Last night I completed a regiment (three battalions) of 10mm Polish cavalry for the 1939 campaign. The figures are manufactured by Pithead. To my knowledge Pithead is the only company that makes Poles in 10mm. Most of my figures for Look, Sarge, No Charts: WWII are Minifigs, but they do not make Poles.
10mm Wold War II figures paint very quickly. It’s mostly a matter of dry brushing. I base spray the figures black and then dry brush the horses and uniforms. I paint the hair and rifles and then add the flesh for the face and hands and the helmets.
The figures are mounted for Look, Sarge, No Charts: WWII. In LSNC all the information needed to play the game is placed on the label at the back of the base. There are no chart cards. Additional information is provided by a handful of special dice. To help denote which bases (platoons and headquarters) belong to which units, I paint a small bar on the base in different colors for battalions and denote the company number with dots. In the case of the picture above, this troop is from the “brown battalion” and is the “third company.”
I can’t wait to get these troops on the table. Buck’s law says that the first time you use a newly painted unit in a game, they will get smucked. I’m anxious to get that over with so we can start doing play tests for the Lvov LSNC extravaganza.
As a Look, Sarge, No Charts: World War II extravaganza for Cold Wars 2011, Chris and I are working on a large battle based on the fighting around Lvov in 1939. We’ll be taking a little license with the history. The Germans attacked the city around the 12th of September. Polish forces retook the city on the 13th with the help of the 10th Mechanized brigade, but the Germans maintained control of the high ground around the city. They set up their artillery on the city and shelled the town. The Russians arrived and completed the encirclement of the city on the 19th of September.
In our scenario, the Poles are in the town, but must attack to seize the high ground north of the city and destory the German artillery there. The Russians are attacking from the East to enter the city. The Germans are attacking from the West. It will be a three sided scenario, because the Russians and Germans are attacking from opposite sides. (In the real battle, there was no coordinated German-Russian attack.) The Russians and Germans are, in fact, competing for the honor of capturing the city first.
In preparation, I’ve been painting 10mm Poles like crazy. I am just about done with more Polish armor and a regiment of cavalry. I’ll post pictures of them soon. When I finish another regiment of infantry, I’ll have enough (minus the trucks) for a mechanized brigade and an infantry brigade. As the trucks are expensive, I think I’ll make my truck bases half sized and only mount a single truck.
I think we’ll have 8-10 players worth of Poles and another 10-12 player worth of Germans and Russians. If you live in the Baltimore area, consider coming to Barrage in Janaury for the first major playtest of the scenario in preparation for Cold Wars.
Before I came home from Iraq, I saw some information about these figures. I put together an advanced order from Eureka, and Chris picked them up for me at Historicon.
Many years ago, when I was living in Georgia and a member of HMGS Mid-South, I needed to put together a game for a small regional convention. I was just beginning to get interested in WWII skirmish gaming, and all I had painted were Germans. I was trying to figure out what kind of game I could run with just Germans, when I saw a television documentary about dinosaurs, narrated by Walter Cronkite. It occurred to me: what would a panzerfaust do to a Tyrannosaurus? Thus was born Deutschland and Dinosaurs, a real crowd pleaser, that I ran for several years. Experiments on Penemunde go bad, and a rag-tag group of German soldiers have to defend the research facilities from rampaging dinosaurs. It was always fun to see the dinosaurs pull the Germans out the top of the open-topped vehicles!
So… when Eureka announced these figures, I just HAD to have them! This weekend was reasonably slow, so I had a chance to finish them up. I actually started them last weekend, but I was gone on business all week.
I can’t wait to get these into a GASLIGHT game.
I’m not sure why the officers and NCOs are wearing masks, but that’s how they’re molded. The other troopers with SMGs are wearing goggles, but not masks. The sculpting on these figures is very clean, and assembly was easy. It took three hands to get the figures to stand straight on the two, separate legs while the super glue dried. Otherwise, assembly was very easy.
Sammy, my 11-year-old daughter and I finished another of the Litko laser-cut buildings today. This one is the small garage. On the pizzeria, Sam did the basic dry brushing, but I did the rest. In this case, Sam also painted the random, different-colored bricks.
I just found the vintage radiator repair graphic on the Web and resized it to fit on the door. I haven’t decided what kind of sign to put above the door yet.
This building is interesting because of the slit-type windows along the sides. Good places to shoot those Tommy guns!
I’ve been adding to my collection of buildings for Pulp games. In a very general, abstract, nostalgic way, I’m working on constructing the town of Granville, IL, which is a small town near where I spent my Summers as a kid. I’m not being overly “realistic,” but looking for the right feel of a 1200-person town with a single main street.
I’ve become a big fan of the Litko building kits. They are laser-cut, hard wood kits that have brick and other detail scribed into them. They assemble and paint quickly. For Christmas, my parents got me another of the 2-story buildings, the pizzeria, and the small garage. The garage is on the project table, but I finished the pizzeria. My daughter did the dry brushing of the bricks, and I painted in the detail.
I’ll post a picture of the garage when I finish it. I’m hoping to run a large pulp game in the Fall some time at a HAWKs night.
Since this project was announced by Hydra about two years ago, I’ve been excited about it. I’m a huge fan of the old movie serials from the 40’s and 50’s, having quite a few of them on DVD. While I was in Iraq, my wife ordered some of the ships for me for my birthday. By the time I redeployed, Hydra had released a few more ships and the rules. The rules and additional ships arrived while I was on vacation, but I was able to get them painted and ready for their first game for last Friday’s HAWKs night.
These ships were very fun to paint. There is enough detail to help with the brushing, but not so much detail that they get gunky when painting them. I was able to paint all four fleets in a weekend.
So… I signed up to run War Rocket at a HAWKs night before I had even primed the ships. There’s nothing like a deadline to increase focus. Having never played the game, I ran two iterations for the club. As this was our first go at the rules, I paired up the four fleets into two alliances (Valkeeri and Galacteers vs. Imperials and Zenithians) and ran a “meeting engagement.”
We didn’t play with the rule about delaying your actions until the next turn for this introductory game. We found that all the fleets had nice plusses and minuses to them that made them interesting. Our feeling though is that the forward only fire of the smaller Valkeeri ships put them at a bit of a disadvantage compared to the others. I think my favorite fleet is the Zenithians.
I made this planet from a styrofoam ring and ball from the floral section of the craft store. I like the effect.
Chris suggested that I put sparkly pipe cleaners sticking out the back of all the ships. That might be a neat effect as well.
I think we all had a good time with the rules. They’re simple, fast, and bloody, but there is enough nuance and detail to make the games interesting. It’s a step down in detail and complication from Firestorm Armada that the HAWKs started playing while I was deployed. I like the feel of the game and the speed of play. While we found a few typos in the quick reference sheet, we all picked up the rules quickly. With four fleets of about 8 ships per fleet, we were able to complete two games in about three hours.
I eagerly await the release of the missing ships and the two new fleets. A combination of Class III and IV ships are needed to complete the Imperial, Galacteer, and Valkeeri fleets. I have six Class I ships per fleet, a Class II, and where available, a Class III and IV for each. I think the right composition is six Class I, three Class II, two Class III, and one Class IV per fleet. When the new ships are available, I’ll purchase enough additional ones to put this together for each fleet.
While in Iraq, during our copious free time (not!), I introduced a couple of the guys I worked with the Kung Fu Fighting, the card-based game from Slugfest. In this game you get to throw flying, flipping, running up the wall kicks at each other. It’s a lot of fun, and it was a nice break from the “Groundhog Day” existence.