Current Gaming Projects

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Still Alive, update and pictures


So, it really has been a long, long time since I posted anything on here.  I really have been busy with work and having no social life except every once and a while.  I think I might have got a miniature wargame in this year, but no more than three for sure.  I know that have not really got anything painted, but I did recently send a box of figures to be painted by a painting service.  They are many more 28mm Russian Civil War figures for the winter fighting (i.e., winter clothing) and some other winter related figures for other skirmishing games, like Inuits for some Pulp action goodness.

I am hoping to have another box of figures going to be painted in a few weeks too.  This will be mainly for a different 28mm project. That new project is 1950’s Atomic Horror, which will be a tribute to those classic 1950’s movies and to the movie, “Six-String Samurai”.  I plan to use Killer B’s rules, Invasion X, but will play with a couple of others; Crooked Dice’s, 7TV 2nd Edition, or Osprey’s, In Her Majesty’s Name.  The bulk of the figures will be the (hopefully) growing Killer B’s line for Invasion X, and Brigade Game’s line, "Atomic Café '57".  Some other figures will be used, mainly for giant critters.  I am really tempted to see if my painting service thinks that they can do them in the glorious gray scale to reflect the B&W movie theme, but I will probably stick with boring Techno-color, especially since I would have to paint everything(!) including the flocking, shrubs, and trees into the gray scale.  After this project, I am going to start sending figures for either my 28mm Back of Beyond project or the 28mm Banana Wars project.

I am doing another re-evaluation of my gaming hobby / collection.  I am really starting to realize that as I am starting to make a real effort to get miniatures sent off to be painted, and storing them in my basement, how little space I really have for storing painted stuff (along with buildings, etc. for that project).  So, I am going to line up the boys and tell them that this will be a fight to the death on what projects I am going to keep and make a hard decision and trash stuff. I might trade some project for a smaller scale (either in figure scale, # of figures, or both). 

Now, after saying that, I feel guilty in showing my new 10mm Russo-Turkish War project.  I bought these maybe a year ago off of eBay and finally got around to re-basing them.  I don’t know what rules the original owner had for them, but I am sticking with the basing, but adding a 3mm base underneath them to make them easier to pick up.  The basing is a 1" front and either a 1/2" or 1" depth.  I originally was thinking of popping the figures off of their metal bases and mounting them to bases for the rules that I was planning to use them with in the future.  But they are really hard to pop off, so I gave up for now.   

I am planning to use them for Neil Thomas’, Nineteenth Century European Wars, rules or his, One-Hour Wargames, rules, and Dan Mersey's, The Men Who Would Be Kings.   In the first rules, the bases are 40mm front with four bases being a unit, in the second each unit is 4" to 6" frontage, and in the last, I can use twelve 1" bases to represent an infantry unit.

I was thinking of using them also with Black Powder, as I got the Black Powder's unofficial Russo-Turkish War supplement and the number of figures are very close to what is need for two forces.  But I decided that I probably will not do Black Powder. I did lay out the figures in the below pictures for Black Powder. In that system, I will have for the Russians: an infantry division, a start on a Guard’s regiment, an artillery battalion, and a start on a cavalry brigade.  The Turks have an independent infantry brigade and an artillery battery, but I still need a cavalry brigade (there were no Turkish cavalry in the collection.)  In the pictures below is probably 85% of everything I want to get for that system.  But for the rules that I am going to stick to, I probably have too much stuff, except for cavalry on both sides, Russian Guards, and replacement Turkish artillery to replace the broken stuff, which I will need to order some more.  I am still sitting down trying to figure the best way to utilized the balk of the collection without having too much unused stands.

This picture is the overall collection as is.



This picture is a sort of a close up of a Russian infantry regiment of three battalions for Black Powder.   Several Russian artillery battalions can be seen in the back ground.




This picture is a sort of a close up of a Turkish infantry regiment of four infantry battalions.  Again, using the suggested strength for the Black Powder supplement of 24 figures for a battalion



This picture is a Russian artillery battery deployed for firing.  As an artillery battery took up about the same amount of frontage as an infantry battalion, I was figuring this would be cool for representation of the actual frontage.  The blank stands in between the guns will be flocked and might get some extra things, like artillerymen or boxes mounted on them.  



This picture is a Russian artillery battery on the move.



This picture is of a Turkish artillery battery.  They had less guns compared to the Russians, so they are smaller for frontage.  As you can see, not everything made it safely in the shipping.  Luckily, there was very little breakage, but both of my Turkish artillery bases got stuff broken. 



The last two pictures are the battalions deployed.  The first one they are in line formation and the second is in an assault column.




Cheers
 
 

3 comments:

Pete. said...

Great to see you back posting Sapper.

Love the new 10mm army. Have you read the recent book by Quinten Barry on the Russo - Turkish War?

Cheers,

Pete.

Blake Wood Walker said...

Interesting stuff. I'm not doing 28mm Russo-Turkish War, now. LOL.

sapperjoe said...

Interesting...I never got any notifications that comments were left. I just happen to open up my blog because I was thinking of typing up a new entry rough draft and just decided to scroll down and saw there were comments. I am going to have to look into why I got no notices.

Anyways...

@Pete: Thanks! I have the book in Kindle format, but have not read it yet. I also have "Valentine Baker's Heroic Stand At Tashkessen 1877" and plan to read it after Barry's book. It will probably some time next year. I sort of stopped reading for a while and when I start up again, I am planning to read a few books about the end of WW1 ("Eleventh Month, Eleventh Day, Eleventh Hour: Armistice Day, 1918 World War I and Its Violent Climax", "Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World", and "The Innocence of Kaiser Wilhelm II")

@Andrew: Thanks for the remarks and the link

@Blake: As soon as I get more them based up, there will be a game for you sometime in the future. I just order more bases over the Labor Day weekend.