unit get an extra activation dice so are less likely to fail, but also if the general's unit activates then he can immediately activate up to two more units within 6 inches, letting him deliver quite a decisive punch in the middle of the normal each side takes turns activating units.
My Nazgul general leads the human heavy cavalry in a charge smashing through Mike's center. |
OK, not quite "smashing". Took a while to bludgeon him down. The wolf riders should have been squishier, but I rolled poorly. |
Pluses:
- friction in the unit activation
- flanks and ranks
- subtle, but distinct, differences between assorted races
- champions aren't overpowering
- commander's main battlefield role is to actually, you know, command
Minuses
- big units (or maybe this a plus for some readers)
- got to be able to make ranks of 5 figuresso rebasing might be required
- lot of math
- army lists are very pointsy and you need a calculator
Oathmark plastic archers sieze the hill! |
Vendel goblin archers sieze the other hill |
Oathmark plastic goblin spearmen drive rangers from the woods, where the archers can then shoot them down. |
So will it replace Dragon Rampant, for me? Probably not. I don't want to go down a rabbit hole of bulking up units to 15 or 20 figures and rebasing to allow 5 figure frontages. Will I happily play it with others though? Definitely yes. So if you've got a horde of WFB Night goblins or Skaven looking to get out of the box, Oathmark might just be for you.
Sunday, June 7, 2020
Ride for Ruin and the World's Ending!
If I tool the GW figure up as a hero, give the foot javelins and add in my ubiquitous early medieval archers, I can field a 40 point eored/retinue/war band without much trouble.
I dislike the monochromatic look of the movie Rohirrim, and I do want these to be convincing Goths, so I have varied the shield and clothing colours. Horse motifs show up a lot naturally, but the Goths were a horse people so it seems legit to me. Plus there are some serpents or dragons and a couple of birds to add variety. You will note that there are no black horses, that's because Mordor has stolen all the blacks.
As you can see with the infantry, I figured out how to make a decent spear fighting pose and managed to get enough for two 12 figure units with 7 extra. I've based the two units on 40mm square bases to get a properly crowded shieldwall look. The 7 extras are on the usual 25mm washers. They can wrangle baggage, stand sentry, make a unit of skirmishers or join my 5 female villagers to make another 12 figure unit.
The infantry, being lower status, have duller clothes and simpler shields. Except for the captain on foot, with mail, a helemmet and gold shield design. He is made from a Wargames Factory Celt chieftain body, WF German head, Gripping Beast Goth helmet plume and a metal shield from my bits box.
Looking at my Games Workshop Rider now, I think he needs a base redecoration.
Looking at my Games Workshop Rider now, I think he needs a base redecoration.
Labels:
Ancients,
Dragon Rampant,
Fantasy,
Gaming,
Lion Rampant,
Lord of the Rings,
Painting Bench
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