Saturday, 7 March 2020

From MikeW - Onto the Snowlord's Peak with 17th Century Saxon Infantry (155 Points)


It was with some trepidation that I awaited the challenge to be thrown down at my door by the Snowlord after I dared to say I was ready to climb his snowy peak! After deliberation he got back to me to say I had to pick one of the following...


1) Another unit for your spiffing Siege of Vienna collection;
2) Something for your VBCW project you dabbled with a year or so back;
3) or, some more Bretons to be poor cousins to the Normans.

What a choice I had to make, as I said to the Snowlord - 'Its like having to pick my favourite child' - but secretly I knew it would be another unit for the Siege of Vienna!

The unit awaiting preparation and undercoating,
they came so close to getting a Primrose Yellow finish!

I have been wanting to complete my Saxon Infantry Brigade by adding a third unit....

White Gloss Skirting Boards, Window & Door Frame
and a Primrose Yellow Emulsion on the walls..
.
... However, before I could start this challenge item - I had to overcome a home challenge that we'd been putting off for too long, which delayed me even getting to base camp for this AHPC final summit attempt. I had to do another painting - arguably the wrong kind of painting - that's right I had to paint the spare room, this took most of last weekend!

Back to painting figures...

The whole unit
The vision was to represent a hastily recruited Saxon unit, who had been issued some coats and equipment but maybe not quite enough of each to go around for everyone. Hence you'll spot that some of the little fellas are still wearing civilian coats and most wear their own hats. What ties the unit together is the all red coats on most the figures - no contrasting cuffs and linings to emphasis the hasty issue of these coats, plus red hat bands and knee ties for their breeches.

Close-up of unit's left flank, pikemen stands are aligned behind command elements
Close-up of unit's right flank
The unit is 24 x 28mm figures, with one prone, wounded musketeer - it is based upon 4, 40mm x 40mm bases for the musketeers plus 4, 40mm x 20mm bases for the pikemen and command figures.

Two Pikemen Stands
Figures are by Front Rank and I will not bore you all with how I painted these - as it is the same as with all others that I have submitted to the challenge. Flags are from Warfare Miniatures, bases have electrostatic  grass added and lashings of grass and wild flower tufts..

The Command Stand split into two - to help with storage of units
when not in use - you can lie them down better!
Only exception to the above is the prone figure - a lone Ebor figure, that was left over from another unit in the collection, I picked this one as it is moulded somewhat flatter than the Front Rank figures and thus would look more convincing lying down.

Musketeer Stand with casualty

The 4 x Musketeer Stands
I cut off his musket and tricorne, replacing his hat with a floppy hat from the Warlord Games ECW plastics box and added a new musket from the Warlord Games WSS Infantry box, lying across the body. I reworked his hands to look like he was clutching a rag or cloth to his wound, the results seem OK to me.

Completed Unit

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Wow, Mike, very impressive. This is not only lovely work, but done so quickly as well! So much to admire here, from the brave banner to the great groundwork. I like the thought and care you put into the unit's colour selection, reinforcing that it has been scraped together from recent recruits. I'm also really impressed with the casualty figure mod, with the hat and weapon swap - very effective.

As to points, I'm going to award you a few more for the banners and bespoke casualty figure which will put you at a very tidy 155 for this unit. I also notice that this entry will put you over-the-top for your personal points challenge as well. Well done and congratulations!

For your prize, I'm happy to award you Ken's wonderful Zweihander Landsknecht, which will give you a nice start to a First Siege of Vienna project. ;)


Thanks again Mike for taking up the SLP challenge!

-Curt

Friday, 6 March 2020

From TeemuL: Lost in Time (and Space) in Roundwood's Tower (55 points)

"Thank you Lady Sarah for the ride!"
"Winter is NOT coming! Winter is going!"
"We need to find the Snowlord before the winter is gone."
"Not having a decent map and getting lost doesn't help. While looking around, we might be lost in time as well..."
"What is this place? Monkey Island? Planet of the Apes?"
"Now! Up that hill and on the double!"


This might not be exactly what was requested for this map lot, but on the other hand it is spot on. The entry is about messing the history, or history of fictional future, which was basically 1960s, so it is history...


These are Simian Minions from Crooked Dice and although they are not licensed, it is not hard to guess what they are supposed to be. I bought these some time ago and now I found a reason to paint them.
























I added Hugo Solomon from Crooked Dice as well, should be enough messing with history now, if it was not before. :) I tried to paint him in the 1960s style, at least he is colorful. After these, I have no unpainted Crooked Dice miniatures left. They seem to have moved from Sales approach to Kickstarter approach, and I'm not much into that. Anyway, they have mounted Simians as well, so I guess I need to do some shopping.

This is my fifth location on the island, so now I'm going to the Peak. Wish me luck, I have my lucky squirrel with me...

Twisting of history at Roundwood's Tower

Points wise, 5 metal 28 miniatures for 25 points and 30 points for location is 55 points. That should get me above my 500 point target, which is quite modest (even for me), but I have been quite busy with renovation of our home and my son's football practices etc. Total of 3 miniature games this year and it is March, so I have been really busy with other stuff!




*checks pocket* "Hmm, no, my time travel device is still here. I haven't a clue where they got hold of one from."

Nice Simians and adventurer Teemu! Good luck with your ascent of Snowlord's Peak!

TamsinP

From GregB: Pico Panzer Regiment Bäke (35 Points)

The Tiger Is of Schwere Panzer Regiment Bäke - 1/600 models from Pico Armor.
Greetings all - sorry to have been absent for much of the past couple of weeks.  I have been busy with work, and the Snow Lord's task has been taking a fair bit of time as well.  But here is a small (haha) project that I have been working on and I thought this would be a good time to share and end my recent blogging drought.  These are 1/600 WW2 German figures in winter kit - and while figures at this scale they could represent almost anything, in this case they are meant to represent Schwere Panzer Regiment Bäke in games of "Spearhead", the classic division-level WW2 rules by Arty Contliffe.

The whole group.

Panzer Regiment Bäke

Heads up...here come the big cats...
As catastrophe overtook the German army on the Eastern Front in 1943, the overstretched German forces would make use of "fire brigade" type formations in order to stem the various crisis arising from the Red Army's overwhelming material and manpower superiority and countless breakthroughs along a huge front line.  Schwere Panzer Regiment Bäke was one of these "fire brigades", and a potent one at that, combining a battalion of Panthers, a battalion of Tigers, a battalion of combat engineers and a few other assets (artillery etc) which represented a terrifying concentration of fighting power.

Tiger Is in 1/600 scale and winter paint.
Under the command of Franz Bäke, a panzer commander of some renown, this formation was formed in late 1943, and fought through the winter into 1944, racing from crisis to crisis. Equipped to such a level, the formation is reported to have racked up fantastical kill totals in a number of armoured engagements. I am skeptical of these sorts of kill-total reports, but this formation certainly made a major impact wherever it was deployed on the front.  And yet the Eastern Front was enormous, and in the end formations such as this could not turn the tide or reverse the broader strategic circumstances that would see the Red Army triumphant in the east.

With each base representing a platoon, we have a Panther battalion in 1/600 scale.
As a wargamer I love tank battles, and I very much enjoy painting armour, and I'm drawn to the Eastern Front as a setting (and the middle east, and Team Yankee, etc. etc.).  It's a lot of fun to represent these "fire brigade" type formations in WW2 games.  The trouble is that many tactical-level games provide players on the German side with all of the benefits (veteran crews, amazing kit) while struggling to represent the downsides (ammo and fuel shortages, being massively outnumbered, dire strategic situation etc).  You can try to make allowances for these things of course, and many well-intentioned game designers look to assorted points systems to create some balance or handicapping in a game where Panthers and Tigers are present.  But this is hard to do...don't get me wrong, skirmish gaming with "big cats" is great fun, but I like to find games that give players on the German side the problems as well as the benefits when it comes to these sorts of units.

Play these rules! They are fantastic!
So that is where a magnificent game like "Spearhead" comes into play.  Yes, your Panther battalion is terrifying, and will blow up a lot of sh*t. But the Soviet player(s) will have infantry to slow it down, artillery to blast it, air strikes to hammer it, AND waves of T-34s to send towards it.  You might blow away clouds of T-34s and still end up trapped in a pocket, with half your Panthers out of action, and in no position to seal up the breach in the front lines. No rule system comes close to "Spearhead" for giving players on the German side these sort of up-ended "I-feel-like-I-won-but-I-still-lost" gaming moments.

The combat engineers...a "Stuka Zu Fuss" battery is at the front...
In "Spearhead" each base represents one platoon.  The round bases represent command elements - small ones for battalion commanders, larger ones for regiments etc.  The "Spearhead" scenario book "Where The Iron Crosses Grow" has a scenario featuring Regiment Bäke that I have always wanted to run for our gaming group, and this submission contains the bulk of the German forces for the scenario.

Another view of the engineers - the armoured engineer platoons are at the front - they have their own Hanomags to ride around in.
For the scenario in question the Germans have a battalion of Panthers, a battalion of Tigers, and a battalion of combat engineers.  As units go in "Spearhead", these are all pretty scary...but in the scenario they will face a vast amount of Soviet armour, and they will have a difficult mission: escort the remnants of some shattered friendly units out of a pocket and back into the German lines.  The German players will have fun blowing up tanks with their elite panzers, but the command challenge in the scenario is a tough one...it will be played on a big table, and those panzers can't be everywhere...

Another view of the Panthers.
I had, at one time, a large 6mm collection of WW2 figures based for Spearhead. That is no longer with me...since I was starting from the ground up once again, I thought I would give these 1/600 models a try. I've been experimenting with them here and there for a long time, and have used them for the "Modern Spearhead" variant - they really are fun.

Regimental command - with a SdKfz flak unit on the left, and a 234 recon unit on the right.
These figures are all from Oddzial Ozmy, available in North American from the fine people at Pico Armor. I never thought I would enjoy 1/600 stuff...but the sculpting is incredible.  The infantry is still hard to do, and the bases will need labels so the players know what is what, but these paint up fast and are a lot of fun.  I also really need to up my game when it comes to ground work etc (check out Curt's 1/600 stuff to see what I mean).  But since I had all of the winter colours out during this edition of the Challenge, and Panzer Regiment Bäke was in action during the winter, it was no big deal to crank these out in winter colours "on the side" as I went along painting 28mm stuff.

Another view of the 234 - recon elements are critical in "Spearhead".
Some people who play 1/600 scale will take the opportunity to make their platoons 1-to-1 creations, putting a whole group of three or four tanks on each base.  I experimented with this, but decided against it in the end.  Crowded command bases look neat, but the tanks in the general combat platoons all look too crammed - you just end up with the same "hub-to-hub" look that ruins so many "Flames of War" games, but just at a different scope.  I kept it straight up, using the prescribed base size from the "Spearhead" rules, and used either one tank to represent a tank platoon, or one group of infantry to represent an infantry platoon.  The armoured engineer bases include a group of infantry and some 251 carriers on the same base - in "Spearhead" mechanized infantry is based together with their fighting vehicles.  

I have no idea how many points this is.  The relevant minions will figure it out! But there are 31 vehicles, and about 12 strips of five infantry figures, all in 1/600 scale, in this submission.

Thanks for looking, have a great weekend!



OK, so scoring this is a bit of a poser as I think the points per base for 3mm stuff assumes earlier periods with formed units of infantry or cavalry. 

Tell you what, I'll count the infantry as being equivalent to a "stand" (= 12 points) and the 29 (you seem to have miscounted) vehicles as half a point each (=16.5 points) plus some rounding and general bonuses for the great look to this regiment.

TamsinP

Tom and Thorin Make Snow Lord's Peak


The balloon sets down Tom on Snow Lord's Peak. He waves to Lady Sarah and steps out of the gondola. He has a wee one in a chest harness.

This week's Snow Lord's Peak brought to you by Mount Goodsir, British Columbia.

The Snow Lord looks at Tom's companion and says, 'Why, congratulations Tom! Nice of you to bring your bairn up for a visit. He looks very new. What is his name?'

'Thorin!' says Tom proudly.

'Oh, that's a very fine name and a good one to grow into.'

'Lady Sarah dropped us off so we could challenge you for the treasure. What do you have in mind, oh Frosty One?'

The Snow Lord smiles, 'Well this one is as plain as the beard on a dwarf! I think Thorin needs some companions from Middle Earth to keep him company. Let's make it a unit or a command stand and we'll call it square for the treasure.'


_______________________________________________

I look forward to seeing what you and Thorin come up with, Tom!

From JohnM: Terrain for Epic (40 points)



Myself and Iannick are planning to have our first 30k Epic game in three weeks, I have never played before and I do not think that Iannick has played Epic Armageddon since he was a young lad.  We are planning to use 2000 +/- 100 point forces and are playing the NetEA rules with the Horus Heresy lists. I am playing the Blood Angels and Iannick the Emperor's Children. I believe the plan is to play on a 4x4 terrain with no spaceship's, but everything else goes. I have my list together but keeping it a secret in order to confound Iannick. as we had no terrain, I have been keeping the CR10S busy. I already have a desert mat and some hills (from Rommel) as well as some 6 mm roads and rivers which will do, I really can not imagine the 30k world being a lush, verdant one, but of course I really have no idea as I know nothing about this world! I am looking forward to getting my force on the table though and the rules themselves do not look too complicated.

A Warhound for scale, I am hoping it is right
Ruined buildings, some objective markers and game tokens, all done on the 3D printer.
Regimental HQ in bottom left. I will make an orbital blast marker later but only needed this one for our upcoming game.
Bit of a challenge to match colouring with mat but pretty good I believe.
Detail of markers and and objectives.
12 x 8 x 6"

A generous estimate of it size would be two 6" cubes, so maybe 40 points. Wish us luck in our game.



That's some great looking tiny terrain John!

TamsinP

From Brettm Natives to Scifi (155 points)

On the next step on the map we hop aboard Sarah's Balloon 




We have a famous captain who only needs one eye to be a badass



First time I have attempted actually painting an "eye" usually just do a wash and leave it. Couldn't do that on this model. I think it turned out great. Might be because its such a big eye though lol


I have been painting on this group off and on all through the challenge. Finally all finished up! So here we have these Natives from Firelock games.

 All of them grouped up
 Decided not to do any shade on the feathers. Left them very bright.


 Thought about basing them differently from the other blood and plunder guys I have. Ended up just going with the same base as the rest of the guys I have.


 the "leaders" from what I can tell.

Point wise this is 24 Natives at 5 each comes to 120 points. Plus Sarah's Balloon of +30 and figure of +5. For a total of 155 points. Now where will this Balloon land...


Oi! You can't just hop aboard Lady S's Balloon without telling her where you want to go. That's almost hijacking! I'm sure that if you leave a comment here with your chosen destination, that will be OK.

Lovely work on these. Where is the badass captain from though? I'm sure others will want to know.

TamsinP

ps - I corrected your maths!

From JezT: Gothic Wars Part 2 - Goth (110 points)

Dear All,

Second part of this batch of figures. Always a soft spot for Goths as my first unit for the challenge four years ago was a unit of Goth Archers. As normal these are all based for use playing Impetus - in this submission I was painting some new rear rank foot figures to create a better looking deep warband. Previously was just using some skirmishers to represent a back rank ... no wonder I kept losing .........

The unbased figures are:




These figures are all Foundry with an odd horse from somewhere. Firstly just added one cavalry scout figure to an existing base to give 3 cavalry on a base, which is my usual amount for light cavalry. Pleased to do this as the scout base was from another competition entry and the missing odd figure was bothering me. I like the pointing figures here in the final basing.


Next up we have the foot figures and here I based as a 5 figure back rank with a switch to put the standard bearer on the front base of an existing unit. These are the finished full warbands with the new 10 figures mainly at the back.



Finally have the extra unit of Goth cavalry.



I have now got all my Goth cavalry in one file box with some skirmishers which is an Ostrogothic Basic Impetus army in a box - this has the typical 10 units to fight a battle. All cavalry with some screening archers - no point being defensive with this army it needs to get stuck in.


The Goths are very flexible so if I switch and add in foot I can play a more Visigothic army and of course all the Goths can be part  of a Late Roman army as federate troops.

All together the new figures are 6 cavalry and 10 foot so should be 110 points.

Cheers Jez



I opened this post thinking that maybe it was about combat between fans of Sisters  of Mercy and those of Fields of the Nephilim but, no, it's about those ancient folks who sacked Rome!

Nice additions to the army Jez..

TamsinP