September 2020 review
The month is over and I finished the summer project successfully! Yay! Realm of Chaos part one is done and ready for battle, four more to go.
Realm of Chaos – Hooves and Fur Part XV
Here they are, the final miniatures of my summer project and I may proudly announce - I'm done, incl. Nurgle Bonus!
Necromunda – Slave Ogryn Gang
After expansions for the regular houses with special gangers, the latest plastic kit for Necromunda covers the big guys - Slave and Servitor Ogryns. Games Workshop offers these in two variants, as the Jotunn H Grade Servitor Ogryns or as a full Slave Ogryn Gang. And after roughly half a year, after its initial announcement in February 2020, the unit as part of the House of Chains is available.
Ogryns are a new addition to the underhive (if you exclude house rules or experimental rules from the Fanatic magazine and such), but a very fitting one. A lot of the gangs have access to brutes, and what is more brute than an Ogryn? There are two choices, you can either go for a double pack of Servitor Ogryns for 32,50 EUR or the Slave Ogryn Gang of 6 for 65,00 EUR. The pieces are in both cases identical, the double-sprue is simply covered three times in the gang box.
Aeronautica Imperialis – Avenger Strike Fighters
The Imperial Navy received a huge update in the second wave of Aeronautica Imperialis. We've seen two new plastic kits in the new starter Skies of Fire and the Arvus and Vulture as resin kits, and now even another plastic kit, the Avenger Strike Fighters.
French and Indian War: French Army uniforms in Canada
The publication of the German translation of Muskets & Tomahawks is getting closer and here and there you can see eager wargamers digging up new collections so that they can get started as soon as the book is available.
In order to simplify the search for the correct painting, I would like to briefly summarize here how the regular armed forces were uniformed in the French and Indian War. First of all, however, it should be said that many soldiers on campaigns no longer took the regulations very seriously. French regulars, who were not stationed in a fort or city, often wore the same clothes in the field as the Canadian militia, adorned with some uniform parts. For the French crown, North America was only a side war scene anyway, and far fewer soldiers were sent there than the English did. The supply situation was also moderate at best, since the British had sovereignty at sea.
But this is primarily about the regular uniforms. Basically it was white, in reality it was rather light gray. Regiments differed mainly in the colors of the vests, lapels and decorative elements such as buttons and the hem of the hats. In addition, each regiment had an individual flag. Flags are a real topic among most Wargamers at this time and can easily lead to discussions. The fact that each state handled this differently does not make it easier.For the French army, the regiment was more of an administrative unit than a tactical element. A regiment consisted of several battalions and these were the actual combat units. The first battalion carried the king's flag, a white cross on a white background. Incidentally, this looks far cooler than you might imagine now, even if many people might come up with various jokes about French soldiers and white flags.All other battalions - there was usually at least one more - carried the actual, individual regimental flag. This is important insofar as almost all battalions in America were not the 1st battalion, so they did not carry the white flag. But more on that later.
Crusader Miniatures shows a regiment from the Seven Years War in Europe. Either way, the representation of the flags is not correct. No French battalion carried two flags.
The main force
Those regiments that participated in several important battles are listed below in the order of their regiment numbers. A reference to the flag and a short description of the uniform follows.
Realm of Chaos – Hooves and Fur Part XIV
Let's get ready for the remaining two miniatures of the summer project. These do not actually belong to the Hooves and Fur project and are "just padding" to have 18 miniatures for the challenge (18 miniatures in 3 months).
As you can see from my first post on these two, I went for regular Ungors from the Middlehammer Beastman range. Both were sculpted by Alan Perry.
I went for the regular black primer along with a stronger white dry brush to pick up the details and have better orientation on the model.
Throwback – Lead Belt Nottingham 2010 – Day 4
Last day of our trip to the lead belt and we headed to the outer area of the Nottinghamshire, to Mansfield to be exactly. Why head out there? Maelstrom Games had their facilities there, back in the day one of the largest wargaming stores, maybe only second to Wayland Games in the UK.
What made it interesting was not only the vast range, but the incredibly large gaming hall with 72 (!) tables, that hosted two tournaments at the same time. Epic 40.000 and Warhammer Ancient Battles on that day we were there. But not all, they even covered a bar, lounge and even more gaming tables. I think one of the things that impressed me the most, that even although the vast amount of tables and this not being club rooms, the amount of terrain was high and the quality of it more than just presentable.
Throwback – Lead Belt Nottingham 2010 – Day 3
Friday started quite early, at 9 a.m. we went for a quick shopping at Mantic, as some of us wanted to buy some Kings of War armies. In my case, it were a few zombies (I really like the versatile use of the ghouls and zombies by Mantic) and the Dwarfen kings council. On top we got these Mantic messenger bags with personal dedication by Ronnie and Alessio.
But that was just a brief stay at Mantics, as we had the second part of our meeting with Warlord Games. I had the chance to meet John Stallard, who was tied the day before (he participated in the Games Workshop shareholder meeting). It was really great to meet another former high ranking manager. John participated in the same battle report, we mentioned yesterday with Ronnie.
Throwback – Lead Belt Nottingham 2010 – Day 2
For the first full day in Nottingham we had the two newcomers on the miniature market on our schedule, Warlord Games and Mantic Games.
Warlord was already in the Lenton Business Centre where they sit until today. But back in the day, as a young and small company, they only rented single offices that were spread across the centre and not the whole wing and own brick & mortar store like today.
The range was already quite broad in terms of historical coverage, but far from the variety of plastic kits as today. The Early Imperial Romans and some Black Powder kits were already available and the first German soldiers for Bolt Action.