Thursday, 5 January 2023

From MikeW: More 40K Orks and 28mm Renaissance Foot (120 Points, +1 Squirrel, +8 Skullz, +50 C&F Points)

A belated Happy New Year to everyone!

This post sees another batch of 14 x 40K Orks & Grechin completed plus a batch of 28mm Landsknecht Hand Gunners. I had hoped to have a batch of 28mm Renaissance Horse completed as well but unfortunately time to do that has eluded me 3D printed. All the more for my next post!

Another batch of 40K Greenskins off the production line!

The Ork & Grechin batch consists of 10 x Orks and 4 x Grechin. If I start with the Grechin, 3 of these little guys are plastics from eBay, the Standard Bearer is metal and a former Gorka Morka figure - if I remember correctly.

Four Grechin, with the mighty 'Red Star Banner of the Rebellion', 
2 x Skullz on these little chaps

The plastic guys were painted much the same way as previously described, I have added a wicked looking bayonet to one of their weapons - a knife captured from the Imperial Guard spares box!

Rear view of the Grechin rebels

The Standard Bearer carries what appears to be an AK47 derivative - who knew that they would still be going strong in the 40K time line. The tattered flag is made of paper and suitably 'distressed' with the big 'Red Star' of the Gobbo Rebellion clearly visible. Otherwise painting technique is the same as his plastic brethren. Between them these four Grechin also carry two skulls and hence I have added an appropriate number of bonus Skullz Points.

Four standard Boyz, with hand blaster and 'Choppa'.
Look carefully and the Guy second from left has a skull on his Choppa.

Left to Right: One of the Boyz with a big gun for more Dakka! a Mechanik
and a converted Fantasy Black Orc

Four of the Orks are represent the fairly standard Ork Boyz, that make up the core of the army, armed with axe or sword Choppas plus hand blaster. A fifth Ork is a conversion of an old plastic Black Orc figure originally released back in the 1990s (I think) which I have converted to a 40K Ork with the addition of a hand blaster and a captured Space Marine 'Chainsaw Bayonet'. As this guy is a little different to the rest I have given him snazzy striped trousers. Another of the Ork Boyz is armed with a heavier blaster, he will act as support to the above group, between them these guys we have 2 more Skulls about their persons.

Close up of the converted Black Orc. I simply added a hand blaster in his right hand.
Note a tiny skull on his left hip - they all count!

Business end of the Big Blasta, note skull on his head

Close-up of the Mechanik

Next is another Gorka Morka metal figure, this time representing a Mechanik, hence the monkey wrench in his left hand and welding gear on his back, he will be able to help fix equipment that is damaged on the table top.

The Standard Bearer, he carries a total of five skulls about his person.

The final figures in this batch are a couple of Big Boyz, an Ork Nob Standard Bearer and an Ork Nob with a Rocket Pack.

Another view of the Standard Bearer

The Standard Bearer is an older metal figure sourced from eBAY, with a plastic skull added to replace the original missing Or symbols, as this hints at a wilder more savage background, I have used browns to paint the clothing of this character, then added the usual red plate armour over that. Arguably he should be on a bigger base but that is what he arrived on my doorstep with - so that is what he keeps!

Stormboy form the front

The Ork StormBoy with the Rocket Pack is a much more modern plastic figure, he arrived with no base, so I have glued him to a UK 2 pence coin, to give weight and added stability.

Stormboy from the left side

And finally from the right hand side

Ork Nob with power axe and hand blasta.

From another angle

Lastly there is my first batch of Landsknecht Handgunners, these are Warlord Games plastic figures which are really quick to put together and undercoat in off white / ivory. I based them on the equivalent of a 2 Pence piece so that they can be considered 'Open Order' troops. For close order troops (Pikemen) I shall use the equivalent of a 1p piece, I've got a batch of these on the go now as well.

A group of 10 plastic Warlord Games Landsknecht Handgunners

With the rear rank moved forwards

So Landsknechts are not so scary to paint as they are to spell! After the undercoat had dried, I dry brushed these guys with white paint and again left to dry. Most have leather tunics which have been painted a suitable brown colour, watering down the paint so that they colour flows really easily into the details.

Close-up of fur of my favourite figures from the batch

It was then fairly straight forward to paint in a base colour for shirts and trousers / leggings in either grey or a muted green shade, then add stripes of colour to the arms and legs, using the folds in the clothing as a guide.

A final closer view of the hand-gunners

Straps and other leather work was added in a suitable contrasting shade of brown before their guns were painted with a suitable wood colour and good old dependable 'Oily Steel'. Flesh and hair was added to taste, trying to keep a higher than usual proportion of blond hair - well they are meant to be Germans after all...

Hats and feathers were coloured somewhat at random before sepia wash was used to shade the flesh and brown areas and then a watered down dark tine wash was used to shade all other areas on the figures. A less watered down version being used on the handguns.

Bases again finished with fine sand and electrostatic grass.


POINTS

14 x Orks & Grechin @ 5 Pts ea                                  70 Points

10 x 28mm Landsknecht Handgunners @ 5 Pts ea    50 Points

TOTAL                                                                         120 Points


Side Duels

+1 Squirrel Point

+8 Skullz Points

+50 points towards the  Codpiece & Feathers Side Duel

From TeemuL: Lovely greenskins and landsknechts! Those old Fantasy Battle Black Orcs keep on giving, I have used them as Fantasy Battle Black Orcs and Blood Bowl Black Orcs, they seem to be an easy job to convert to WH40K setting, too.

AndrewB- Spreading the Corniness to Sandal-Wearers! [Lady Sarah's Limousine] [Historical Drama] (70pts)

Hello!  My first installment this week(while more Star Wars silliness is going on my 3D printer) comes in a continued small project around Biblical/mythical Eastern Mediterranean fun!  I’ve been prepping miniatures for a series of skirmish games based on a silly version of Jason and the Argonauts(more on them later).  One of the villians of the 1963 film was a King Aeetes, who I’ve attempted to recreate here, along with some generic civilian figures as well, perhaps to represent previously unnamed Argonauts?  


Two of them look similar enough to perhaps be the twins Castor and Pollux, but the others will not be heroes named in the mythic text.  Maybe they’ll be Jason’s old Greek fraternity brothers Chad and Tyler.  Such remains to be seen, but will probably be entertaining.  I really couldn’t resist such goobers when the main character’s named Jason.  

The kind woman pictured here isn’t Jason’s wife(aptly named Madea, for those fans of the American films of the early 2000s), but maybe Courtney or Brandi?   We’ll have to figure that out.  Maybe Lady Sarah can decide, given she’s helping me transport myself to the Historical Drama section to cash in on the rest of these fools!   Speaking of which, more pictures!


No Aeetes in that one, just the nice folks who don’t try to raise armies of skeletons and whatnot.  

Points wise for this post, I’ve got six 28mm figures and the Historical Drama room, for 50pts by my reckoning   We’re gonna get through the challenge in our first two months this year, it’s going to be great!  More coming before Thursday!


From TeemuL: Good looking perhaps-argonauts! For the future, could you add a picture of your Studio map to the post, so it is easier to follow your path? I guess you are moving from Under Construction to Historical Drama with Limousine. I have added 20 points to your tally, since you 20 points for the Limousine, too. In addition I added "Sarah's Choice" tag.

From ByronM - Black & White AND Under Construction (80 Points)

For my second entry of the day I am covering off my last two mandatory green pass studio spaces, although I plan to do more.  

First up, I am visiting the Black & White studio where I really had no idea what to do, and was just going to paint up a random Great War figure in B&W, but then I saw a post on the blog and changed my mind. I am therefore stealing JohnathanO's wonderful idea of painting up some Weeping Angels.  


I found a STL file for them online, and printed out a pair of them to paint, but one had the wing kind of separate a bit, and while ok for a statue, I printed off a second pair of the so that they were perfectly correct.  I then broke out the airbrush and did a quick black base coat and then a zenithal white highlight.  I then blasted it with a stone grey colour, washed them and then applied some quick stone grey highlights.  Super fast and super easy, and I think they turned out awesome!  So thank JohnathanO for the great idea, as I now have some great little pieces I can use as Angels or simply terrain bits.

Next up I am visiting the Under Construction space with a return to a long sidelined project.  Years ago now Games Workshop released a bunch of new Ork Vehicles including a F1 race car, a jet car and a few others.  I immediately wanted to paint them up just for fun, then heard about a game that Curt plays called Charioteer and thought I would base them all up, find some Imperial vehicles to fit with them and start playing them as chariots just for fun, I mean after all Orks can't shoot the broadside of a barn anyway, so close in combat is their thing anyway. 

Anyway, I promised I was going to get some old stuff done this challenge and this resurrects that project with one of the Imperial vehicles I picked up for it, an Adeptus Mechanicus roadster.

I painted this one to match my existing Adeptus Mechanicus force in deep crimsons and brass colours, and then based it to match the Ork vehicles that I had started before.

 
Overall I am really happy with how it came out and can not wait to get the other vehicles done now so that we can start racing.  Oh, and I might have laser cut a board for them to all fit into so that they look cooler when racing, so hopefully I can show that off sometime later in the challenge.

As for points, the statues are all 28mm figures so 5 points each = 20 plus the 20 points for the theme space.  And then the vehicle is a 28mm car so 20 points for it, plus another 20 for the second theme space of the day, for a total of 80 points!

From TeemuL: It is good to see that this Challenge has already inspired some of us! Those grey statues/angels look great and are very usable in various settings, I guess. I do remember one of your race car red ork vehicles, it was just brilliant - must have been some 5 Challenges ago or something. This new one will make a great competitor for that (and Curt's "chariots", too). I like the skull head lights and the road it is riding. There's a fair amount of skuls, but you are not joining the Skull Duel madness, aren't you?

From DaveX: We Came, We Saw, We Kicked its... [1980s] (40 points)

Sticking with Zombicide, I have decided to paint hundreds of dollars worth of miniatures. I purchased the Zombicide Ghostbusters packs direct from CMON when they came out a few years ago. They are now varying in worth but probably both box sets could fetch me a pretty penny and much more than i paid for them. But that's not me. Instead I opened them and gave them a nice tabletop ready paint job. They are great miniatures and should be easily recognisable on the table. They were a little flat in detail and some stuff was hard to pick out but I gave it a good go. I painted the four Ghostbusters from the original 1984 movie. This will also be my 1980s entry for the challenge, afterall Ghostbusters came out in 1984. I did some research first.
And then I opened up some expensive miniatures
Doctor Peter Venkman is probably my favourite and a fan favourite too!
Dr Ray Stantz
Dr Egon Spengler
Winston Zeddemore So this should be 4 x 28mm = 20 Points Bonus Studio1980s Theme = 20 points Totalling 40 Handy Points :D

From TeemuL: This is the first time in my short Minion career, where I meet the infamous non-labeled post, marked as ready. Oh, the horror! But since I'm a newbie, I took this as a challenge and did my very best to assign some labels to the post. I just hope this will not be a habit...

Then the more important things, these minis look great and fit the 1980s studio like a fist in a ghost's eye. I'm sure they are able to fight both zombies and ghosts, if needed.

From SteveA: "Late Risen Undead" [High Adventure] (100 points)

Hello all, 

By these words and pictures below hereby do submit my premier post for my first time joining in on the AHPC, and consequently I do hereby also indulge in an wee bit of a circuitous self introduction as I present pictures of my first painted offerings for your review. 

Back in the early 90s to me were halcyon times when I had long hair atop my head and many pots of fresh Citadel paints at the ready - all things minis were awesome, the dice were six sided devils with whom I liked to share a few beers as we played a few haphazard table top battles with our friends while the metal music played... My back-log of unpainted minis was growing but manageable, and there seemed no reason to slow the accumulation of wargames I was getting into.  My Games Workshop fan boy fever dreams of many fully painted armies seemed both reasonable and inevitable, glorious. 

Well, with the discovery that reality was a poor friend to unchecked hobby ambitions, it came to pass that my back-log of unpainted minis grew faster than I laid paint from brush to models.  Then after a short few years of my enraptured submersion below war gaming waters, the stuff of life banished all of my miniaturing hobbies into a few crammed boxes that were hauled through a couple moves and left to languish in the darkest closet corners for over two decades.  

In those boxes of unpainted model shame and unspent paints, were unfinished soldiers for my mostly completed  "Undead Army", a mix of official Games Workshop undead and proxy miniatures that seemed fit for purpose at a lower price point for purchase, for playing games of Warhammer Fantasy Battle that made sense at the time. 


Now here I am in present day,  after a couple years of slowly resuming some of what is best in life, that being the painting minis and playing table top battles with friends!   At last, the call from the things dwelling in the closet were  not from bothersome haunting ghosts and gremlins, but rather from my brush, paint and minis of old!  My hair may have fallen from scalp to chin, and lost all color in the descent, but to battle I am called!  I must slay the grey!   Big thanks from me to ByronM and a couple others for relighting the creative fires whereupon I layer paint upon models for purpose of waging war and skirmish games upon dice battered and beer splattered table tops. ( and also there is a big thanks from the ghosts and gremlins in my closet, they are using the recently freed up closet space from my moved hobby supplies to set up a modest Karaoke stage for themselves.)


I am now rearmed with many new pots of paints, with paint brands new to me; Vallego and Army Painter as well as a few pots of what GW has to offer now..  and also surprisingly my old Citadel Colour pots of "Snot Green" and "Putrid Green" survived decades where my many other pots of citadel colours (and Ral Partha) paints had perished. These two old Citadel paints together are both fortuitous and relevant to this post.... as these old green pigments are present in my pictures for this post. 



Back in the day when I was painting my Warhammer Fantasy Army of "Undead", I was naturally inspired by what I saw in White Dwarf Magazine and 'Evy Metal painting.. which to me meant all bases were treated with sand and white glue and painted with a foundation of Green Snot, dry brushed with Green Putrescence then given a wash with whatever the painting gawds saw fit to have mixed upon my pallet that day

I had the old models, I had the old paint, I had a new challenge...

So for these new reborn undead, once lost to long years to the purgatory unpainted grey, they arise painted at last,  their moldering feet atop the same sandy green bases as their fellow undead in an army last painted many years ago... better late than never I suppose..

... and as these undead clamber and shuffle their return to the High Adventure of fantasy themed table top battles,  so do I also return in earnest to the hobbies of mini painting and rolling war dice with the first points scored next to my handle-name.

28mm Undead figures x 11 + Challenge   =   Total  100 points

Zombies (Foot Figure) 8x5pts                                        = 40pts
Skeleton Calvary (Mounted) 2x10pts                            = 20pts
Undead Dragon (Score as Mounted Figure Vehicle)    = 20pts
1st Green Studio Pass: 'High Adventure'                     = 20pts

From TeemuL: Welcome to the Challenge and I think your history is rather familiar to many of us. You are a lucky one, being able to keep and move thosee boxes containing old minis for several years! It is amazing how some of the GW paints are still usable after decades while at the same time some pots are pretty much useless when you carry them out of the store. You could have painted the bases more green, the edges can be green, too, you know? ;) It is good to see how old minis get some love (other than from ghosts and gremlins). I'll score your dragon as a vehicle, since it is much bigger than a regular mount and practically is a vehicle. Good to have you on board, looking for more goodness!

From ByronM: 10mm Kings of War Salamander (Lizardmen) Army - Part 1 (251 points)

One of my goals for this years challenge is to finish a second Kings of War (KOW) army in 10mm scale so that I can indoctrinate welcome new players to this wonderful game in this great scale.  I had always wanted to paint up a Lizardman army for Warhammer Fantasy Battle, but never got around to it, and ended up giving the figures to my son Riley to paint.  So when I saw the amazing files for some10mm sculpts from "Forest Dragon" I just had to jump on board and pick them up as my second KOW army, and got to work printing out an armies worth of them.

I have kept them all based to 28mm standard base sizes using my own Northern Lights Terrain Kings of War Bases that have a notch in the leading edge to help pick out the center point of each base of figured (which is important in the rule system).  This means that a unit that in 28mm scale would be based with about 18-20 figures on the base ends up having 45-90 figures on the base.  The actual number of figures never really matters in KOW (as long as it looks correct or cool), just the base size.

 
This first submission for the army has most of the core units, with mainly specialty units to come in a future submission.  I did this because I find it way easier to bang out the rank and file while motivation on a project if high, and then get to the reward of specialty / cool figures to paint later on in a project.  As it turns out, this core block of painting is actually 1020 points total (in game terms, don't worry, not painting points!) so with it I am actually already 1/2 done this project!

So with that I have 2 horde sized units of Tyrants.  These are massive 15-20' tall lizards that swing clubs the size of full grown trees to smash their way through the enemies.  They hit hard but do not have much in the way or armour or defences.  In 28mm scale there would be 6 per base, but here I did 13 per base to give a look of unordered giants lumbering forward in rough formation.  I also painted them in 4 different shades to provide a mixed look rather than the standard single skin tone that GW always did their lizardmen armies in.  I did keep predominately to the traditional blue skin tone as I find it looks really sharp, but mixed in some pale blues and greens as well for variation.



Next up are 2 regiment sized units of Salamader Primes, the core of the army as they are both effective on the attack and have sturdy defensive abilities to take a hit.  In 28mm scale there would be 20 per base for these units, but in 10mm scale I put 60 on one base and 75 on the other base and really like how packed they look (especially the 75 model base).  I kept some variation of colour with these as well, using 3 different shades of Scale 75 Instant Color paint (Replenish Blue, Paralyze Blue, and Magic Blue) and find that the slight variation makes them look more realistic to me.

 
Lastly a pair of regiment sized units of Skink Ghekkotah Hunters with blowpipes.  These are smaller troops so end up on a smaller base.  Since they have the Pathfinder and Stealthy rules I kept them spaced out more on the base and much closer to the actual model count that they would have had in 28mm scale, but I did add a champion to each base and a few Salamaders to the back of the units with two-handed weapons as minders/tenders.  The smaller lizards are a bit flighty with lower moral than their larger brethren so I pictured having a few larger lizards with them as support, but hanging back to the rear of the unit as they are not able to sneak around as much so follow as a reserve.  They play ZERO effect in game terms and I just put them there for looks cool factor and fluff.

 
All of these were super fast to paint with the Scale75 instant colours, and are not great individually, but I think they look pretty damn good when all ranked up. So while more could be done to them, I am leaving them as is and moving on.

Points:

26 tyrants @ 2 points per (15mm scale infantry) = 52 points
135 Salamader Primes @ 1 point per = 135 points
56 Ghekkotah Hunters @ 1 point per = 56 points
8 Salamaders w/2hw @ 1 point per = 8 points

Total: 251 Points


From TeemuL: Those crowded bases look great, much more unit/army looking than GW units in 28mm. I trust your miniature count, I'm not going try to count them all and I'm happy with your 15mm tyrants. :) Looking forward to see the sequel.

From PeterD: Pict Hunters (30 Points)

 I have a small unit of Pict Hunters with bows.


Figures came from. bag of (IIRC) Old Glory 28mm Welsh Archers that I acquired 15-20 years ago.  While packaged as Welsh I figure that they are hairy, badly dressed and generically Celtic enough to work as Picts.  Being Old Glory, posing and anatomy is um... interesting at times.  Also it wasn't until I had these guys primed and ready to paint that I realized that two were wearing the Late Antiquity version of Ray's Budgie Smugglers.


According to Ancient Wargamer cannon (book of WRG) Picts differed from other hairy barbarians by using longer spears and more bows (including Crossbows).  It's all pretty circumstantial based mainly on 1500 year old rock carvings, but it means that a Pict war band has a different feel than a Scot-Irish warband or Saxon raiders.


I tried free handing plaids on a couple of figures but gave it up as a bad job after the first two.  I've left a clear space at the back of the bases for unit tables but I'm still playing around with the fonts that I want to use for Picts.


In terraforming my bases I tried to make these look like rougher terrain than typical with lots of rocks and low bushes. In his comments on my Intro post, Martijn noted that I had primed these figures on their bases and asked if it was something I often did.  It was a short lived experiment and after a single session they were pried off, put onto pennies for painting and then returned to their bases when ready.

Points wise I make this 6 28mm figures for 30 points and no theme bonus.  But I can apply the points to the Carausius Emperor of Britain side Duel.

TeemuL: Hairy barbarians they are! The rough terrain looks good and it is nice to see some old figs getting paint on them. Your math is correct, 30 points it is.

From LeeH: Poynings, Guildford, Talbot & Savage (56 Points)

For my first submission with the Thursday crew (good day gentlemen), I have some pikemen and scurriers (light cavalry). Sadly I’m back at work properly since yesterday so I expect the speed of delivery will slow a bit. I’ve had most of the last two and a half weeks off work and, thanks to a very understanding wife, I have got a lot painted. But I couldn’t avoid work forever and with its return so my painting time will be curtailed. That being said, the ability to work from home means I can get simple but time-consuming jobs like varnishing and waiting for the glue on bases to dry, completed while I work (my ‘office’ is also my games room…oh the humanity!)



Anyway on with today's submission. First, we have the troops of Sir Edward Poynings of Southwark. In my army list, he has a unit of pikemen and a unit of archers. It's likely that many of the pikemen that accompanied Henry’s army to England were French and other mercenaries (that depends on the source material and the scholar interpreting them of course). For the purposes of my OOB, I have assigned the to Poynings and they were his red livery. Sir Edward had been amongst those Nobles who rebelled against Richard III in 1483 and after their defeat, he had fled to join Henry in exile.



Next, we have Sir Richard Guildford of Halden. As with Poynings, I have assigned him a unit of pike and a unit of archers. I made an educated guess as to the livery for his troops, partly based on his personal banner but also on the fact I wanted to do halved livery (yellow and black). I wasn’t sure how well it would come out but I’m pretty happy with the effect.



The last two units are small skirmish cavalry units under Sir Gilbert Talbot and Sir John Savage. Some of the accounts I have read suggest these were placed on the flanks of Oxford's army when it attacked Norfolk's troops. Various rules treat such light cavalry differently so it's hard to judge how effective they would be but as with all the other variables for this battle, it's something I can experiment with. Any suggestions for research material on how light cavalry was used in this period would be greatly appreciated.



Lastly, I thought I would snap a picture of everything I have completed thus far. This is a little under a quarter of the total project…so I have my work cut out for me! Incidentally, thank you to everyone who has left nice comments on my submissions thus far. It is greatly appreciated and keeps me motivated. However, I must correct a misconception…the painting really isn’t that great. Seriously, 6mm is a doddle to paint simply because you don’t have to be that careful or detailed with the painting. My method is to block paint all the main areas and then ink the whole model to add shadows and define one bit of kit from another (the micro equivalent of blacklining a figure). Close up they look terrible…but they look perfectly fine in the 3ft test. I have been putting extra effort into the basing and the flags and these two latter stages - far more than the painting - are what make these look ok at arm's length.



That is it from me for now. Hopefully, I will have something to show off for next week's submission.


Points Estimate:
96x6mm Foot - 48 Points
8x6mm Cavalry - 8 Points
Total - 56 Points

TeemuL: I agree with you, in 6mm the nice flags and pretty bases steal the attention, so there is no need to paint pupils and mustaches... The group shot is excellent, looking forward to see how this develops and how close you get when the Challenge ends.

From GeoffreyT: "I'm Batman" (Superheroes)(25 points)

No, I'm not batman, and neither is this miniature I sculpted.  He is a cosplaying super-fan.

He knows the skin tight lycra doesn't flatter his physique, but he wont let any nefarious body-shamer ruin his hobby. 


He is in his natural element here, the base is painted as a burgundy carpet of a convention centre hall.


His outfit is in the traditional batman colours because he is a bat-traditionalist, but he still plans to work on the outfit and add the logo and belt, but the billowing bat-cape is really what nails the outfit for him.

Points:

I arrived here from the adjacent retro studio with my blue security pass complete.

As I don't pursue the superhero genre at all, I did not have anything for this studio.  So when I saw the list of studio tasks, I decided to sculpt something for it.   The sculpt and paint work is very rough, but I'm quite pleased to have been able to choose a different subject matter and execute the concept as I intended.

1 x 28mm fig = 5 points

1 x bonus for Superhero Studio = 20 points

Geoff

TeemuL: He is a superhero, following one's dreams and walking on a convention hall in front of thousands of fans wearing a self-made lycra suit. The real Batman doesn't have superpowers, he is still a superhero, so this fan counts as a superhero, too. Paintjob might be rough, but I guess it is just the high contrast lightning and all the flashlights in the hall.

Thor's Day Team in Line

Welcome to the celebration of the first Thor's Day of the 2023! First I have small informative section and then I take a look at the coming posts.


:suomimainittu:


SUOMI MAINITTU!

The feeling when someone mentions Finland abroad.

Finns are always excited when someone – anyone – mentions Finland abroad. When you come to Finland, be prepared to tell what you think about Finland and Finns.


Finland is the first country in the world to publish its own set of country themed emojis. The Finland emoji collection contains 56 tongue-in-cheek emotions, which were created to explain some hard-to-describe Finnish emotions, Finnish words and customs.

--- End of Finn writing about Finland ---

We have bunch of posts today, our team has been very productive, most of the members were already on board on 2022 and now we have quite a lot of content for several movies!

- There will historical movies all the way from Ancients to 1980s, including War of the Roses in between
- Superhero movie, or at least a Superhero wannabe
- Fantasy movies of Undead and Lizards
- Scifi movie with race cars
- And probably much more!