Advance and be recognized |
If all goes to plan, this should be the first of two posts from me this week. Having been thrown way off schedule by my bout of COVID at the start of my teaching semester, I've decided to bin the challenge locations and focus on the stuff I've got ready to paint on the workbench.
All of the pieces lined up. Four straight sections, three curved sections, two gates and two end caps. |
Backside view of the whole array. |
I had two largish modular terrain projects planned for this year's challenge, the modular ruins posted a few weeks back and this Dark Age Ring Fort. It's a set of 28mm pdf kits by Sarissa Precision. As with all the Sarissa Kits I've worked with it was a joy to put together, an easy hour of punching out, applying glue and clicking the bits together. And yes there are two camps regarding terrain, those of us who enjoy making scenics and those of us with irrational phobias towards terrain brought on by extreme emotional trauma while in uteri.
My Gripping beast warriors on the ramparts. |
This sort of works would protect villages, towns and manors all over Western Europe from the early days of the Roman Empire into the middle ages. it's inhabitants might be Celts, Saxons Franks, Danes or Scots-Irish, but the basic plan remained constant. Sloped earthen ramparts topped with a fence or palisade and flattened off on top to make a fighting platform.
Most Sarissa kits come with doors, but oddly the gate houses did not come with gates. I bodged some together using left over doors from other kits. I did one gate open and one gate closed. |
The roadway and fighting platform are done with fine railway ballast firmly cemented in place (thanks for the tips Curt) and overpaid in earth tones |
The pair of gates in the open position are to narrow to full close of the entrance, but modeller's license and forced perspective means that can be ignored. |
The kits are marketed as 28mm but the walls and gates seem low compared to my GB figures. As with most war-games terrain it's a matter of balancing the differing vertical and horizontal scales and looks ok on table. Anyway, I'm not sending it back!
I see a ton of uses for this on table. First off for my Beowulf RPG when we go on TT. Also it will fit my El Cid armies nicely and can be morphed into other eras easily. I now have a pretty good tied collection of terrain to cover Dark Age Britain, and so I think that I need to build Sub-Roman armies and enemies to fight over it!
Points wise the ramparts measure 36" long, 3" wide and 2" tall. That's a perfect terrain cube for 20 points.
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That is a very cool looking Dark Age fort Peter. MDF kits are getting quite sophisticated, doing a better job in mimicking more naturalistic structures. I like how you used clump groundwork to cover the joins and break up the uniformity of some of the lines. Well done.
- Curt
Nice ramparts, Peter! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks very much Tamsin.
DeleteThanks Curt. I’ve had had good results with the mdf kits, they go together easily give a good look and are kinda fun to work on.
ReplyDeleteGreat looking ramparts,they do seem a little small for 28mm, but at least they're easy to pack away! I've been thinking of scratch building something like this,but it'll probably take 10 years!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Thanks Iain. I’ve also thought of building from scratch. This is much faster, and all the hard work is done for me!
DeleteThis is great Peter! I like how you added your own touches to make it unique and more suited to your needs!
ReplyDeleteThanks Natasha. The great thing with these kits is that there is room to add on as you like.
DeleteWell done, Peter. You have nicely camouflaged the mdf kit as terrain.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much.
DeleteNice fort that as you say can be used for a number of periods
ReplyDeleteThanks, I am hoping so
DeleteNow if I was a Viking raider I’d go around the sides… nice work!
ReplyDeleteTrue enough, I need more ramparts to make a full ring.
DeleteGreat work Peter! A fort is an awesome terrain piece to have, as it lends itself to so many cool gaming uses. This is particularly impressive...if you had not told us it was MDF, I would have assumed it was a home-made job. This speaks to, as Curt says, the increasing sophistication of the MDF gang, but also the effort you put in to make it work. Well done.
ReplyDeleteIt's quite splendid, Peter, agree with the other comments about how you've used turf and flock to trick it out and make it look natural. Kind of boggles the mind how much dirt would be moved by hand to make these fortifications. Also odd that they didn't include gates with the kit.
ReplyDeleteCheers, MikeP
Cheers Mike. Appreciate the comments that I’ve been getting here. The earthmoving would be significant. I also think of sawing the Timbers with the equipment available.
Delete