Categories
wargaming

Fragment February ’25/1 – Magazines

New year new ideas. Over at westbury wargamers https://westburywargamers.com I like their monthly game wrap ups. Now my games are very erratic to non existent at the moment, so my equivalent posts would be pretty much empty. My postings have tended to be model or painting specific yet there’s quite a lot of other stuff whizzing round in my head.

So for now I am going to try out this posting of bits and bobs. I could have called it that or indeed meze or tapas – you get the drift.

I have settled on “fragment”. We will see how it goes.

And of course I am going to break my fragments rule by having the first post consist of just one subject! ok one fragment then.

The year has started with me picking up a number of print magazines. It’s something that has caught up with me. During the Covid era I inhabited bookshops where possible as part of lots of walking and getting out. I gave magazines short shrift as a result.

In 2024 my book buying declined – well it fell off a cliff. And in 2025 I have shipped out fifty books I have read or will never read and which are not useful for future reference.

I still have plenty of reading material to go at.

Those magazines purchases – what’s going on? Somehow I have reconnected with the mix you get in magazines and especially I will read about aspects of the hobby I don’t follow. It’s a fascinating hobby because of the many tentacles it has.

Magazines are in effect a form of censorship on the information you get. Once upon a time like newspapers such control was significant. This was especially true in niche areas such as wargames. The World Wide Web changed all that. Now we are all rigorously self censoring or should be.

A key selling point gone, print magazines should have long gone with vinyl and cd’s.

Somehow they have survived and you can even get three magazines for general consumption.

Do I have a favourite? Well yes and no. My favourite magazine is the one that has just the right mix of articles. That means I buy these on the high street and look before I buy. This is why all three print titles remain my favourite!

Do I tend to buy one magazine more than another over time? Well yes I tend to buy Wargames, Soldiers and Strategy more than Miniature Wargames. I buy Wargames Illustrated least. This is because WI run thematic editions and so it is easier to leave those on the shelf if the theme real does not appeal.

WI and WSaS have superior print quality over MW. And yet MW does run some intriguing subject mixes.

With WSaS having plenty of writing while WI offers lots of photography you could say they have managed to differentiate the market.

Quite how long the hobby will support three titles I have no idea. I would say I had thought they would all disappear when the social media onslaught took place over a decade ago.

So what caught my eye and liberated my coins?

Wargames Soldiers and Strategy issue 133 themed charging into combat. The theme is more about tying together disparate periods rather than discussing the mechanics of charges and wargame rules etc. It worked for me and I was actually taken with Bouvines 1214 – French Cavalry charge fails due to disorder. The rest of the magazine was mildly interesting for its subjects but especially Von Bredow’s charge at Mars la Tour 1870 and again in my current period of interest the item on charge of the light brigade. Despite its fame? It seems to get little coverage in wargame publications.

With WSS you get several written articles which I generally find worth a read. That is something you don’t get in Wargames Illustrated.

Wargames Illustrated 445 January 2025 ran a theme of painting and modelling.

The content was eclectic if nothing else. However an article on Airfix 1/72 in arguably the premier 28mm picfest hobby magazine caught my eye and yes – there was a Crimean article – I somehow had missed part 1…..

The article on MDF scenery was interesting in the sense that it showed what “low relief” modelling can offer as well as the benefits of “abstract” modelling. In both cases the human eye is actually very good at filling in the blanks so if the eye knows well an oak or alder tree in all their 3D glory it can imagine the missing bits of a model – enough to please the eye.

The Airfix article included some modifications to the 40 odd Napoleonic Highlanders box of figures. A good paint tutorial for these venerable 1/72 or 20mm plastics followed.

The theme sort of worked although you can simply argue it was a magazine full of variety!

Next up Miniature Wargames 501 January 2025. Really simple – I bought the magazine for the free hobbits sprue. And that was because I am taking part in the Analogue Hobbies Painting Challenge – AHPC15.

The magazine enjoys a seelction of regular writers so if like WSaS their not your cup of tea then the magazine might feel samey or poor value if your interests are left with just the specials.

I enjoyed the range of articles – wild west through fantasy and WW2 and into pike and shot. Scenery modelling and free rulesets always get a look in.

So on to February and Wargames Illustrated 446 February 2025.

Again the freebie won my money – valour and fortitude marches into pike and shot. Yes I have played just one game with the original rules yet could not resist a read up on their adaption to a period sometimes considered a bit awkward to game. V&F is aimed at bigger wargame battles but my aim is to shrink them for 6×4 or 1.8m x 1.2m max. Probably a stupid idea?

I did find the Black Bands for Giovanni – a 16th century italian warband a good read and even a possible solution to the devilry going on in AHPC15!

Finally we get to Miniature Wargames 503 March 2025. This was the least compelling purchase of the lot. Although ACW is slap bang in the middle of my current “in vogue” period – 1840 to 1877 I am primarily interested in European conflicts at that time, especially those in Schleswig Holstein and the Italian peninsula.

So McPhersons ridge sprayed across the cover just about did it. I did enjoy the Turkish Wagenburg scenario.

So thats a 2 month window where you get 2 MW and 2 WI but just one WSaS. If I had to choose I would settle for WSaS once every 2 months simply for the reason that their mix most often chimes with my interests.

I could save money and buy online using a subscription. I actually prefer to look at the physical cover and make a judgement. The act of a physical purchase just like figures and kits is something I grew up with and still enjoy.

And as you can see I would probably need to take 3 subscriptions to satisfy my print interests!

The three magazines remain sufficiently different to see that they can coexist. Whether the uptick in print sales across the book market sustains these magazines remains to be seen.

Take your pick.

Categories
miniatures painting wargaming

Tangent – Crash Test Dummies

What are 28mm figures good for? Well if your a 1/72 figure follower then they are fantastic to paint!

Or rather in my case to experiment with. Recently Wargames Illustrated ran a contrast paints article while Wargames Soldiers and Strategy dealt with slap chop.

I have been edging towards these products simply because I bought a load on impulse. This is normal behaviour for an Erratic: A solution looking for a problem.

The problem has been I could not bring myself to use them in anger on my 1/72, 20-25mm figures without knowing their possibilities for me including my failures. Clearly they have been a great success for others.

And then there was the Wargames Illustrated article on “what a cowboy”, next minute I dug out some Dixon and Blue Moon figures from the dim and distant past, gathering dust in the great figure vault.

And then “ping” what if I experimented with these new paints and methods (new for me) on these figures?

They were definitely bought at Triples in Sheffield but around 2011!!! I think that means they were on the back burner……..

Anyway this is as far as I got and maybe I might not get much further – back on the painting table……

Big turf out and a surprising number of figures – they were already based and undercoated white. I sloshed cheap burnt sienna over them….
I realised some were prohibition era gangsters while I also found a couple of freebies – Rasputin and Karl Marx. I primed these black. I then did some slap chop white dusting – at least I used a stolen make up brush on the gangsters……it worked quite nicely. Need to buy some.
And then I simply ignored all the video and magazine advice I had gathered recently and got paint on the figures! Which was very pleasing. Note the appalling slap chop white work on Mr red hats arm – never mind.

Well this Tangent may develop or simply become another Icarus episode in the world of the wargaming erratic.

Categories
Book Reviews wargaming

Supermarket Surprise

I don’t normally dwell on editorials when reading a wargames monthly – its all about the content itself for me.

Today I chanced upon a WI when looking for some other non wargaming publication in a rare trip to a supermarket magazine aisle. I guess it was the ship sampler on the cover the caught my attention.

Anyway having been hooked I was reeled in by the prospect of an article on the Perrys Franco Prussian War figures. I am not sure what all those painted Prussians have been doing for the past year waiting for the enemy?

Having bought the magazine – not one I regularly buy – I scanned the pages and found some promising material on Flags. I am always interested to read about cowboy games even though I don’t play them – don’t ask! And there was an interesting article on homespun fantasy figure creation resulting in a product launch – “imaginations gaming” in any genre normally piques my interest.

The Hammerhead painting competition results show that there are also plenty of artists at work producing tremendous pieces to inspire. On that last point it is questionable whether it really sells a print magazine though.

Actually the speedpaints article also shows the challenge for print magazines. I happened upon a blog post recently complete with video which compared all the recent companies who have piled into the “contrast” market. Having said that the article (which I read first) was well put together and had some useful ideas and perspective. I liked the mix of “newbie” and “professional” painters trialling the product.

Barry Hiltons Naval rules article has compelling models on display – Langtons – but I can resist despite the enjoyment they give. How about that sampler that caught my eye in the first place. Its just one ship so no risk of hobby drift – and it occurred to me I might just knock it up and pass it off as Danish ship. The thing about the Schlieswig Wars is the proximity of the sea and the Danish ability to use the sea as another front even if only for logistics. You never know when you might need a ship or two.

And what of Dan Faulconbridge and his editorial? It turns out my usual source of wargame magazines is charging Dan far too much and as he says markets are markets. So in this case it worked – I found WI where I did not expect it and bought it into the bargain. Also Dan is looking to broaden his customer base – I am not really sure the magazine aisle is being randomly browsed. If anything supermarkets are heading to be a glorified logistics warehouse where customers are spending the least amount of time they can, to get what they need.

Of course any leverage over WHSmith who still dominate over the counter print sales will help Dan’s cause.

That ship sprue just might land a few interested souls yet.

Will I switch from WHSmith to the Supermarket? Well no actually, I like still finding a shop on a high street thats open and sells something useful.

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
wargaming

“On track” with Wargames Illustrated

The October edition of Wargames Illustrated is a fantasy special. So you might miss the article on railways in war, specifically the Franco Prussian war. As part of my wars of the Italian independence I have been considering railways – something that really marks out post napoleonic warfare.

WI have a good introductory article on the subject with images of models available as well period art.

Is it me or does the Amercian Civil War wargame hobby tend to cover railways more than their european counterparts even though a railway often ran through or near the european battle fields?

The magazine is mainly about fantasy and I am pleased that again the message is that at the start of the fantasy era of gaming miniatures it was simply another theme that players did – the historical gamer was a fantasy gamer. The divergence came later on with phenomenal growth in the hobby.

One article shows 1970’s era D&D figures so here are two of mine – some layering with only fleshtone shading. And note plain grey bases with the dungeoner having both shoulder bag (for storing loot) and a rope. At the beginning there was a bit of “what you see is what you get” – WYSIWYG or wizziwig.

Ral Partha Elf Warrior – circa 1977
some shading facially but otherwise layering was the order of the day.
Ral Partha Thief – These figures were just awash with detail that the historical wargames makers of the day did not offer – they soon followed though and started the journey to 28mm even back then.
The chunkier style was completely new but with such great detail no one complained as I recall, base detailing gives away that these were figures bought singularly and were for the dungeon
No self respecting dungeoner in the 1970’s sent their characters into a game without equipment and baggage – very WYSIWYG!
Despite a few chips this is still one of my favorite character figures and is now a mature 45 years old!

I have posted previously about Grognardia who has some excellent posts on 1970’s D&D. This link shows the first? full colour White Dwarf Magazine edition No7.

Categories
life wargaming

Duncan Macfarlane Wargames Publisher

The death of Duncan Macfarlane is a sad moment. His life though should be celebrated by wargamers as he delivered two great magazines into the hobby – giving pleasure to thousands of gamers. And his publishing enterprises probably did most to keep me from leaving the hobby altogether.

In the late 1970’s I left the hobby and at that time Battle was the wargamers magazine – kit bashers and painters had Military Modelling.

However I became an armchair wargamer through the next wargaming magazine – Miniature Wargames launched by Duncan in 1983. Later in that decade he started Wargames Illustrated as well.

Still the big head era – maybe some of these are by Bill Lamming?

I have binned my magazines over time simply because I have gutted them all for those articles I wanted to keep. Along the way I kept some of the covers.

Renaissance and Medieval periods are particularly photogenic
I recall the variety of covers – most importantly they were wargames figures painted to be fought with.

here are a few more

Horse and Musket shares the cover with a Wargames Holiday Centre scene?
I think it was also the era for 15mm and big armies at that – well before DBA?
Although clearly set up, the scenes depicted always felt within reach of the hobbyist in some way. There was always some purpose – not just an excuse for a photo.

By the late 1990’s Wargames Illustrated was mature and we still had Miniature Wargames. I re-entered the hobby by chance – finding a flier for the Solo Wargamers Association (which is still going strong) left in a library book as I recall.

I seem to have liked medieval covers!
This cover sowed seeds that only germinated in the late 1990’s when I bought into Museum Miniatures 15mm ranges – ironically not their Republican Romans though!

So it was Duncans two magazines that sustained my interest in the hobby during almost 2 decades of no table top battles or painting of any figures.

I will finish with probably one of my favorite magazine covers of that era

Medieval Magic again

Thank you Duncan.

Categories
wargame rules wargaming

Leadership, MacDowall, Callan and Mersey

Well I missed the Wargames Illustrated Magazine free rules giveaway this Autumn. The rules were “never mind the billhooks”. Written for Wars of the Roses. They are just one of many or should I say one of the “plethora of rules” that wargamers can access these days.

So what fuss would there be, given their free, should be more bargain basement than of any original value surely?

Well Andy Callan is the author and for me he has history and if he has authored the rules they will be worth a look. I first encountered Andy Callan as a writer in the 1980’s when I recall his ideas about rules were running against the grain: Something to stir up trouble in wargaming circles most of the time. After all we can be a fussy lot.

Over the years I have kept articles from magazines. Yes I know I have probably destroyed some valuable copies in the process. Still I have what I need. And more to the point I have articles that are still useful reading even decades on.

So back in Spring 1987 when I think Stuart Asquith was at the helm, Practical Wargamer published an article by Andy Callan entitled Leaders and Generals.

He covered three periods in the short article that was really about rules design. The medieval and dark ages era leaders should worry about unit formation – a measure of order, unit aggression – a measure of fighting spirit and unit strength. The latter being an amalgam of numerical strength, armanent and relative fatigue.

The Leaders would be allocated command points.

His main objective for this period was that the “big man” (he coined that term) should be focused on being a “leader” and not be a “general” standing at the back directing operations with so many staff officers.

Move forward a couple of years and we are back with Stuart Asquith who via Publisher Argus Books offered the “wargaming in history” series of A5 booklets.

Simon MacDowell authored Goths, Huns and Romans.

My Dark Ages – “as the lights go out” late roman end of the period has never got beyond a 15mm DBA army acquired at Triples about 20 years ago. Well I do also have a 15mm late byzantine DBA army. Neither have had much of a runout despite my love of DBA. A case of right period wrong ruleset maybe?

He offered a set of rules within a booklet that also gave some background history; explained the forces and troops involved; set out a variety of game options from skirmishes, through encounter battles to campaigns.

Simon required his leaders to personally intervene to motivate troops to act. Control Points were allocated to each Leader along with inspiration points.

Both these writers were contemporary with the first trials of what became DBA. DBA was conceived in 1988 and was first published in 1990.

And so I thought that all this was disconnected from today. Yet I happened then to rediscover an article by Daniel Mersey in Battlegames shortly after publication of his successful Osprey publication Dux Bellorum around 2012.

And nestled there is Daniels’ homage to that 1980’s wargames era and specifically Andy Callan.

I remember Andy Callan promoting what I consider to be important considerations when trying to replicate the feel of a period through command and control. And I think the other key theme is that you make your rules period specific.

I hope his latest rules “never mind the billhooks” carry on that theme of challenging the status quo and promoting enjoyable and satisfying wargames.

And one final point, Angus McBride bestrides the world of illustrated warriors. His work has become synominous with Osprey. Yet Rick Scollins had a way to engage you in the 1980’s and as you can see he even influenced the young Daniel Mersey (see above). And perhaps appropriately it is his West Saxon Thegn who illustrates that 1988 article in Practical Wargamer.

Happy wargaming whatever your rules preference.