Dave (far left) and Duncan (far right) teamed up again to host the Battle of Vittoria using the Fate of Battle rules. They tweaked the scenario a bit from Cold Wars, and by all accounts the changes made the scenario more interesting for the players. I was busy running my own game at the time, but the players appeared to be having fun. There was a LOT of movement, unlike many Napoleonic battles are have armies lined up hub-to-hub across the table.
Noah Guibalt, one of the HAWKs, ran a popular and well-attended Skirmish Sangin game Saturday afternoon in the HAWKs room at Historicon. The following pictures are in no particular order.
I ran this game twice at Historicon, once for kids and once as a normal convention game. The basic scenario involves a squad (or so) of German Wehrmacht infantry and a US tank crew defending French VIP prisoners in a castle (Schloss Iter) in Austria against Waffen SS troops sent to kill them. This is a real incident that happened in the last week or so of WWII.
The pictures are in no particular order and mix the two games together. The intent is not to provide a battle narrative, but rather to show some interesting pictures of what turned out to be two fun games.
In the version aimed at kids, the defenders won. There were three “key” prisoners in the castle (for game purposes). The attackers killed one of the three. Since the defenders maintained two of the three, I called if a defender victory.
In the general version (which also had some younger gamers) the attackers fought their way into the courtyard and killed all the defenders. In all the play tests and running of the game, this was the first attacker victory.
The Waffen SS about the charge into the courtyard as the defenders turn to face inward
For rules, I used my under-development GAMER system (see previous posts). The rules worked well, and I think the players caught onto them quickly and easily.
Even the moms got into the game!
The Waffen SS score a mobility kill on the Sherman at the gate house.
These pictures are mostly from the HAWKs room at Historicon 2015, but I did get out of there once in a while to check out other gaming. I didn’t arrive until mid afternoon on Friday, so I don’t have pictures of earlier events.
Dave Wood describing Bear Yourselves Valiantly to a boy and his mom who played last year and returned for more unbridled fun.Eric Schlegel's GAMER WWII eventSome of my Italians taking cover behind a rocky outcropping.Bill Acheson putting the final touches on his theater for Saturday's zombie game.Tank Nickle deep in thought.David Schlegel's Hunger Games event. David always gets the girls in his games! It could be the topic, or it could be they all think he's hunky.Don Hogge's Battleground WWII skirmish game. The scenario involved Germans bumping into a group of Americans getting chow.Jim McDonald getting his six-player Saga game started.Duncan Adams running Look, Sarge, No Charts 1914Noah Guilt played in the MBA-sponsored Skirmish Sangin extravaganza in the main room.Robert, William, and I had chance to participate in a play test of Pulp Figure's upcoming Star Crush rules in support of their new line of 1970's style space ships.I don't know much about this WWI airplane game, but the blue and white squares caught my attention every time I walked by the table.Ron Prillaman's great looking and popular Magnificent Seven game in 54mm. People were talking about this event a week BEFORE the convention.An attractive post-apocalyptic game featuring a new set of rules, This is not a Test. I didn't get a chance to play in it, but it looked wonderful.
On Saturday at Historicon 2015, Eric Schlegel hosted the 5th Armies for Kids Giveaway game. The event is for kids under 10 years old. Each younger gamer who participates in the event walks away with enough PAINTED figures (for both sides) to run a game at home, some terrain, some unpainted figures, some paints, etc.
This year’s event featured 40mm ACW figures, mostly Sash and Saber, through the kind donations of many folks. Maynard Creel, Ed Mohrmann, Phil Kearnan, Keven Pinder, and Eric Von Reyn provided the figures. Ed hired Phil to paint all the Confederates that Ed purchased, and Phil subsequently donated and painted the mounted officers. Chris Johnson once again provided terrain for the kids to take home. These included wooden fences and a paper bridge over which to fight. I realized after I got home that I need took any good close-up pictures of the figures that Phil painted, but they were amazing. The HAWKs held a couple of painting bees during the year to paint up all the unpainted figures that had been donated. Our figures did not look nearly as good as Phil’s.
Eric used his ACW rules he has created specifically for kids games. They flow nicely, and the kids always have good time. Eric’s rules also include his “test of history education in US schools.” When a specific card is drawn from the deck, he asks one side or the other an ACW history question. If the kids on that side get it correctly, one unit gets an extra activation. If they don’t get it correctly, the other side gets a chance to “steal” the extra action. I learned a lot from these nine year olds, like the “fact” that Grant commanded the Army of Northern Virginia and that Robert E. Lee was the president of the Confederacy.
A dad provides tactical advice to a gamer in training.
The game involved both sides trying to capture the hill seen in the center of the picture (above). The Rebs got there first, but they were eventually driven off by the Yanks. The boy on the far left of the picture was the last Reb in the game. His single remaining figure killed five or six Ynaks before being gunned down.
This was our fifth such giveaway event.
1 – AWI 20mm plastics (Historicon 2011)
2 – 54mm ACW plastics (Historicon 2012)
3 – 15mm SYW metal (Historicon 2013)
4 – 30mm Napoleonic metal (Historicon 2014)
5 – 40mm ACW metal (Historicon 2015)
We plan to give away 20mm plastic WWII figures at Barrage 2015 (see http://www.bucksurdu.com/Buck_Surdu/Barrage.html) in October.
The Armies for Kids Giveaway was followed immediately by Geoff's ever popular Lego pirate game.
We hosted four games specifically targeting kids at Historicon 2015:
The Armies for Kids Giveaway.
Geoff’s Lego pirate game.
Duncan’s game based on the Warriors books involving tribes of warring cats.
A version of my Defense of Schloss Iter game tailored for kids.
While my buddies are at Historicon gaming themselves into a sleep-deprived stupor, I had to work today. After work, I finished a few figures that were sitting on my painting table.
Crooked Dice "Big Tam Frazer"
They are all nice figures that paint up easily. The detail is clean. Some of the facial features on the Daredevil Pilots were a little obscured after I primed them, but otherwise, I am very happy with the figures.
Crooked Dice "Metalnaut" and "Pandora King"
The silver-faced man is a “cybernaut” from a couple of episodes of The Avengers television show, and he is facing a very nice likeness of Emma Peel from the same show.
Tomorrow after working a few hours, I will brave the insane and obscene DC traffic to get to Historicon.
In previous posts I have described my town of Granville that I use for pulp games. A few months back, I bought a bunch of buildings on Ebay. Now that school is out, my daughter has been painting again. She doesn’t paint figures, but she enjoys painting terrain. Below are some buildings she completed recently.
Plasticville SchoolPlasticville Church
I realized that while the real Granville has two churches, my Granville had none. This perhaps explains the lawlessness in my town. I really like this one from Plasticville. It has a nice small-town look about it.
Plasticville House
This house is perhaps a little too modern looking for Granville.
Plasticville Post Office
In addition some weeks ago, I posted a review of the corner hotel from Multiverse Gaming (www.multiversegamingterrain.com). At the same time I ordered the hotel and gargoyles, I also ordered their fire escapes. In fact, it was the fire escapes that brought me to their site in the first place. I assembled them right away, but this week I got my daughter to paint them. Below you can see the Multiverse fire escapes attached to a Litko building with some 25mm and 28mm figures for scale.
Multiverse Gaming Fire Escapes
I think they are quite nice. When assembled they include “hooks” that enable you to mount them on the windows of most buildings in my collection.
This weekend I finally got around to painting some of the Crooked Dice figures I ordered a couple of months ago. These are UNIT troopers for Dr. Who games.
UNIT heavy weapons
I don’t know if I got the uniforms correct — I didn’t do my historical research. I went with a simple khaki and green camouflage pattern. I think that looks better than plain black or something sinister like that. I figure Greg will paint his correctly, so when I put mine on the table, it will be easy to separate them at the end of the game.
UNIT troopers
I wasn’t sure about the headgear. I went with a blue that is meant to be reminiscent of the blue berets worn by UN peace keepers.
A couple of months ago, Greg and I put together a big order from Crooked Dice. While I have had the figures filed, primed, and based for many weeks, this weekend was my first change to paint any of them. I plan to work these figures into my zombie game in a shopping mall next weekend at Historicon.