Competitively, at events, Dark Eldar had a wonderful record last weekend. They won 4-5 GT sized events and had a 75% win record.
The Long War this weekend has no DE present.......Wellington: The Self Respect Capital of the World
Competitively, at events, Dark Eldar had a wonderful record last weekend. They won 4-5 GT sized events and had a 75% win record.
Following on from the Malanthrope, I got inspired to paint up some outstanding Tyranid models to finish off my army.
The first of these is a Broodlord (Space Hulk version) which will be followed by two 3rd Edition metal lictors.
For the last 12 months I have had a Tyranid Malanthrope primed sitting on my desk.
On Monday evening I thought I would try out my new Cult of Paint H&S Evolution airbrush I had bought myself at Xmas.
It was quite clear, even after a few minutes, that this airbrush is a step up from my Patriot and my Sotar. I was able to lay down lines at low pressures that I don't have the skill to do with the other brushes. in this case, I used it to quickly lay down base colours with some modulation on the carapace.
The reflection is mainly due to the gloss varnish I have on the shell. I may look to tone that dowm a bit.
One thing with this resin model was that it was a really crap casting. I purchased it cheap second hand and I think that it may be from a Chinese/Russian recaster as I'd hate to think Forgeworld would put out anything this shite. Lots of broken claw tips.
Yesterday I bought a couple of Tervigon/Tyrannofexes off the local Facebook trading group. They should arrive next week and I'm looking to see how they paint up with this brush.
Regular visitors to the Dunn household will remember the involvement of Prime Ginger, Nurgle in wargaming activities. He would quite happily get on the table, curl up and go to sleep. On odd occasions he would insert himself into games, I remember he took exception to Wil Hoverd's Ogre Kingdoms' Gorgers no matter where Wil brought them on.
Well this week we saw the emergence of a new generation as my 5 month kitten Suggs (who is already the size of a small horse) decided to be involved in a Death Guard/Imperial Knight battle.
This morning I had a game against Aaron's Imperial Knights with my Death Guard. We played The Scouring from the CA:GT2020 missions.
In the end I managed to grind out a comfortable win 72-36 which was largely due to the advantage I had in securing Primary Objectives. The Death Guard scored 5-15-5-15 vs. 5-0-5-0 for the Knights, providing a 30 point margin. In Secondary Objectives, I scored 10 for Engage on all Fronts, 12 for Titanhunter and 0 for Deploy Scramblers. Aaron had 9 for Grind Them Down, 4 for Engage and 3 for Assassinate.
So what was the story?
Turn 4: Blightlord Terminators Strung Out Protecting the Tallyman and Plaguecaster |
One thing I have found through the last 25 years of gaming is, generally, if you focus on some core principles and strategies with an army then you have more success.
I have updated the Events Calendar for those 40k events that I am aware are occuring.
If you are a TO/Umpire that would like me to post your event in the Calendar then please drop me an email.
July is rapidly creeping up on us and so my thoughts have turned to the Mission Pack for FOB NZGT. This is a hobby-focused event rather than the normal Batte Points only event that is more common these days.
To support the "friendly" nature of the event I had been looking at using Core Rulebook Eternal War missions rather than the ubiquitous Chapter Approved 2020: Grand Tournament missions. The latter have some problems with them in that not all armies have their own special Secondary Objectives and with those that have not all are necessarily equal.
Recently the Mission Pack for the local ValleyCon event was released and it is largely based off the beta Maelstrom of War rules included in White Dwarf 461. I've looked at these and read a number of articles on them and think that they are a good fit for what I am trying to achieve at Fields.
You can find a really informative walkthrough on Goonhammer. This includes a couple of short battle reports showing you how they work in practice.
If you would like to read them then you should get a copy of White Dwarf 461 or have a look at the ValleyCon Players Pack which is using a version.
I'll release the final version nearer the time which will incorporate any changes GW make in the beta.
So the weekend project of finishing my new Cityfight tiles and tying those with the previously produced tiles was a resounding success. I managed to get 95% of the work done and now it is just a case of running some filters over a couple of tiles and adding some wet effects to a few others. By my reckoning that will be one evening's work.
There is a UK YouTuber, Mel Bose, who over the past 5-6 years has created a series of videos on terrainmaking. I've watched these and have learned an enormous about the various techniques involved. Mel's work while not as sophisticated as, say Gaming Geek, allows you to put together functional terrain that is pleasing to the eye.
About 18 months ago, Mel ran a Kickstarter in conjunction with Dave Taylor to produce a book on terrainmaking. I have Dave's book on building armies and it is a great resource, well put together and always informative.
Recently I saw that Mighty Ape were carrying the finished book so I purchased a copy (NZD 75 ~ USD 50).
On the weekend I had the second game with my Death guard Plague Marine army. my opponent used a Shadowsun Stealth Tau army (3 Ghost Keels, lots of Stealth Suit units, Battlesuits with Rail Rifles - backed by Fire Warriors and drones). It didn't go well for the Death Guard, the game effectively being after by the end of the Turn 2.
Lynne is away for four days so it's time to cut wild. And what does a wargamer do while the wife is away? Spends the weekend painting terrain! 😀
I'm adding more tiles to my Citifight board and tying them together with the existing tiles.
I have forty tiles to do and these are the first 25%. More rocky ground cover has been added to all tiles, infilling some pre-existing bare areas. Using a mix of inks and paints on the ground cover (and this time I'm writing down the process).
Long day ahead on the remainder.
Just a follow up on the "Fatigue Stage" post earlier in the week. The impetus of breaking completion done into component tasks worked.
Three evenings and a few hours on my day off have seen me complete my Titanicus army. A lot of satisfaction putting Legio Vulpa and its supporting House Hyboras into my display cabinet last evening.
A couple of years ago, at Adepticon, I picked up the full set of weathering pigments from Secret Weapon Miniatures. I had used pigment powders before but this set gave a great range of colours and I was keen to put them to use. The ideal project for this is my Legio Vulpa. The engines are based on the Gamers Grass Badlands bases which replicate a dusty red planet. The powders provide the opportunity to tie the engines to the bases by extending the dustiness up their lower bodies.
Vince Venturella did a great video on how to use weathering powders which you can find here.
A few years ago Games Workshop released as a hobby accessory, a pack of skulls. Now GW models get an awful lot of shade for including excess skulls on their models but perhaps the truth has been lying in plain sight. The 41k Millennium is not a very nice place and skulls have replaced the electric scooter as the ubiquitous urban accessory.
I never gave the pack much thought....it was always a bit of a "meh" to me. However as I watch more and more terrain making videos, I now realise I need more skulls in my life! And in this pack GW delivers.
Back in March 2016 I bought a Wanhao i3 PLA 3D printer. This was a filament machine and I used it to print off a large amount of wargaming terrain - both for Kings of War and Warhammer 40k.
Over the first 2 years of its life I printed 3-4 times its purchase cost in terrain pieces. The big thing was that I discovered 3D printing was a hobby unto itself and could be very time consuming - and bloody frustrating when things aren't working. As a result, once I had printed the terrain pieces I wanted I stopped using it regularly and for the last three years it has sat largely unused in my garage.
I have, however, been watching the evolution of 3D printing and the arrival of resin printing. This has been on the wargaming "scene" for a couple of years and we have seen a move towards miniatures as well as terrain pieces.
A number of creators use Patreon to fund the production of new designs and recently I was introduced to Archvillian Games and their latest campaign. Regular readers will know I am a sucker for all things "ratty" and their March campaign seems aimed directly at me.
Saturday morning I painted the rims black on the last four figures for my 2000 points of Death Guard. The sense of achievement and satisfaction was palpable. This was a project done and dusted. There is an opportunity to expand the army - I have a number of Blight Drones and 30+ Poxwalkers in my bitzbox but they were never in the original army plan.
As I cleaned up my hobby desk, my eyes strayed to the left and staring at me accusingly was my Legio Vupla army for Adeptus Titanicus. This project was one of did over the New Year break and has been sitting uncompleted on my desk for three months. It is 80% done but has hit what I call the "Fatigue Stage".
The "Fatigue Stage" is that point you reach where you have completed a substantial part of the project - so have a significant sunk cost - but the enthusiasm has receded and you focus entirely on the work/effort to get it over the line. You realise it will only take "x" hours/days to finish but you want to move on to something more exciting....if it isn't addressed it will likely be boxed up as an unfinished project and potentially find its way to a Bring & Buy table at some event.
So how do you get through the "Fatigue Stage"? You can wait until there is a knock at the door and you are visited by New Enthusiasm or it becomes a case where you have to put on your Big Boy Pants.
Over the summer here, I watched a lot of Youtube videos on hobby aspects of wargaming.
One of the clips looked at hobby equipment and focused in on hobby knives. Most people use some sort of craft knife with Citadel, Tamiya, Excel and a swathe of No-Name brands being popular. However, in virtually all cases they use the #11 blade.
On the weekend I had a game with Locky which gave my new Death Guard their first run on the table. Up until then I had been theorycrafting my tactics and it became very quickly obvious just how slow and immobile the Death Guard are relative to what I had played most of 8th/9th Ed with (Dark Eldar and Harlequins).
"Da ya lek daags?" |
What that has made entirely evident is that tactics need to be vastly different. The list I was using is heavily Plague Marine based which according to the 40k Hivemind is sub-optimal. While I accept this I believe that the list can work but requires very disciplined play. I have made a few changes to the list I used and this week painted up the four new required models.
First change is Putrifier in for Surgeon. While I am not happy about losing a 6+ FNP bubble, I can see benefits in wider synergy. The other thing I have done is taken a "win more" pathogen off my Lord of Contagion. The points that have been freed up have been used to give each of my "Shooty" PM squads a HtH threat to keep opponents honest.
My updated list as follows:
Plague Company: Mortarion's Anvil
++ Battalion Detachment 0CP (Chaos - Death
Guard) [1,996pts, 7CP] ++
+ Stratagems - Gifts of Decay [-2CP]: 2x Additional Relics
+ HQ +
Lord of
Contagion [120pts]: 5. Rotten
Constitution, Plaguereaper, Warlord, Warp Insect Hive
Malignant
Plaguecaster [95pts]: Miasma of
Pestilence; Curse of the Leper
+ Troops
+
Plague Marines [195pts, -1CP: Champion of Disease]
Plague Champion: Bolt pistol, Plague knife,
Plague Skull of Glothila, Power fist; Plague
Marine w/ 2nd Plague Knife; Plague Marine
w/ Bubotic Axe; Plague Marine w/ Great
Plague Cleaver; Plague Marine w/ Flail of
Corruption; Plague Marine w/ Plague
Spewer; Plague Marine w/ Plague Belcher
Plague Marines [167pts]
Plague Champion: Boltgun, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/ Blight Launcher; 4x Plague Marine w/ Boltgun, Blight grenades, Krak
grenades, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/
Flail of Corruption
Plague
Marines [167pts]
Plague Champion: Boltgun, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/ Blight Launcher; 4x Plague Marine w/ Boltgun, Blight grenades, Krak
grenades, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/
Flail of Corruption
Plague Marines [167pts]
Plague Champion: Boltgun, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/ Blight Launcher; 4x Plague Marine w/ Boltgun, Blight grenades, Krak
grenades, Plague knife; Plague Marine w/
Flail of Corruption
+ Elites
+
Blightlord
Terminators [295pts]
Champion: Bubotic Axe, Combi-bolter; 2x Terminator: Bubotic Axe, Combi-bolter; Terminator: Balesword, Combi-bolter; Terminator: Flail
of Corruption; Terminator: Blight Launcher, Bubotic Axe; Terminator: Balesword, Plague Spewer
Deathshroud
Terminators [150pts, -1CP: Champion
of Disease]
Champion: Plaguespurt gauntlet, Reaper of
Glorious Entropy; 2x Terminator: 2x
Manreaper, 2x Plaguespurt gauntlet
Biologus
Putrifier [65pts]
Foul
Blightspawn [75pts, -1CP: Warlord
Trait] - Gloaming Bloat, Plaguechosen, Revolting Stench-vats
Tallyman [70pts] - Tollkeeper
+ Heavy
Support +
Plagueburst
Crawler [175pts]: 2x Entropy cannon,
Heavy slugger
Plagueburst
Crawler [175pts]: 2x Entropy cannon,
Heavy slugger
+
Dedicated Transport +
Chaos
Rhino [80pts]
It was a slower month overall in March, work kicked off in a big way and kept me distracted from a lot of hobby, and then there’s the hobby butterfly syndrome...
1. Paint a new 40k army
1. Paint a new 40k army