Showing posts with label Challenge Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Challenge Island. Show all posts

Friday, 20 March 2020

From HerrRobert (Robert H): Exfiltrate the island (15 Points)

Finally, my last post! I'm escaping Challenge Island via Sarah's Balloon:

For the fare, I have a suitable espionage themed entry:


This is yet another Spectre Miniatures figure, their Task Force Nomad undercover operator:


Unlike others, I painted her exactly as she is depicted in the catalog, though her headscarf is a more vibrant purple:



As a "special figure," I stole Curt's basing idea and put her on an octagon. That way, she will stand out on the tabletop.

So, another five points, bringing me to my target, almost all of which was done in the last 48 hours!

To celebrate, we will be serving mimosas on Lady Sarah's balloon, for it is morning somewhere.


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Oh, you humbugged me on this one. I have this very mini and have been dying to paint it. Such a great pose. Great job Robert! I especially like her headscarf. (I also really like those buildings with the great archways - where are they from?)

As this was your third trip on Sarah's Balloon I've given you another 10 frequent flyer points. Also, as I added all your locations you have actually exceeded your target - Congratulations!

Wow, that was an amazing whistlestop tour if there ever was one! I'm happy I could minion you through it all Robert. Thanks for taking the time to put all these entries together! Hope to see you for the next edition.

-Curt


From HerrRobert (Robert H): Hey Doc (35 Points)

Next stop, Bromley's Butte:
As you must know by now, it is always wise to consult the guidebook when venturing about Challenge Island:


Recon, Surveillance, Target Acquisition (RSTA) was my first job in the the infantry and is still the most exciting and best experiences I've ever had. A job held by small teams of light infantry and scout snipers that are experts on stealth and stalking. Moving unseen, hidden when halted, and deft with all infantry skills as well as radio and camera use. Some of the best are are hunters, native born tribesman, like Tommy Prince. 
In homage to the light infantry, skirmishers and recon: 
An individual figure or squad of tactical stealth troopers. Any period, any scale, extra 5 points for hiding a warpaint Amer-Indian in a Napoleonic regiment. :)
For this, I present an undercover operator, the very definition of tactical stealth and recon:


This figure is another from Spectre Miniatures. He's one of their Undercover Operators (second from the left).


I found this figure quite spooky. With the exception of the pistol, he's wearing my usual "Dr. Herrick" uniform, when I have to look professional, but not full-on suit. Even the cut of the hair is right. As I said, spooky. So I painted him in my usual "look nice" garb - brown sports coat, blue polo, khakis, outrageous shoes.




The shoes are modeled after a pair of red Penguins I just bought. They're not the most outrageous shoes I have worn, though:


So, five more points!


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You're right, those are outrageous shoes (I'm more of a Fluevog man myself). I'd want to shoot him just to stop his fashion sense. 

Nice job Robert!

-Curt

From HerrRobert (Robert H): The female of the species is more deadly than the male (10 Points)

Now, a future entry to be posted in ten minutes would work for Sander's Sand Dunes, but everyone has been there. So, instead, I shall summon Lady Sarah's Balloon and Airmobile Assault Service to carry my agent to Bromley's Butte.


For my fare, I present two no-nonsense ladies, Sarah Connor and Ellen Landry:


Both ladies are from Spectre Miniatures Undercover Operators line:


Both were still just primer as of noon. I wanted to go with a similar color scheme as the Spectre Miniatures line, but reversed it due to fading memory.



While painting, the facial expression reminded me of Linda Hamilton in Terminator, so I went with Sarah Connor for the figure's name. Paint job was relatively simple, though I did elaborate on the running shoes. I'm not happy with the base, so I may fix it later.



The ponytail on this figure reminded me of CDR Landry in Star Trek: Discovery, so that was the name. I used Gryph-Charger Gray contrast paint on the pants, and I'm pleased with how it worked. Should be good for Civil War Union troops, which I needed.

So, another ten points.


Hopefully Lady Sarah will not mind having beer aboard for this voyage. It seems to suit the passengers more than champagne.

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Great work Robert. I have these very same miniatures and I agree they are wonderful sculpts (and the one DOES look like Sarah Connor). :) Thanks for the inside information for using Gryph-Charger Gray for faded jeans. That will come in very handy, Cheers!

-Curt

From HerrRobert (Robert H): Street fighting (95 Points)

Next stop, Benito's Brook:

This is probably as close to a point's bonb I will ever get, short of sandbagging. I just can't sit still long enough to paint dozens of figures at a time. This entry has been taking me the entire challenge to put together:


I've been playing a lot of Chain of Command and Bolt Action, and we've done a lot of street fighting. But nothing is really as savage, or as brave, as the street fighting in Stalingrad. From the guidebook:

A figure or vignette related to some brave feat of arms, almost hopeless against impossible odds.
A few ideas: A forlorn hope. A heroes assaulting a bunker, trench or fortified position single handed. A wounded soldier covering the retreat of his brothers-in-arms. The last Spanish Tercio square surrounded at Rocroi. The last stand of the Old Guard at Waterloo.
Most of the figures I've painted for Challenge X have been straight out of the tin, as it were. However, plastics give a lot of scope for conversion work, and figures based for urban conflict demand a certain bit of atmosphere.


All of these were based on Renedra's plastic bases. 25mm for individual figures, 60mm for the PTRD team. I sculpted out of greenstuff paving stones, and filled a Warlord oval base for the one figure with the ammo box.


I then created rubble, cutting down the plastic bases some figures came with, chopping up sprues, and applying copious amounts of railroad ballast to make smaller rubble. Then it all got primed.

First up, from the Plastic Soldier Company, I made a PTRD anti-tank rifle team:



This is my absolute favorite of the lot, though the pictures don't really do them justice today. For the Soviet uniform, I used Army Painter Skeleton Bone for the base, then hit it with Games Workshop's Agaros Dunes contrast paint. While the photos do not do them justice, they look like they're straight out of the Osprey book on the Red Army. The helmets are also a lot more work than they look, Vallejo Dark American Green and Reflective Green, then Army Painter's Military Shade. The rubble has at least four or five grays on it, then washed down.


The two additional figures are planned to flesh out a Warlord 50mm mortar team (very useful in Chain of Command). Both are also Plastic Soldier Company figures. I didn't like them until close to the very end, then I did. Painted the same way as the PTRD team.


These are actually Tamiya figures, from their Russian Infantry set. They're later than Stalingrad (you can tell from the banana magazines on the PPSH), and were frankly absolutely no fun to paint. But they look all right now that they're done.


These are 1st Corps resin casualties. I was converted by some of the incredible games I have played with the Jay's Wargaming Madness crew at Kublacon. His games are always a visual spectacle, and they have lots of casualty figures for atmosphere. Since I do a lot of skirmish games, it seemed appropriate.


Last up is a 76-мм полковая пушка обр. 1927 г., or the 76mm regimental gun M1927. This was the standard Russian regimental gun, and served throughout the war, though it was increasingly superceded by the M1943, which put the 76.2mm gun on the same gun carriage as the Russian 45mm. 

As far as I know, Company B is the only firm that makes the M1927. The gun is a great model, though fiddly to put together and comes with no instructions. The crew I am less thrilled with; the helmets are exaggerated, the faces not that great a sculpt, and overall casting was crude. I had a hard time enjoying the paint job, which may explain why I started the challenge with them, and did not finish them until the last day.


So there we go. Eight standing 28mm figures, for 40 points, six prone 28mm figures for 15, and a gun for another 10.



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Soviet close-support artillery in Stalingrad? Yup, that sounds pretty grim to me (only to be exceeded by being German close-support artillery in Stalingrad, now that's last stand). Great job on the little vignettes and basework, Robert. Urahhh Stalino!!!

-Curt

From HerrRobert (Robert H): Seeing Red! (45 Points)

Next on our journey, Piper's Peak! Or should we say, Piper's Pique?
This entry could also work for Roundwood's Tower, seeing as how it's also influencing an imaginary world, but honestly the pun was just too good to resist.

Tamsin would like you to paint anything that is (or could be): 
i) associated with mountains; or
ii) taking a look (a peek); or
iii) displaying anger ('a fit of pique')
(Or a cheeky airline stewardess - ed.)
And so I give you a sight that thrills Goblin generals everywhere, and inspires dread in all their foes in the Old and New Worlds . . . Night Goblin Fanatics!


These gobbos don't quite qualify as cheeky airline stewardesses, yet, but they're definitely seeing red! These are three Games Workshop plastic Night Goblin fanatics I picked up back for Challenge Ate, and have been sitting on ever since. 


While I do miss the nostalgic Old World of my late teens, my gaming group has been breathing new life into their fantasy miniatures with Warlords of Erewhon.


Rather than Night Goblins, I've decided mine will be Snow Goblins, fighting it out with the Dwarves of the Gray Mountains and occasionally raiding down into the plains of Bretonnia.


Painting was relatively easy, if slow. I relied very heavily on Games Workshop Contrast paints, especially Blood Angles Red for the cloaks, Orc Flesh for skin, and Snakebite Leather for the leather work. All went over base colors, not white, except the Blood Angels Red, which I used to blend together an otherwise three color highlight that just wasn't working. Red is fast joining yellow and white in my hated colors list.




These fellows had such fun faces and facial expressions, I had to get a little silly. So, instead of painting eyes and teeth, I did them in red. It reflects the effects of the hallucinogenic mushrooms they consume quite nicely, and literally leaves them seeing red.


So, three Snow Goblin fanatics for Piper's Pique!

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Grey Mountain Snow Goblins? Noice!

I have to admit the red stained teeth kinda creeps me out, but I still love 'em. Those twirling wrecking balls are mental.

15 points it is. Next!

-Curt


From HerrRobert (Robert H): Portugal the Man (35 Points)

As you may or may not know, when not creating stunning miniatures, my day job is a public health epidemiologist and disaster response guy. So while many of you have been able to spend the last few weeks chained to your painting tables churning out challenge points, I've been extremely busy. While the overtime will contribute nicely to expanding the lead pile and assorted plastics, it's made painting rather difficult.

Having requested relief since I was beginning to see things, I have put my 48hrs into P&P, or painting and posting. With Tamsin having affirmed free-fire mode has removed the speed limits on Challenge Island, you're going to get a whirlwind tour of the most painting in 48hrs I've ever done.


My last post was booking fare on Lady Sarah's balloon ride to establish an airhead at Roundwood's Tower:
In this location, you will need to paint or create one or more figures or vehicles, item of terrain or aircraft, which are based on an alternative view of history or based on changing the story in your chosen work of fiction. So you might be painting figures from the Roman invasion of Ireland, or an ‘imagi-nation’ which fought Frederick the Great in India, or Black Numenoreans chasing Frodo across The Dead Marshes…. Its a chance to tweak history, weave through time, change the past to fit your imagination - and, please, feel free to add your backstory!
Lately, I have been playing a lot of Spectre Operations; those of you who are fans of the Tabletop CP channel can see the last two games here and here. The second video, rescuing Oliver from somewhere in Dubalah, inspired this entry. I was hoping to get him done before the game, but ran out of time.


Esteban "Portugal the Man" Portugal is a seasoned operator for the British private security firm Risk Intelligence and Defense International Control, Ltd. or RIDICL. They're eager to cash in on the prospect of operations in Dubalah, especially the lucrative client the Sheikh, and had been courting Oliver from Shadowspear. When he went missing on the most recent Shadowspear mission to extract the Sheikh, RIDICL had to step in.


Infiltrating OTP, Portugal quickly became a trusted commander of one of their militia units. Under his direction, OTP militia were able to locate Oliver's hiding place in Dubalah, prevent him falling into the hands of either Free Dubalah forces or Shadowspear themselves, and return him to the OTP militia headquarters. All that remains is to extract him, play on his sympathies to join RIDICL, and cash the checks.


Portugal is a Spectre Miniatures figure, MENA Militia Squad Leader Alpha, at 3.50 pounds, plus shipping. He was the first Spectre Operations figure I bought, as a bit of a Christmas present when I bought the rules.


So, five points for a 25/28mm figure, and 30 for capturing/infiltrating Roundwood's Tower, or 35 total!

Next stop, proceeding rapidly and maintaining social distancing, Piper's PEak!

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It's great to have you back so you can make this last evening blitz of Challenge Island, Robert!

I really enjoy Spectre Operations and am totally addicted to their miniatures so I know where you're coming from. I quite like the sound of your ongoing campaign and will be checking out the links when the dust settles. 'Portugal' is a great looking mini. In particular, you did a great job on his face and eyes - he looks the part of a hardened operator.

Now, let's see what else you have for us.

-Curt