A few odds and ends I finished up over the last few weeks and didn’t post pictures of because… well.. they didn’t fit in with any of the untis I was hastily trying to finish up.
(Remember: click on the pictures
for a bigger version):
These Dwarves I found while rummaging through all the old
junk they have at the Sentry
Box when I was in Calgary
in August. One was in a pack from one manufacturer and three were in a pack
from another… I forget which was which… I have no particular need for them, but
they all looked fun, though, so I grabbed them.
They’ve been hovering on the edges of the paint desk since I
got back and I’ve been working on them a bit here and there over the last month
or so. I’m sure I’ll find space for them in one Dragon
Rampant unit or another… or join a party of Dwarf Adventurers for A
Song of Blades and Heroes…
Zulus.
These ones are all from Black Tree Design.
The
Men Who Would Be Kings arrived last week and I’ve been looking at
that and wondering how to reorganize my forces to work with the rules. Most of
my ‘units’ for larger games have 15 figures in them (for Infantry – Cavalry are
generally about 10). In The
Men Who Would Be Kings regular and irregular infantry has 12, tribal
infantry has 16, cavalry 8. So one would think it would be easy for me to just
leave out a couple infantry from existing units and find a spare one to add to
the Tribal units… Oh, no… not me. I happened to notice that 15 and 10 for
regular infantry and cavalry, respectively, were precisely 25% more than the
suggested numbers. For Tribal infantry 25% more would be 20. The whole
(admittedly, rather arbitrary) reason I have units organized in 15 is because
the drawers I have to store them in 10 guys make one nice neat complete row and
10 seemed to small and 20 seemed to big for units so 3 rows (30 guys) would
neatly make two units… but if I added 5 to each unit of Tribal Infantry – that
would make a nice even unit of two rows… 16…? That’s just crazy talk – where
would the spare guy go…
(this is all starting to sound a little OCD, isn’t it…? I may actually have a problem… a buzzfeed quiz actually told me I was 100% OCD).
(this is all starting to sound a little OCD, isn’t it…? I may actually have a problem… a buzzfeed quiz actually told me I was 100% OCD).
Anyway… I actually have four units of 15 unmarried Zulus
painted – one would think I could just use those 60 to make THREE units, right?
WRONG! Two of those units are from and the other two are from Black Tree Design, and the
other two are from Wargames
Foundry. One of the units from each manufacturer has all black
shields, and the other has black with white spots… You don't just go MIXING manufacturers and shield patterns!? WHAT KIND OF A MONSTER WOULD DO
SUCH A THING?!
(This is starting to seem like a cry for help. I may need an intervention here…).
(This is starting to seem like a cry for help. I may need an intervention here…).
(of course, given the audience I’m reaching with this blog,
you’re probably all sitting there thinking “What does he mean by that…?”)
Luckily, it seems (when looking at ALL of the painted AND
unpainted figures) I have a total of about 90 unmarried Zulus from Black Tree Design, and
another 60 from Wargames
Foundry - so I’ll just reorganized them into 3-4 units of 20 from each
manufacturer.
Of course this means I have to paint up five for each of the units I already have…
Of course this means I have to paint up five for each of the units I already have…
So here are two complete
20-figure units of the Black Tree Design Zulus.
Yeah, those 20-figure units look
a bit more menacing…
I'll have six of these, eventually, in a 24-point field force... I actually have enough for figures for about TWELVE such units (plus assorted odd and extra bits - Zulus with looted rifles, etc.)
I'll have six of these, eventually, in a 24-point field force... I actually have enough for figures for about TWELVE such units (plus assorted odd and extra bits - Zulus with looted rifles, etc.)
In the short term, however, I’ll paint up another 10 to
bring the two Wargames
Foundry units I have up
to strength and then I’ll just need two more units to complete a 24 point Zulu
Impi (Field Force) for The
Men Who Would Be Kings. (actually I have two other units I COULD currently use
– they’re all armed with looted rifles, though. I suppose could classify them as
Irregular Infantry and downgrade them to “poor shots” - not having much actual training in their use...).
I already have enough stuff
painted to field a 24 point Field Force of British – though it would be a
rather boring force of three units of regulars and a gun of some sort - I don’t really have much cavalry or
irregulars or natal natives painted up… I think they’ll have to wait until after
Vimy… I DO want to try out The
Men Who Would Be Kings soon-ish, however, so I will take a little
break from khaki and finish up a few Zulus.
And now, so Great War casualties…
This little vignette of a casualty on the stretcher being offered a
smoke from the padre is
This poor fellow is also from Gripping Beast/Woodbine
Designs.
This stretcher-bearer party is from Wargames Foundry.
A German sniper (who, perhaps, CAUSED some of the above
casualties…) from Great
War Miniatures.
Staff for the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade (from Gripping Beast/Woodbine
Designs)
Coming soon on Tim’s Miniature Wargaming Blog:
Zulus…
Great War Canadians (and GERMANS!)…
More Trench Terrain Making…
Tim, step back and take a deep breath. Better? Figures look smashing as always!
ReplyDeleteMuch better, thanks! I'm okay now.
DeleteI'm STILL making 20-figure units organized by shield pattern and manufacturer, though!
You know that another solution would be to just give away some of the those Zulus right?
ReplyDeleteThat seems reasonable.
DeleteExcept... that I'm also a bit of a hoarder....
Even that seems a bit crazy to me - sounds like Old School toy soldier gaming.
ReplyDeleteI AM actually trying to build a brigade from for my Great War Canadians from every company that currently manufactures Great War British/Canadians.
Great looking dwarves and casualty figures, the zulus all look great in whatever way you want to do them!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain