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wargame rules wargaming

Take two Magazines

Wargames in Print has been on a rocky road – I was a subscriber to Battlegames (BG) not long after I found it by chance on a WHSmith railway station stall back in 2008. I abandoned that journey when it really disappeared into Miniature Wargames (MW). MW had always been a mixed blessing for me while Wargames Illustrated (WI) had been a favorite before leaving the hobby.

Henry Hyde and BG brought me back into the hobby. And I returned to the Wargames Publication world transformed by the Internet with Blogging/Being online all the rage.

I started reading blogs about 2011 and the print market now seemed terminal although BG helped sustain my interest. WSS I luckily discovered at another WHSmith when that shops footfall was in serious decline.

Today I am fully erratic! If I buy at all, it is mainly WSS but occasionally WI and MW.

This month both MW and WSS caught my eye (last month it was WI425 and what a cowboy).

The WSS focus was Hundred Years War and although at the wrong end of the war for my latest interest I decided to take a punt. I enjoyed it and I liked the range of scenarios/actions.

The Slap Chop/Grisaille method painting article was a bonus. I have read quite a few online articles on this subject yet some printed paper words and pictures were still enticing. That is the “print preference” still in me. I could contrast it (sorry) with the Speedpaint article in WI425, but I won’t, it was another very effective print article on a subject I have read round on the internet.

Now MW484. The last word was by Brenden Wheatley who talked about the importance of the Solo Wargamers Association and solo wargaming that sustained his hobby which he now pursues in both Budapest (see some hussars and music at the end of this post in Budapest) and Brecon!

Mid 19th Century warfare was a topic in WI425 – Perry French Franco Prussian War (FPW) plastics painting class while MW484 led with the Schlieswig Holstein Question.

Dave Tuck gave an excellent taster for the two wars – 1st and 2nd (1848 and 1864 respectively). Given MW style and content he did the subject justice and I would definitely recommend it to anyone wanting a clear straighforward way into the subject.

FREE RULES – Dave Tuck offers his ruleset via a link on the MW web page. FREE WARGAME RULES

Interestingly Dave Tuck started his journey before the FPW range from Perrys appeared and after the Helion range had ceased production. He had also used the North Star range. For coverage of the second war (1864) the one he opted to develop, he also resorted to conversions.

And I do think you should not be put off by the lack of a “go to” range. in 28mm 1864 can draw on Perrys FPW and any number of ACW ranges as well as other mid century wars in the Americas as well as the Crimean war of 1854.

If you are a uniform purist then that lack of exact replicas will probably drive you mad!

For the 1st war in 28mm, if you want to literally start at the beginning you can steal lots of Napoleonic era forces. 1815 to 1848 saw new uniform ideas but a lot of conservatism while weapons technology appeared to have stalled. A few months into the 1849/50 war and its all changing with kepis and pickelhaubes gathering pace alongside frockcoats, breechloaders, rifling and even the very early machine gun. Given quartermasters stores and regulations were never up to the minute, you can have lots of leeway in my view. You can borrow both back, forward and sideways for these wars!

I have grown to like the 1st Schlieswig Holstein war period simply because I get the best of both worlds – with the early versions of FPW uniforms and weapons still mixed up with Napoleonics. You have tailcoats, frockcoats, all types of shako, kepis, pickelhaubes, flat caps, smoothbores and rifled weapons in the mix plus of course emerging railways and telegraph.

If I was doing 28mm I would follow Dave Tucks approach and start with 1864 (the 2nd War) using FPW/ACW resources.

If your more Napoleonic in outlook opt for the 1848 or slightly earlier uniforms – the Danes are clearly still Napoleonic as are many German Confederation troops which just leaves the Prussians and Bavarians in their iconic pickelhaubes and combed helmets to be sourced from ACW/FPW era. And you don’t need fancy rifled/breechloading artillery yet – smooth bores will still work. You can also consider Crimea War for 1850’s era uniforms.

I would look at Ed M’s Wargames Meanderings for further inspiration if Dave Tuck’s article does not convince you.

I wanted as, with many of my projects, a low cost option. 1/72 plastics used to be low cost. Now they are no longer so cheap. Yet you can still pick up around 50 figures for £10. The key issue is sculpting quality, figure poses and paintability. You have to love the sculpts, I have grown to like their roughness in an age of 3D marketed perfection. To get the repetitous poses you may want you have to buy multiple boxes. My advice then is that if multiple poses is a problem go with 25/28mm sector metals. Finally paintability – the internet provides an astonishing window into the art of those who wash, prime and then successfully paint bendy plastics. My favorite site for inspiration is Pauls Bods – he can even make venerable airfix ranges look compelling. Also Philotep is worth a look. And you can always look at weather like Crimea, being winter wars there is a greatcoats crossover which can hide a multitude of things. Tumbling Dice Miniatures do ranges of 1/72 sculpts which are excellent – cast in pewter. I prefer the figures in summer gear with greatcoats packed away and blankets rolled. So Crimea ranges might also help here for those who want correct season clothing. Also Jacklex relaunched a few years ago in 20mm.

I opted for 20/25mm and have accepted a complete mash up of ranges both plastic and metal and the inevitable conversions.

20/25mm or 1/72 is small enough to hide the imperfections at 3 feet yet not so small that you can’t enjoy each figure in its own right. The scale remains my perfect compromise for the “table top” game.

WW1 Austrians repainted to 1850’s Danish in transition (Irregular Miniatures Metals)

I have bought from

Danish Line Infantry 1849 (Irregular Metals from their Colonial Range)

Alas the sheer variety of infantry types has overun my imagination and SHQ remains a questionable (sorry again) project with slow yet very enjoyable progress! Most units and figures are stuck on the paint table because I keep being distracted by mechanised warfare, medievals, Sci-Fi and yes even some FPW french figures daliance – Emhar – You can’t keep a good kepi down.

Which brings me back to WSS125 again and the 100YW. I have succumbed to yet more diversity in my painting – digging out my various unpainted medieval figures. My aim had always been Italy for this period, but it seems alighting on the battle of Shrewsbury 1403 while reading a biography of Henry IV caused me to re-examine an english force.

Who can avoid Hotspur…..thin end of a new wedge?

It remains to be seen what progress I make. And of course the next butterfly moment armed with a chance magazine purchase is probably just round the corner………

Two enjoyable editions for me………whatever next?
Categories
wargame rules wargaming

Take 3 Balloons

Last week I was looking for a post published on Pauls Bods about figure conversions and I stumbled across his homemade balloon for ACW battles. Then I caught a Sky History Channel programme about early winged aviation and yes their nemesis balloons appeared. Finally this week I picked up Wargames Illustrated – it had free rules in it as well – I can’t resist rulesets, especially free ones. And this one offered up some rules on balloons.

A coincidence maybe.

Lighter than air flight – Balloons were all the rage throughout the 1800’s

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Early_flight_02561u_(10).jpg#metadata

Pauls Bods

http://paulsbods.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-silk-dress-balloon-gazelle.html

Pauls Bods is a treasure trove of ideas for tweaking your bought figures. In this case its about a completely home made model.

Sky History Channel 2

episode 6 of this series is about the plane

No sooner than I encountered a model balloon on Paul’s Bods than I started watching a programme about early aviation. This single episode was well set out with good balance and content given what it had to cover. And without the annoying repetition you get with some other channel documentaries I was not tempted to fast forward.

Obviously the programme was preoccupied with what they called “heavier than air” flight. There was a slot for “lighter than air” flying machines – balloons. The slot highlighted how the french balloon industry and thinking eclipsed the crucial ideas of a french aviator Alphonse Penaud – eventually leading to his suicide. It sounded like a missed opportunity on the road to Kitty Hawk and the Wright Brothers. Perhaps powered flight might have been achieved earlier?

Unknown authorUnknown author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Either way this programme was most enjoyable not least in recounting those flying pioneers of the 1800’s.

Wargames Illustrated (issue 418)

copyright Wargames Illustrated 2022

And then I saw that this months WI theme was Napoleonic Wargames and it offered some “simple rules” in a free offer. Nestled amongst the articles gaming a Napoleonic action were Jervis Johnsons’ free ruleset options.

Use of observation balloons were included. And a balloon appears in the game pictures.

https://www.wargamesillustrated.net/product/wi418-october-2022/

I thought 3 balloon items in the space of a week a coincidence. Hang on though, “up north” there was the last ever great balloon festival on York Racecourse at the end of September. So thats 4 coincidences!

All this hot air has me thinking a Balloon might make a fine addition to my mid 19th century wargaming.

Categories
1/72 scale figures 20/25/28mm figures miniatures painting wargames blog wargaming

Wet Palettes and Appreciation

This is the tip I found by chance on the “The Waving Flag” blog of Martin who runs Vexillia. I found Vexillia during my interest in impetus rules and italian figure makers.

Then I dropped out of that and very recently came to Martins blog by way of one of his recent posts and then having wandered around his blog site again I found the tips section. And wet pallettes update from 2016!

OK so I am slow on the uptake but I do remember a lot of discussion about wet pallettes a while ago (was it in 2016 though?) and it passsed me by. It so happened this time round I was in the middle of a lot of painting and well the article or should I say tip caught my eye.

And yes I followed Martins advice and it works and works really well.

I had some ochre base paint in the wet pallette box for the best part of 3 weeks – no mould in sight and the paint remained perfectly workable.

So thank you Martin.

This is also my 50th post so I can say that starting this blog and achieving this very small milestone in the blogging world is in lots of ways due to the work of others. All those other blogs I have followed over the last 10 years for example.

Here are some that have inspired my gaming, painting and an appreciation of what blogging has contributed to the wargames hobby.

Thank you to one and all. And for those omitted from the list, thank you as well – it is the variety that matters – the different tastes and interests mean there is always something for everyone to enjoy or discover.

And my whole DBA 15mm world received a massive jolt one day in 2007. I picked up a magazine in WH Smiths at a railway station. Nothing untoward you say, except it was a copy of Battlegames published by Henry Hyde.

Subsequently in one of his magazines I read about the beginners guide to blogging by Greg Horne and his Duchy of Alzheim blog. At the time with zero wargames playing going on blogging looked like a waste of good gaming or even painting time.

Much later, much much later in the atlantic publishers era I read in Battlegames Henry’s guide to starting your own blog. Still not for me. And the site link above is Henry’s consolidated site now – the guide I followed in the magazine has been removed. But his main site mentions it.

Another site Henry introduced me to was meeples & miniatures blog and Neil Shuck, and that led me to podcasts – but thats another story.

Some of my favorite blogs have been the following…………

Pauls Bods – absolutely excellent painting of 1/72 plastics and most recently metals by tumbling dice

Wargaming for Grown Ups – great all round musings and plenty of 1/72 ancients plastics that got me out of a 15mm DBx rut and into simpler gaming with plastics and even modifying them

Plastic Soldier Review – has simply fed my 1/72 craze

Blogs of War – source of so many great blogs

Keith’s Wargaming Blog – I found Keith’s blog back in 2009 and have enjoyed his writing

The Sharp End of the Brush – another early blog discovery, plenty of written word and 1/72 wargaming

Olicanalads Games – battle reports, scenarios and scenery – another early discovery I have regularly visited

Wills Wargames Blog – lots and lots of painted 1/72 plastics – a production line of reports about what Will is painting – excellent reporting

The blog with no name – plenty of ideas and variety

I live with Cats – another blog whose written content has been signficant

Archduke Piccolo – imaginations inspirations

Don’t throw a 1 – 15mm and lots of funny stories plus he drew me towards the wars of Louis 14th and the late 1600’s

Miniature Minions – lots of old school metals of the 20/25 mm era

Unfashionably Shiny – reconnected me with my original gaming figures of the 1970’s

Castles of Tin – excellent items on painting literally anything – flats and imaginations very good

Pijlie’s Wargames Blog – lots of variety including some 1/72 material

History in 1/72 – great for ideas about what you can do in 1/72

Parade Ground – got me back into 20mm metals with the likes of tumbling dice/newline/SHQ alongside plastics – motivated my purchase of Late Romans by Miniart. excellent 1/72 ideas, painting and figures

The Grand Duchy of Stollen – simply drove my enthusiasm for 18th century imaginations wargaming

The Eastern Garrison – pics of the much missed figures of greenwood and ball – the garrison metals I always wanted were the Carthaginians. Great archive.

Sumer to Sargon – exemplary painting of early ancients

Harness and Array – excellent medieval material, motivated me to do or rather start my stoke field project. Sadly it is my one 28mm enterprise and remains unfinished despite the fantastic figures.

Dark Age Wargames – although it only ran from 2006 to 2016 I found this site very useful for my interests in the Dark Ages

Cameronian only a game – good 1/72 selection – one of the first blogs I found

Camisado – always top of his game and consistently wonderful blog about the 15th/16th century european wars

Je Lay Emprins – excellent figure painting and another blog that stoked my interest in wars of the roses – no pun intended!

Aut Ceasar Aut Nihil – ok all 28mm but I just love the figures and posts

Dalauppror – great discussions/observations on the hobby and gaming ideas and one of my early blog discoveries

The League of Augsburg – drew me back into the late 17th century – sheer quality of material hard to beat

Wars of Louis Quartorze – also drew me back into the late 17th century with a wealth of information

Pauls Wargames Blog – a great variety of posts and a good read

The Wars of Wine and Cheese – another imagination thought stream that got me revisiting horse and muskest warfare – but always with a “fantastic” leaning

Vintage Wargaming – so enjoyed the old metal ranges being replayed I rebased mine and used them again

Bennos Figures – great painting inspirations

Baueda – got me properly going with PVA priming and dipping my toe in the plastics world

DBx wargaming with 20mm soft plastic figures – wealth of ideas about gaming with 1/72 plastics

John’s Wargames page – another blog that got me convinced to go down the soft plastics 1/72 route

Heres no great matter – sustained my interest in 15mm, showed me the drawbacks but pleasure of ancient and medieval warfare (AMW) and lots of small but great ideas like dice army pics to show each turn development when reporting a game

20mm wargamer – lots of 1/72 plastics ideas

Dux Homunculorum – painting inspiration for my 1/72 plastics

Jim Duncan Wargamer – plenty of painting and ideas

Carpat’Land – simply amazing figures to enjoy especially in medieval period and L’art de la guerre ruleset appeared to me here

Steves Random Musings on Wargaming – consistently offers a variety on interesting ideas for me – books and war of the spanish succession to name but two

20mm figures and modelling – wargaming info provided lots of useful links plus news, rulesets views and some interesting carolingian material

the duchy of tradgardland – another imaginations find in my ealry days of reading other peoples blogs

As I say these are just some of the wargame blogs I have enjoyed – some are no longer updated but I think all I have listed can still be visited.

Thanks to every author who has committed time to share their ideas on this fascinating hobby.