Saturday, 29 August 2009

More Germans


Here are some close-ups of Nuni's lovely German Nefs. I really like the way he has added colour to them with the red keels and the deck staining.


He tells me:
These I actually did some research and found that some German ships of the period had a reddish lower hull side and I tried to go for that look, with a grey superstructure. I decided I wanted the deck to feel darker than was the actual case

- white undercoat
- 1:1 vallejo game colour gory red/blood red for the side of the hull
- GW ogryn flesh wash on the decking followed by a watered down GW badab black wash
- GW foundation adeptus battlegrey on the turrets, superstructure and the sides an rear of the tail
- GW bleached bone on the top of the tail and superstructure, followd by devlan mud wash
- GW chaos black for the chimneys
- Devlan mud wash on the masts

Friday, 28 August 2009

New Brits and Germans

Nuno (aka Rastamann from the TacCom boards) has finished up his British and German starter sets and they have come out beautifully!


Well done Old boy! They look great and I love the thematic presentation style you've adopted. Great stuff!

Saturday, 18 July 2009

More VSF Goodies from Brigade!

New releases have been announced for the LI and Aeronef ranges.
The new stuff includes 2mm infantry (no pics yet) and this Fokker style triplane for Aeronef!

Wednesday, 3 June 2009

MONI Workbench Article

Another of Dampf's great scratch-build works has been featured at TMP's workbench section.

For a full view go here: http://theminiaturespage.com/workbench/4896/



Great work once again Dampf!

Monday, 25 May 2009

Leviathans

Catalyst games has been showing off its new project- Leviathans: an alternate history miniatures game of air fleet battles set in 1910. For us that means more pulpy airship goodness!
(actually, Ive been excited about this one for awhile - see my post here: http://pauljamesog.blogspot.com/2008/08/leviathan-new-vsf-game.html)




Over Togo's head the Zed flag was burning. The pride of the Japanese fleet, the battleship Mikasa, his Mikasa, was sinking. His aide tried to pull him toward the lifeboats, but Togo stopped and looked up. He saw the battered Russian leviathan claw its way into the blue sky. And at that moment Admiral Togo Heihachiro knew that Japan would not rule the east, after all. And one more thing. It was not the age of the gun.

It was the age of the sky.



There is also a promising new associated blog, "Monsters in the Sky" started up here:
http://monstersinthesky.com/

Hold onto your goggles chaps, this is looks to be a good ride!

Thursday, 16 April 2009

The Defence of Melbourne (CanCon 2009)

I have been meaning to get around to posting about this excellent emo game put on at CANCON 09, yet sadly haven't found the time. But now, I've found this excellent Blog by the guys themselves:

It was a great game using 25mm figs and modified TSATF rules. And as you can see, the scratchbuilt models and terrain are just stunning!


2026 EDIT: Through the magic of the Wayback Machine, I have recovered most of author Greg's original material. I offer it here unaltered and in homage, so that it will not be lost again. Note that not all pics had higher res versions captured.

CanCon 2009 - The Russians Have Arrived

https://web.archive.org/web/20190810081546/https://defence-of-melbourne.blogspot.com/2009/01/cancon-2009-russians-have-arrived.html
The frowning guns overlook the Russian Infantry as they gallantly row their boats for shore.
The main barracks at Nepean; the Fortress commander sips his tea on the verandah. He does not realise how difficult it will be to get substantial re-inforcements into the fort if the Russians break in.
Cerberus with the Naval Brigade lining her decks. Their rifle fire with the many machine guns carried by the ship caused the Russians huge casualties among the crews of their deck guns during the course of the third game.

The Vladimir Monomakh steams toward her fate. She was sunk in each of the three games played, but not before absorbing the attentions of the Victorian Fortress artillery and that of the Cerberus for almost the entire game.

Russian marines and light artillery pull for shore. They did a fair job of pinning some of the Victorian militia down during game three, eventually overwhelming them - but far, far too late in the day.
By the third iteration of the Game the Russians were getting desperate; nothing seemed to be working. They decided to put their Cossacks in boats and run them ashore in the Vladimir Monomakh. It ended poorly; one unit got ashore, advanced bravely up the cliff then failed a number of morale tests and surrendered. The other unit were all shot down in their boat by artillery and machine-gun fire.
So much for that bright ideaski!

The Victorian Navy steams into action; Albert is towing two units of Victorian Militia in boats. This is a desperate ploy to bring them into action quickly before the infantry defending the fort all succumb to the tender attentions of the Russians.

Duelling Ironclads. The Cerberus and Vladimir Monomakh close, exchanging main armament fire as they go, pom-poms and Nordenfeldts raking each others' decks.

General view of the fort from the end closest the entrance to the Bay. Russian Infantry would come swarming up these slopes... slowly.
The whole area counted as difficult terrain whicin TSaTF terms means that of the three movement dice your infantry throw, you loose the highest D6. Ouch.
The figures on the board are engineers hoping to act as speed-humps. They are effectively poor-quality infantry. They held up two Russian Cossack Units for almost the whole of the game.

Russian Sea-Cossacks surge past the Vladimir Monomakh. Figures by Askari Miniatures.
In the movie industry they call this a "Beauty Pass". *sigh*
Two 8" Hydro-Pneumatic (HP) guns to the right and a 9" RML in an open pit to the left. The trick was to keep the gunners at their guns; the crew of HP#2 fled in the first two games, while that of #1 fled in the third
Steadfast Victorian Infantry lie on their guns, waiting to "Stand To" as soon as the Russian Infantry hit the beaches. The Nordenfeldt Gunners (one gun is at the right of the picture, the other is out of shot to the left) shelter in the bomb-proofs before they rush to man their guns.

Main barracks in the foreground. This building was a bit of an impediment to re-inforcing Victorian forces and I am sure the Victorian Commander was secretly overjoyed when a stray Russian shell reduced it to splinters at the start of game three

The front of the fort as we set up. The land to the left of the building at right is impassable, forcing any troops landing at the quay to march left up the tram tracks.


Dolphins'-eye view of the Russian landing boats. The figures in the foreground are Old Glory Boxer Rebellion.
More Russians going ashore. In the first game this took a long time and the Nordenfeldts caused one of the boats quite a few casualties.

Victorian re-inforcements wait patiently to - er - reinforce. They needed to roll 1 on a d6 in turn 2, 1-2 on turn 3, 1-3 on turn 4 and so on. I consistently rolled high!

More CanCon Pictures


Courtesy of the very kind Mr Stephen Finlay:
Here and below, Victorian militia assigned to the fort stand to as the Russians enter the Bay. Note the gunners in the distance rushing to man their Nordenfeldt.
"Here they come..! Steady lads, steady..!" cries Sgt Bourne, his own voice cracking a little in the excitement of the moment.




Rough (!) terrain.




The only way is up. Russian Infantry really had only one practicable way to attack - one unit at a time up the tram line.
Those cliffs were the only other means buy which the Russians could assault into the fort. A tough proposition.
Green pants infantry on the left; gunners on the right. About to come ashore for a hellish baptism of fire.
Fort Nepean; a tough nut to crack.
Cossacks in close country.
The last of the Fortress infantry desperately trying to hold out against the Cossacks who are on the Parade Ground. HM is not amused!

The Parade Ground formed a delta, the frontage of which the infantry could match their diminishing numbers to. It was excellent defensive terrain.

Monday, 13 April 2009

War of the Worlds with LI


A TMP thread discusses the use of :LI to fight out WOTW scenarios:
Fires in the Night Sky or How I learned to stop worrying and love the Madhi
SitRep: The Madhi forces had been pushing hard along the Nile toward a small port of Abba-Dabba Do. An Anglo-Egyptian force has marched to protect this town from the advancing enemy. During the night before the battle, huge fires in the Madhi camp lit the night skys and the frenzied warchants of the fathful could be heard. The defenders of Abba-Dabba Do steeled themselves for the coming assault.
When the dawn broke, the defenders were in for a suprise….

Great job chaps!

Monday, 6 April 2009

Land Ironclad errata

Brigade have posted the official LI rules errata to their page here:

Thanks lads!

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

MiniWarGaming


Just found this nifty site, which can direct you to a bunch of other neat gaming places and leave you utterly lost in cycberspace - Bravo, I say!

I've registered this humble site there, so feel free to check it out and leave a rating for the old YIAWWS - cheers old bean!

http://www.miniwargaming.com/siterater/s67wEhocteWG


An exploration of debauchery, vice and other reasons to be a man!

An exploration of debauchery, vice and other reasons to be a man!