Villiam Bedsforc the Bombardier – ‘Bange Off!’

Villiam Bedsforc. Ladies and Ale...its his bag baby!

It is now May and since Tony Harwood unintentionally released VLE12 Bombardier Bedsforc on his excellent blog back in early April you could say he caught me napping!  What with me not intending to release the miniature until the middle of May.  You can see a picture of the laddy above as rendered by Edward Jackson, resident Valonian artist.  What with Salute and the much higher than expect level of orders pre and post the event it has taken me about two weeks longer than expected to get around to the insert and scenario for this character but now the time is at hand!  So I am on time, ahead of time and behind of time depending on how you look at it.

The scenario is called ‘Bange Off’ and concerns the Bombardier, his ale and his glory  for Albion and the family brewery.

During the  week beginning 7th May the Alternative Armies website will be updated to include full details for VLE12 and the scenario will appear on Barking Irons Online in due course!

GBS

Chris K tutorial on HOF Fire-Team tiles

Now for tile based action a plenty!

Chris K a fine fellow indeed has posted a tutorial on how to get the most out of your HOF Fire-Team tile sets over on Dropship Horizon.  It is an excellent posting, informative and balanced.  In fact it is so good I intend to link it up to the 15mm.co.uk website so that everyone can read and gain from it.  I also have to thank him for the kind words on the tile sets.  It is appreciated by everyone who worked on the tiles from me to Edward Jackson the artist and also our commercial printer who goes above the call of duty when it comes to our printed products.

So go forth…cut and mount!

GBS

Painting the Ion Age with Sam Croes

 

IB51

Retained Squires - Front

Some of you might have seen the beautifully painted and brand new Ion Age 28mm white metal miniatures from Alternative Armies released in late March 2012.  But I bet a lot of you did not know who painted them or how he did it.  Well know you will know who and how!

Sam Croes a man of many talents has posted on his blog an account of his painting and basing method for the four miniatures.  So go along and have a read and a drool!

You can find these miniatures (unpainted…sorry, I am keeping the ones in the photos!) on the Alternative Armies website.

GBS

Salute 2012 – My take on the day

Driving into London is a hairy experience at the best of times.  I know, I have asked those who live and work there.  But for me and the rest of the team it is a once a year event and sometimes getting to Excel is an adventure in itself.  Luckily this time the trip inside the M25 and then through many, many streets passing such sights as the Angel Islington, the Spittalfields Market and the Moorfields Eye Hospital (plus many streets that feature on the Monopoly Board!) went well and when the doors opened the Alternative Armies / 15mm.co.uk trade stand was set up and ready.  It did not take long for the crowds to build as you can see below.

What do you mean you can't see me, I am near a white wall!

I am always awed by the sheer scale of a hall at Excel (and Salute only occupies half of the possible space!) and if you have not been you can see above what I mean.  I took this standing next to our trade stand which was no where near the opposite wall so this is not the whole length of the hall.   At this point I have no idea of the attendance but I think it topped five thousand and felt just as busy as last year.  I did manage to walk round the whole hall once and said hello to many traders whom I know and also a good number of the Warlords themselves who are customers of ours.

I did not work on the stand this year instead I went back to my 90’s roots and took on the challenge of the ‘Sharkes Gingerbread’ demo scenario for Flintloque.  You can read all about the scenario over on Barking Irons and I managed to entertain a good two dozen with it who all went away happy.  I played as the Gingerbread Men and lost and lost and lost.  The most memorable event on table was watching Sharke being killed by a Trolka armed with a Skandavian Kannonderbuss (basically a musket that is a 6lb cannon!) at short range; even his legendary status did not save him.  A big thanks to Tony Harwood for giving me the actual Gingerbread House from his article; it was photographed a good thirty times across the day and I have seen it on three other blogs so far!  Below is a picture of one of the games in progress; it was excellent fun and really entertaining.  Being my first public demo in…humm…maybe three years.

Can I play mister?...I love Flintloque!

The trade stand itself was right next to the demo game table and it was busy for the whole day.  As yet I cannot say what the highest selling codes of the day were but I am fairly certain of some.  We ran out of the packs used in the demo game (including the Gingerbread Men) and handed over a good deal of Sharke’s Chosen box sets which was the big release for April for Flintloque.  HOF Fire-Team was greeting with big grins and open hands (only being released this week no one had seen it before!) and the print edition of MOTH went down well.  But!  I only put half the number of USE ME books we brought back on the van with there being virtually none of some of the books left out of the now Twelve titles in the series.  I am told that the article in Miniature Wargames reviewing USE ME was quoted by many (I will review that current issue given to me by MW Editor Andrew Hubback himself real soon) and also the poster showing the series brought gamers over.  I took a photo of part of the ‘books table’ so you can see this.

Can I speak to Omer Golan, is he here? If I take all twelve can I get one free?

It would not be Salute without meeting my good friends both old and new.  I apologise in advance if I miss anyone out but I must have spoken to a hundred plus people and my throat still hurts!  First off the Warlords themselves including musical and sculpting talent Steve Young (he of Burrovian fame for those in the know).  Thanks Steve for the novel too…all good Joccian fodder!  And then a new talent by the name of Sam Croes (he of the Ion Age art and tiles already on the blog) who is a super guy and a real pleasure to speak to (I will not go into what we spoke of…but great things will happen later this year!).  The feature writer for Starburst magazine whose card I got.  I also got to meet Darker Horizon’s column writer Gary Mitchell and thank him for his full page review of mine and the company’s work.  I also later on got to meet the editor of MW Andrew Hubback who impressed me with a huge knowledge of the hobby and views similar to mine that diversity in wargaming is the key to its continual thriving.  I am sure I am missing people…   Edward Jackson, artist extraordinary of Valon (he draws all the art for Flintloque and other ranges too) with his good lady spent some time and made me smile…he is a really talented fellow and brimming with ideas.  Watching ‘Jacksorc’ talking with Rob Alderman (sculptor of a good number of current Flintloque miniatures) and Tony Harwood..you could almost see the lightening of ideas in the very air!  Below is a picture taken of that chat (sorry I am not in these pictures, but hey I need to press the button!).  Again there were many more people….

Feel the talent! Yes...I was lurking next to the Flintloque racks!

I got myself some swag too.  I will not reveal who make ‘swops’ with me for our stock in return for theirs (more this year than last) but it will keep me in reading for a few months.  I got a copy of the Aeronef rules by Wessex Games,  a title I had been lacking that was recommended to me.  I look forward to digging in this pile when time allows.  We also ended up with a good number of Salute promo materials that were handed in at the stand, mugs, badges, the salute miniature, magazine and bundles of business cards and flyers.

Rob Alderman asked me to do a video interview (good thing I brushed my hair!) so in return I got a snap of him holding his favourite reading material…

Don't hurt me...I will hold the books!

All in all this years 40th Anniversary Salute show was a roaring success for both me and the company too.  It never ceases to amaze me what talent exists not only in the world but also in connection with me.  Wargaming is home to some of the nicest people you will ever meet.

Thanks to all of you dear customers…I ate prime steak on Saturday night!

GBS

Journey’s End

Another Salute wargame show is over and another one thousand mile round trip is now complete.  I am back home!

I intend to publish a few posts in the next couple of days, one about the show and my excellent experiences there and another reviewing the latest Miniature Wargames magazine in which I featured!

So look out for these posts and if I feature anywhere else on the web in regards to the show, and failed to say hello, I apologise…it was a heck of a busy day!

Early night tonight I think….zzzzzzzzzzzz  🙂    Normal service resumes upon the morrow.

GBS

Pick and Choose – Just what does a Miniature Company take to a Gaming Convention?

What way to go and what to take...

So it is convention time, or show time if in the UK and the boss says to you ‘Right which of all of our mighty ranges and books are we taking this time?‘.  Now this conversation happened weeks ago for Salute 2012 but it is the same each time and for every event.  Unless you load up five large vans, get three twenty four foot stands, turn over a ton (no not joking) of white metal alloy into miniatures you simply cannot take everything with you.  So you must choose what to take and know that whatever you choose you will be the saviour of some and the cause of damnation for others.

A lot of wargamers seem to think that asking at a trade stand for a single miniature from a pack that you once carried in 1994 for a range out of production and you not having it to hand is tantamount to treason.  Well, I try and keep everyone happy but it is just not possible.  Not everything there has ever been can be to hand.  That is the reason for ‘collect on the day’ orders to avoid dissapointment.  That is before you get to the fact that we have both Alternative Armies (Flintloque, Slaughterloo, MOTH, Firefight 2.0, Erin, Typhon, DarkeStorme) and also 15mm.co.uk (HOT,HOF,SHM,ASQL2.0,HOF Fire-Team, USE ME, Isarus, Medus, Altuos, 6mm sci-fi etc).  So choices must be made…but what?

I am sure that every miniature wargame company has to make these choices and not everyone does it by throwing a D6 dice and chancing to fate (I did that only once!).  So how do you choose?  What are the parameters?  Due you take the new, the old, the best seller, the remainder stock, the traded in, the stuff at the back of the warehouse, those items you inported that are too heavy to send in the mail, stock that came back from stores and is already packed and priced..the list goes on.   While I cannot tell you how others make their choices I can tell you my own system which I feel is close to how others do it.

15mm fantasy and science fiction wargamers seem to like having an entire range to choose from as they tend to buy an entire ‘army’ in one go while at a show.  This means I ensure the whole HOF and HOT ranges are there with their rule systems.  Then I watch with amazement as whole stacks of packs are lifted off the racks by one customer!  On the other hand 28mm Fantasy, Science Fiction and Flintloque players seem more to like the idea of the new and the small force.  That is they pick a few packs or even just one as a painting project; often adding to an existing force.  It is not odd for a new limited code (this season it is VLE12 Villiam Bedsforc the Bombardier) to run through so much of its number to have it out of stock by the end of the year.  Those interested in rule books and there are many tend to pick a system and then purchase every title in it.  The best example of this I can give you is the USE ME series of titles with wargamers buying a half dozen booklet at a time covering sci-fi, fantasy, WW2, ACW and more.

I always take every code we have released in the last year, since the last Salute, that way those customers we tend to see only once a year have something new to see and to purchase.  I avoid taking anything left laying about in the warehouse as it is often there because it does not sell well and space as I have said is at a premium.  The same goes for stock from retail stores.  This is often in need of re-packing, re-pricing and can be codes that did not sell through too.

As for traded in I run a unique service at Alternative Armies called ‘The Swop Drawer’ where we will accept at retail value limited codes from the Flintloque range (LE’s, VLE’s and LEU’s) in exchange for other codes from the range limited or not.  The gamer pays the freight to us, we pay it back to him. The codes swopped must be sold out though not ones that are still in stock.  This is a slow process but twice a year, once at Salute and once in the run up to Christmas I put out a list or a rack and its first come, first served for the sold out packs again at face value.  This will be the fourth year of the swop drawer at Salute.

After this the space that is left is given over to two main areas, for all the pins on all the racks are now full, the areas of painted miniatures and new range titles.  Alternative Armies employees a team of painters and supplies thousands of high quality pro-painted miniatures (from our ranges, all by hand, all in Scotland) covering all of our game systems.  These are sold as singles and units and are out to see, to be examined and handled too.  Customers love to see what they buy.  The new range titles, well I have to pick three, and this year it is HOF Fire-Team (released at Salute first!), Flintloque the Skirmish (the game we are known for all over the world) and USE ME which has gone from six to twelve titles in just over a year and has made me very proud.

So that is what I take, what I chose this time.  The choices are rational and cover as many bases as it is possible to but they will not please all.  They do not please me but only because I ‘know’ that I will be asked at least one hundred times across the day for something we did not bring.  But space is limited and the demands for it come by the dozen.  We take the new, the limited, the traded in, all our books and rule systems, two entire 15mm ranges, a spattering of the massive Ion Age and Flintloque ranges plus a focus on painted miniatures and three of the array of titles we publish.  I pick and choose and I smile!

See you all in London…

GBS

One week until Salute 2012 – ‘chucking in pick up orders’

It is now exactly one week until the biggest wargame show in the UK takes place.  I refer of course to Salute 2012 at Excel in London’s docklands.  Saturday 21st April is the day and I will be there on the Alternative Armies / 15mm.co.uk trade stand plus I will be doing the ‘Sharkes Gingerbread’ Flintloque scenario participation game across the day too.  You can read the scenario on Barking Irons Online.  But that is not what I am aiming at with this post…oh no…

Every year the company makes a Salute promotion and part of this is an option for customers to pick up their orders on that day from the trade stand.  This is dandy as it saves them the postage and ensures they get what they want (some codes, especially the sold out limited ones in the ‘swop drawer’, sell out at 9am when the doors open!) but…

Please for the sake of my sanity and worker relations with the rest of the crew get your pick up on the day orders in NOW, not just before the show.  London is four hundred plus miles from Girvan and to get to Salute I have to leave early on Friday morning.  The last packing and casting shift is that Thursday morning.  Every year, without fail, we get a few pick up orders placed late on Friday or even on the Saturday morning!

I live to please (ask my kids and my good lady) but I cannot do the impossible.  If you want to pick up on the day..please order before Thursday 19th!

Thank you for reading my annual one week to go to the show vent!

Details here for Salute during this week.

GBS

5109 Sharkes Chosen – Boxed Set for Flintloque – Released on 2nd April!

It is a grand week indeed over on Alternative Armies for the release of a brand new Flintloque Boxed Set is upon us.  Yes, I taunted you all with teaser posts but it was worth it.  Rob Alderman and myself have been working on this for more than a year and now it’s here – 5109 Sharke’s Chosen (A4 Boxed Set of Characters!)

This is a super set and contains not only the new incarnations of the original six Rifleorcs but also a new Rifleorc (Koopa) plus a new Captain Fredorcson and a new Wo-Gan to replace the long sold out LE code but also a brand new character Major Septic Piecrust.  Not only this but four mounted versions of Sharke, Harpy, Wo-Gan and Piecrust on horses.  All of this in white metal 28mm scale plus a four page insert that gives you full character details and rules, uniform guides, weapon guides, stats for Half-Orcs and a scenario too to get you started.

Miniatures from 5109 set

Above you can see an image of the whole set but if you click HERE you can download a zip file with hi-rez images of all the miniatures both front and back plus a PDF version of the insert that comes with the 5109 boxed set.  Enjoy!

Craig Andrews over on Barking Irons Online has told me he is interested in doing a special interview with myself and Rob Alderman about this great new set and our plans for Sharke and his lads over the next year.  More on this as it happens.

This set will be featured at Salute as the main part of the demo game which I will be running alongside the Gingerbread House.

Also keep in mind you can get 15% off your orders with Alternative Armies until 23rd April 2012 with the Salute Month Promotion using the special code plus if you are going to the show you can collect your order from my very hands saving the postage too!

GBS

A Look at Miniature Wargames Issue 348

Another month another magazine on the wargame hobby to read on a leisurely Saturday afternoon.  I learned from the excellent TMP this morning that MW348 was now on the newstands so I headed out to Ayr and got a copy..plus a few other bits and pieces.  I even read the mag on the way home while my good lady drove!  So let’s see what we have.

Miniature Wargames 348 (April 2012)

Cupola

Andrew Hubback introduces the issue and muses on new years, new spring and new projects and the choices to be made.  I know all about this, choices in gaming are always present.  Which figures to buy, to paint and base and then which systems to play and that if after the agony choice of which period or setting to choose as only so much is humanly possible for yourself and your group to do.  This is tied to the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War and a new book named ‘A Damn Close Run Thing’ of which 30% of the sales proceeds goes to a worthy military charity.  Good stuff from a conflict I am just old enough to have memories of.

Recon and Diary

A lot in here on shows in England and the rest of the UK but as is the norm in the wargame community April is all about Salute 2012 at the docklands in London on April 21st, and this year is no different.  MW will be at the show as will I on the Alternative Armies / 15mm.co.uk trade stand plus I will be running a demo game of my own beloved Flintloque 3rd edition.

Figure Focus

Looking at the fifth anniversary of the formation of Warlord Games a very interesting look at how a gaming company works from the inside from the casting to the packing with all its glamour!  While the sight of spin casters, metal pots, packaging and molds is no novelty for this veteran of the hobby, this was a super article by Andrew Hubback and well worth a read.

The Maximilian Adventure

The main cover story! Jim Webster gives us part one of a multi-part part series of articles about ill fated intervention of France in nineteenth century Mexico.  This is not a nation or period I know much about and I have never gamed it either.  But information was given on both sides with great efficiency outlining the typical French forces and the Imperial Mexican army too.  A good introduction set the scene along with a map showing battle locations and dates.  Lots of facts are given on uniforms and equipment and a focus on rather unusual troops such as the Egyptian Battalion.  The pictures are really nice too and the article ends with a well placed advert for suitable 28mm ranges and 40mm range too.

The Battle of Sark

Stephen Maggs gives us a view of the Scottish victory over the English army at Sark in 1448.  Sark is near Dumfries and I have been there a few times, its much like Ayrshire as in its wet, boggy and damn cold when the mood takes it.  Being in the same period as the War of the Roses I know something of this and Sark certainly did contribute to the safety of Scotland over English aggression for a good number of years after the event.  The article gives  map, troop displacements along with orders of battle.  A section on Border Raiding sets the scene and gives us the reasons for the battle.  A full account of the actions of the day follows and then options on wargaming the period and the battle.  This was an excellent battle report and having been to the place it occurred made a difference too.  For those interested the Medus Range at 15mm.co.uk contains many suitable miniatures.

Showdown at Salamanca

One of the decisive battles of the Peninsula War, this battle occurred two hundred years ago this year.  Apt time, according to John Walsh, to look at the battle in detail which is just what he does.  An excellent distilled account from which I remembered elements from my own copies of Oman and also the Osprey title of the battles name.  The pictures taken by Joe Dever show you the scope of the battle in miniature, which is huge, it does need a lot of space, time and a dedicated group to carry it out.  I look forward to next month for the next part!

The High Ground

Steve Eardley writes a good column…oh yes he does!  This month he looks at his new club and his current bugbears too.  This article made me laugh and it made me remember my own encounters with T.W.A.T.S while throwing the dice.  Well worth the cover price of the mag alone in my option it ends with two pages of knowledge on Musket Lines and WW2 publications of rules.

Inkerman 1854

Trevor Hallsall’s final part of this look at this battle in the Crimean War left me a bit cold.  Its a fine piece of writing but its not a war I am keen on.  I much prefer the Napoleonic Era to the middle of the century.  However the scenario did give me some ideas for Flintloque with the Elves against the Undead.

Catching the Train

A scenario from the Anglo-Irish war of 1919-1921 presented by Andy Sykes.  Often hidden by the vastly bigger First World War and the shadow of the coming Spanish Civil War I have not gamed this setting and have not seen it done often either.  That said the scenario is really well done and adding in civilians makes it all the more real.  If you are interested in this conflict then check it out!

The Snipe

David Brown presents an El-Alamein scenario from his new book.  Just as the title says.  Ground covered many times before but with these new rules perhaps differently.  Without the mechanics I could not make a lot from these two pages and moved on from there.

Casting Carefully Considered

It is a real month this time for a look behind the mystery of the hobby.  Steve Eardley lets us look about Old Glory’s casting area and gives us the alchemy of the process.  Really interesting!  I began with Alternative Armies around the spin casters when I was a teen (before that I saw Citadel’s production floor a few times in the eighties) and it has not changed much for all the other things that have changed in twenty years.  While some points in the process are a bit different I can recommend this article for its terms, heart and humour.  Those of use who know the smell of rubber and have seen raw metal alloy turn into little miracles this is familiar stuff; for others…its a look behind the mirror.

Darker Horizons

It seem regular new goodness in the sci-fi and fantasy realms man Gary Mitchell is away for some ‘re-education’ this month so Dave of the Borchester Irregulars sets in to do the round up.  All good stuff which, if nothing else, proves that even in these times of economic recession the gaming industry is thriving with at least four companies named I have NEVER HEARD OF!  Gary does though review a new set of Greek Myth rules but hey ho he would have been better of with my own far cheaper and awesome Typhon rules for mythic skirmish with gods, heroes and monsters (self plug ahoy!).  Look forward to next month when perhaps some of the goodies I sent to Gary turn up in print.

Book and Product Reviews

Reviews of the following titles:  Encyclopaedia of Classical Warfare (1457-1815), Knight: The Warrior and World of Chivalry, The Spanish in North America 1700-1793, Forts of the American Frontier 1776-1891 and The Napoleonic Art of Keith Rocco (I want this one!).  Then comes Prussian Napoleonic Tactics 1972-1815, Shadow Commander (Donald D.Blackburn), Dakota Dawn (1862 Sioux Uprising), Desert Rat (WW2, Osprey) and Collecting Toy Soldiers in the 21st Century.  This last one leaves me cold, not a fan of that side of our hobby at all…always scared to touch things in show cases!  This section ends with a review of the Iwata Neo CN Airbrush by Paul McDonagh in which he finds it..extremely good!

So, all in all this month’s magazine is, to me, not as fine as last months but still a very good read and of the wargames magazines on the newstand it is the one with the most interesting content.  Oh, and its price does not put the fear of penury in your heart!  Go, get, read, enjoy…game!

I reviewed last months’ MW347 you can see the posting here.

GBS

Foul Mouth Freddie in colour

Edward Jackson has penned a nifty coloured image depicting Foul Mouth Freddie, an Orc Sergeant with a mouth like a sewer, who has graced several excellent Flintloque scenarios.  Freddie was created by Tony Harwood and you can see all of his F**king scenarios on Barking Irons.  There is also a Foul Mouth Freddie limited edition miniature which you can see on Alternative Armies.

FMF!

FMF is a cool addition to any Albion Orc force in Flintloque.

Enjoy!

GBS