Saturday, December 25, 2010

28mm Napoleonic Austrian High Command


This past August, Greg and Linda, two very good friends of ours got married (the fools) to which I had the honour of being one of Greg's groomsmen. In getting prepared for the wedding, I was at a loss trying to figure out what kind of gift to get Greg. Finally, it dawned on me that he needed some officers 'to-the-manor-born' (to lead his new Austrians to their destruction) and so I made up a command stand depicting Archduke Charles and a group of his inbred aristocratic funkies from an old pack I had from Foundry.



I've based them up to be compatible with many of the 'Grande Manner' rulesets that have been published recently. I also made sure to heavily pin all the figures to their mounts and quadruple-coat with the varnish just in case Greg feels the need to fling it across the table when my French roll over his boys-in-white... ;)

Welcome to the Club Greg!

SmackTalk: 'Off'

Friday, December 24, 2010

Battle of Raszyn, 6mm Fast Play Grande Armee (FPGA) and 40mm 1860s Wars of German Unification

'The beer hall is through the Austrians and over that hill...'
Happy Christmas All! I just put up some more postings in the 'Past Games' section. One is not so much a battle report than a little feature on my friend John's 40mm castings for the Wars of German Unification. We had a great game on our deck this past summer with his Prussians and Austrians. The other posting is of a 6mm Napoleonics game, the 1809 Battle of Raszyn, using Sam Mustafa's excellent 'Fast Play Grande Armee' rules.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

New Posts in the Past Games Section

I dug up a few shots from the photo archive of some previous games we've had and placed them in the Past Games section. One is an excellent Sudan game put on by Greg and the other was a whacky 'Ten Commandments' meets 'Deathrace 2000' mashup we played during a past New Years. Some of the images are pretty dodgy quality-wise so my apologies in advance.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Game Mat from Hotz

I have this thing about seams. I don't like the look of them on a wargames table. Ok, I'm a bit weird that way but that's why I have a blog to work these things out. Anyway, in the quest for a 'seamless surface' I ordered a 72x90 'European Fields' game mat from Eric Hotz at HotzMats to see if it looked as good as on the website.


Well, almost two months after my order the mat showed up at our door.  I quickly cleared off the kitchen table, put on my foamboard game surface and draped the mat over the whole works.


I was quite impressed with how easily the mat shook-out its wrinkles and flattened out over the table surface. This is good as I often have all my gaming stuff packed away and having something that can be quickly laid out and played on is a definite bonus.



I quickly put out some terrain features to get an idea of how well they blended with the surface. I think it looks quite good. I really am impressed with the use of colour and pattern to give the impression of the different fields.


I tried putting a hill under the mat and while it looks rather neat it is really hard to determine where the flat surface ends and the hill starts - which is requirement for most rules so I think that hills will have to stay on top of the playing surface.


I wanted to see if I could use pins to fix stuff to the surface as regularly do in my games. So I pulled out the excellent rivers that Brian made for me way back when I had a head of hair (but alas not Brian). These are ingeniously made from sheets of thin blue foam, cut to shape and then hot-glued with flock and tallus. I've added a few more sections to the collection over the years so I have around 8ft of the stuff if need be.


Anyway, I pin the river sections down so they lay nice and flat. After I set in the pins I use a dab of cheap, dark green hobbycraft paint to touch up the heads of the pins. They just disappear into the flock and the rivers look like part of the landscape.




Voila! A river, a hedge, a field and some pliant sheep. What else would a Scotsman want?


There, pins and rivers removed without any telling marks to the HotzMat surface. Brilliant! Even the nervous sheep are happy. 

Republic to Empire Wooden Markers from Litko

Another dorktastic post here. About a month or so ago I ordered these custom wooden game markers from Litko for Republic to Empire. The author of the R2E, Barry Hilton, has his own markers which are nice but I find the coloured plastic somehow out of synch with painted minis and terrain.  Its funny as I sometimes don't mind a coloured marker for significant events like charges, retreats and routes but that's my particular hangup.

Here are the seven markers I had made up. Most of these are placed next to brigade commanders to denote what type of 'order' they are operating under.
I rather like the look of these. They are just noticeable enough but not too obvious.