Wednesday 25 September 2013

Recent Rage Virus game

I've posted details of the most recent ragers game. It was played in an hour which Mr C- H- had spare and was a straight version of the 'zombie hunters' scenario from the Fear & Faith rules. It was intended to be a simple, quick, one-off game set during the early stages of the outbreak but unrelated to any of the other Barberton City games.

Set-up was pretty basic: a squad of well-armed SWAT people is trying to clear an area of ragers.  As the hope was that the SWAT team would appear in later games as deus ex machina reinforcements for struggling players they got names from the very useful name generator at: http://www.fakenamegenerator.com/gen-random-us-us.php

It didn't quite turn out as planned, as you'll see from the match report which has been added as Part 4 of the continuing picaresque Barberton City campaign.

Monday 16 September 2013

Song of Blades & Heroes basing quandary

As you'll see from the preliminary picture http://spodilicious.blogspot.co.uk/p/song-of-blades-and-heroes_17.html I had based these on 2p coins. These were a perfect size and within a millimetre or two of the size of a standard slottabase. However having finished them I then thought about storage. As this is a new project storage should have been considered as part of the whole plan, but wasn't. About the same time I saw an article about sticking powerful magnets inside slottabases and storing the figures in metal containers and that seemed ideal. I am not a big fan of the slottabase, as no matter how well you base the figure the edge looks obtrusive and the the figure appears to be going about on a thick pedestal. However if this solves the storage problem I can put up with that. I know they're only figures anyway.
So the finished Warrior Miniatures figures had to come off the 2p coins. I soon discovered that a metal figure fixed to a coin with two part epoxy and the cast-on base then blended to the coin with Milliput is not easy to shift.  The only solution was to use wirecutters (as used to snip things off sprues) to cut through the layers of flock, PVA and Milliput to the coin then using a not-too-sharp knife carve away the Milliput until the figure's cast on base could be seen. The point of the knife could then be gradually eased under the base and the figure levered off. It was a long laborious process. One or two figures had sore legs from slips of the knife, and I had a few sore fingers too. They are now stuck on slottabases and a supply of 10mm by 2mm magnets is on the way. Those are the maximum diameter that can fit inside the slottabase between the edge and the lip of the slot and should be thin enough to not stick out below the base. I think the magnets are about 25p apiece but as a figure is a pound or over and for those I'm getting painted by someone else the painting adds another two or three quid the price of the magnet is worth paying. So long as the storage problem is solved . . .