On the 1st March I attended the Overlord show in
Abingdon. This is a nice sized, old-school type of show; not all traders are
present and the quality of the games are of a club standard, rather than the
beautiful, epic demo games found at larger shows. I went mainly to buy a few
paints, a batch of D8’s, and to catch-up with some gaming friends. I did buy a
pack of 28mm Jacobites from Colonel Bill’s to augment my existing collection.
The figures were multipart to allow for different leg/torso combo’s, and were
armed with large 2-handed swords and axes, which is what I’m currently short
of. I immediately assembled the figures, primed them and set to painting. I
must admit to enjoying painting tartan, especially when there is no uniformity
required. A week later they were complete.
A nice touch to the show was the ‘gift’ of a free figure by
Bicorne Miniatures on entry. The figure was a Napoleonic British rifleman and
this would fit with my ‘Sharp Practice’ collection of figures (featured in a
previous blog post). Single figures can be a pain to paint, but I grouped him with
the Jacobites and this worked OK (I apologise for the quality of the photo, the
camera seems to have focussed on the cart rather than the rifleman). Also at
the show I bought a 4Ground MDF wagon (plus metal draught horse). I have always
felt I lacked baggage vehicles and other ‘clutter’ on my gaming table, so I was
keen to see if the offerings from 4Ground could remedy this. I really like the
cart; cheap, quick to assemble, plus it looks the part. I’m disappointed with my
painting of the horse; I should not have used a single colour scheme on it.
For my next project I plan to assemble a pair of retinues to
use with the recently published ‘Lion Rampant’ rules, which have had many good
reviews. I initially considered a couple of generic medieval retinues, but on
further reflection I decided a Teutonic setting would be more interesting. The
Teutonic Order figures could be easily sourced using FireForge Games Deus Vult
range. The pagan Prussians would be more difficult. I view these to be
latter-day Vikings; the Baltic remnant of the old Scandinavian empire. I could
simply use Vikings and, in fact, I could just utilise my existing Viking figures.
This seems like a cop-out, and I don’t think they will meet my vision of the
Baltic conflict. Instead, I plan to use FireForge’s Mongolian and Steppe
warrior figures as the basis of the Prussian pagans. To get a more hairy
barbarian feel I will swop the heads for some spare plastic Viking and Medieval
heads that are lurking in my spares box. I will also use some axe and sword
arms, plus change some of the shields to get a less Mongolian feel.
I am still a bit uncertain and would happily accept any
advice from gamers out there. Please add a comment, especially if you think I’m
going down an incorrect path!
Number
|
Scale
|
Period
|
Manufacturer
|
Notes:
|
97
|
15mm
|
War of the Roses
|
Peter Pig
|
|
16
|
15mm
|
Pony Wars
|
Peter Pig
|
Casualty markers
|
12
|
28mm
|
C17th British Cavalry
|
Wargames Factory
|
|
20
|
28mm
|
C17th British Infantry
|
Wargames Factory
|
|
12
|
28mm
|
ECW cavalry
|
Warlord Games
|
|
14
|
28mm
|
ECW pikemen
|
Wargames Factory
|
Conversions
|
8
|
28mm
|
Jacobites
|
Col. Bill’s
|
|
1
|
28mm
|
Napoleonic Rifleman
|
Bicorne Miniatures
|
|
1
|
28mm
|
Horse and cart
|
4Ground
|
|
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