USE ME Post Apocalyptic rules Reviewed on Dropship Horizon Blog

There is a great review of UM007 USE ME Post Apocalyptic rules for 15mm miniatures over on Dropship Horizon Blog.

Dropship Horizon is the world’s premier place for all things 15mm science fiction related and the review was written by Chris K who has his own excellent blog The Basement Gaming Bunker as well as being a reviewer for DSH.

The review of the rules covers both the print and electronic editions of UM007 and is fair, balanced and independent as all good reviews are.

You can also find links to additional free resources for UM007 by author O.G.Joel in the comments list for the review.

So head on over and have a read.  Good Job Chris!

GBS

Shilling Service Pack Painted by Imp522 – Flintloque

I picked this link up from the Notables Yahoo Group posted by member Dave.  Dave has his own wargaming place so I headed over the Imp522’s blog where he resides to take a look.

I think he has done a great  job on a SSP04 Shilling Service Pack from Alternative Armies.  You can see his painting and basing work over on his blog.

The Shilling Service Pack gives you a Flintloque rulebook plus miniatures, dice and an insert with scenarios to get you started.  Great value and great fun too.

Nice work Dave!

GBS

MOTH Prydia in Flame – to be put into print

ION01

Confirmed today by the Alternative Armies grand meeting is that ION01 MOTH – Prydia Aflame will be put into a print format for release in late March/April 2012.

The purpose made electronic version will be transcribed into an A5 format booklet of approx 56-60 pages.

Not many more details at present but as I will be assembling the documents myself I shall post some follow ups as I go further into the work.

Remember to check out Barking Irons for the MOTH free files and scenarios.

GBS

Competition Winner!

The two book prize

Well done to my eldest, the thinker, on winning himself two new books by Random House Children’s publishing.  Both are aimed at nine year olds which is spot on.

They arrived this morning in response to his entering a competition a couple of months ago.

I am sure he will enjoy the read…just in time too as his current stock of paperbacks is extinguished having been piled up at Christmas.

Lucky Boy!

GBS

The Underground Electric – Hey Jude 1969

Album Cover

The Underground Electrics “Hey Jude” album is Lee Akers singing with back up instrumentation from the The Firebirds, (they’re the same band as the Electric Firebirds) who released two albums including “Light My Fire” on Crown Records in the late 60s, early 70s.   This is a strange album that offers up not only the worst cover of the Beatles ‘Hey Jude’ that I have ever, ever heard (which is odd considering its the title track) but also some great late 60’s blues tracks and groovy pop works all in one.  The album is all over the place and its best material is the blues piece ‘Goodbye Baby’ and thumping good  instrumental ‘Queen Bee’ while dance floor ‘Boogie Chillin’ is a delight…very Austin Powers.  Some folk will listen to this and want to pop out their eyes to better reach in and poke their brains to oblivion but on the whole I liked it and its been on MP3 in the car for a week and a half which is evidence that I find it worth the pain of track one to get to the rest. Its raw, its rough but its damn tasty with it.

Over on YouTube a poster has written the following which sums it up well I think:

Crude raw Heavy psychedelia /Hard rock by the band most known as The Firebirds but also 31 Flavours. Exellent wasted raw psychedelic fuzz blues based hard rock influenced by Cream/Hendrix & Blue Cheer. Hope the mystery surrounding this band is solved one day.

Here is the track listing:

1. Hey Jude
2. Standing At The Crossroads
3. Boogie Chillen
4. The Syndicator
5. No Love In My Heart
6. Goodbye Baby
7. Queen Bee
8. Sunnyland
9. Dark And Dreary
10. Dust My Blues

This album can still be found and bought but its rare.  I could find no current vinyl listings but recent auctions placed it at about 150.00USD.  My own copy went back to the market a few years ago to fund my acquiring of the San Diego Brain Police but that is for another day.

Here is a link to YouTube for ‘Boogie Chillin’.  Also one for the blues number ‘The Syndicator’ on YouTube.

Want to be amazed and appalled…yes…well get this album.

GBS

The Goddess Athena on Barking Irons

Craig Andrews, editor of Barking Irons Online, has posted up my additional rules for Typhon game of Greek Mythology on the news website.   The article concerns the Goddess Athena and her abilities in the game as a patron god of your Hero and his sacred band of Warriors.  The article contains all seven of her gifts and their costs in fate points.

My favourite of all Greek Mythology creatures is tied to Athena and that is Bubo the clockwork owl.  I adore this little fellow and hope at some point to have him added to the Typhon Miniature Range over at Alternative Armies.

Barking Irons has more material on Typhon, so go along and have a look.

GBS

Watch out for the Eyetaran!

Watch out! …there in the undergrowth…what is it…arrgh…no, its the Eyetaran!

Soon to be added to the growing SHM 15mm Range at 15mm.co.uk is SHM23 Eyetaran.  This little fellow is a lot of fun and quite an odd ball too.

SHM23

Designed by Nick Kondratov this miniature stands about 13mm tall and has a furry body, two little feet, long neck and a single eye.  Is it dangerous…most likely…I imagine some sort of bio-beam from its eye.

The great thing about the SHM range is that it lets designers get their own ideas into mold and to market.  Otherwise miniatures like this, quirky, useful, would never exist except as one off sculpts or concepts.

I am adding a profile for the Eyetaran to USE ME Alien Safari.

Look for this miniature on 15mm.co.uk during February.

GBS

Valentines Adoration

My good lady another Valentines Day is here.  I hope you liked your carefully chosen presents; I liked mine.

You know I adore you and I have done since the day we met fifteen years ago.  ‘Will you still need me, will you still feed me when I am thirty five.  I hope so!’

The rest…well its not for this blog 😉

Luv ya Janey!

GBS

A look at Miniature Wargames 347 magazine

Miniature Wargames (MW) magazine is a main stream print title dedicated to the various facets of the wargames industry and hobby mainly in the UK.  It can be purchased direct or from high street newsagents and bigger store chains like WH Smiths.  It was from the branch of that chain in Ayr that I got my copy of issue 347 last week…upon its release!

I love wargame magazines (duh!) and took the first chance I had to read this one cover to cover.  So here is a look at this issue from beginning to end with my own comments about each section included in italics for ease of reading.

Cupola

Introducing the magazine an interesting column by editor Andrew Hubback which concerns itself with not only 2012 being the two hundredth anniversary of the Russian Campaign of 1812 but also on the need for marketing/shows/mechanics of rules sets.  In addition a notice that the facet of MW that is Darker Horizons will be getting its own publication bi-monthly as of the third quarter of 2012.

I agree with Mr Hubbock that the promotion of rules sets is ever more needed for their success however success is what needs to be defined.  I will not argue that my own titles are among the most known but they all do well and they all sell and all of this through personal service, company promotion, agents and shows.  You need not be first among the many to be popular enough for ‘success’.  I think a great let down of the most ‘famous’ and therefore ‘market leading’ wargame titles is their expense to purchase.  Gloss costs as they say and it lets down the core idea of wargaming which is all about clubs, fun, comrades and above all affordable enjoyment.  Be good, give value, remember the fun! 

It is great news that Gary Mitchell will be getting Darker Horizons into its own imprint.  Fantasy and Science Fiction are my main interests so those pages get more reading for me.  It will be bi-monthly and Gary has already told me that 15mm.co.uk and Alternative Armies releases both metal and paper will feature..excellent stuff!

Reconnaissance Report and Diary

New Venue for the Derby wargame show, Osprey offers the chance to get your rules into their imprint, a set of gaming rules adapted from real life lessons to train US Special Forces, Diary Events and Letter.

All good reading here as news pages should be.  Salute 2012 is not far off but more on that elsewhere.  Keep in mind I am looking for aspiring game writers to get into print with 15mm.co.uk in the USE ME series.  Drop me an  email if you have an idea.  I will send you the terms.

Steady as She Goes

Andrew Hubback crunches the numbers on the MW2012 poll of popular periods for miniature wargaming.  Some are up and some are down.  Big points are the revival of the Ancients period and the loosing of ground of 28mm scale to 15mm scale miniatures with science fiction on the up too.

This is a good and unusual article that on the whole ties in with my actual experience of scales and periods over the last year or so.  15mm has continued to grow and grow (pun intended!) as a scale and inside that the continual surge of 15mm science fiction miniatures.  I like to think that the sheer number of UM001 USE ME 15mm Science Fiction books we have sold has contributed to this and its been seen in clubs all over the place.  Flintloque is not really Napoleonic but it is to an extent and its also Fantasy.  The graphs in the magazine did not separate SF and F but Flintloque has continued to perform well in the last year helped by the release of 5028 Bier & Bones.

I Predict a Riot

Andrew Hubback provides an in-depth article including mechanics suggestions for civil disturbance; riots if you will.  Looking at the troubles across English cities last summer there is plenty to inspire and though not a mainstream subject of wargaming it is a very valid one.  The article covers rioting from all angles, all forces involved, all weapons, tactics and so on before giving suggestions for rules when using this setting in play.

I have to give this article top marks.  It is superb.  All you would like to know about gaming and riots (on table of course!) across five pages.  I actually have a draft of a rules engine ‘Civilus Uncivilis’ to cover this sort of thing for 15mm or 28mm scale though I prefer the smaller figures to give a grand size.  Crowd movement and Kyng Mobbe.   Thanks Andrew!

Once More into the Breach

Peter Hall discusses his project for a Hail Caesar game at Salute 2012.  The article looks at the layout of Scotland during the classical period with the various tribes, their lands, their lives and battles.  This is accompanied by brief force lists for his chosen game system.  Mons Graupius is covered with suggested texts and ideas for scenarios involving Celts and Romans.  But Peter still has many figures to paint to be ready in time – Tempus Fugit indeed!

This is a period I know a lot about, albeit from an angle.  As the author of Erin 2nd Edition my knowledge of the period is based in the Myths not the reality of classical Britain.  The article is a really interesting read and would be great for introducing you to the subject of Celts bashing Romans.  The additional page on painting was not really to my taste but will appeal to others who are going to give this a shot.  I shall most certainly be popping over to this demo table on the day!

The High Ground

Steve Eardley looks at wargaming on your own; going it solo.  He discusses the origins of solo play, its implications both on and off the table, the loneliness of playing with yourself (oh err missus!) and also how to define winning when playing solo.  The author also makes an offer of picking up his own solo wargame rules for free from him by email.

This is a great article and I have an interest in Solo Wargaming since it has grown in popularity in the last five years.  Indeed every new title I produce has contained solo rules as an included add on since 2009.  The information in the article has also influenced my thinking for UM012 Alien Safari (see posts previous to this for more) which will be a solo play title in the USE ME Series.

Zulu Dawn

Stuart Asquith gives a complete account of the Battle of Isandlwana which took place in 1879 and was one of the worst defeats suffered by the Victorian British Army.  Good maps of the battlefield, suggestions for wargaming, forces present are given along with contact details for the Victorian Military Society and suggestions for further reading on the subject.

A solid article but not on a subject that is of interest to me but I enjoyed it and Mr Asquith gives a fine account of the battle which is often overlooked for the ‘glory’ of Rorkes Drift.

Brandy Station

Derek Coleman takes an in depth look at wargaming the biggest cavalry action of the US Civil War; Brandy Station prelude to the Battle of Gettysburg. A good map, lots of images of action, suggestions of forces based on historical accounts, suggestions for how to create the action on table including the importance of morale.  Also given is an account of a wargame of the battle and how that turned out.

The biggest capture for me on this article were the lovely images provided by Alan Perry of his terrain, miniatures and backdrops for this period and setting.

Patton takes Champagne

Lee Sowers author of the World War Two rules Combat Action Command (CAC) gives an account of the US 4th Armoured Division’s relief of Bastogne in 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge.  All you need to play out this battle using the CAC rules including a turn by turn account, after action analysis, designers notes and then laid out statistics sheets for the forces.

There is more on CAC elsewhere in the magazine including a review. 

Darker Horizons

Gary Mitchell presents his look at the science fiction and fantasy wargame market for the month.  This time titled ‘Build a Rocket, Boys’ with a theme of mad scientists, a return from Germany, a colder cold war and the Undead. He covers 15mm, 28mm (lots!) and then gives a review of A Call to Arms.

This is the best bit of the magazine for me as its where most of the work I do would end up.  The march of 15mm sci-fi continues (perhaps my work of five years with 15mm.co.uk, Laserburn and USE ME has something to do with this!) and the sheer diversity of makers and miniatures is well shown.  Beam me up Scotty!

Modelling Project

How to create a Greek Temple of the ancient period in 28mm scale by Paul McDonagh.

Great modelling article on how to create a simple built temple.  It looks easy to do and the instructions are nice and clear as are the supplied images.

Book Reviews

The latest titles in the wargame orientated military book publishing world are reviewed.

Reviews of ‘Armies of the Irish Rebellion 1798’ by Osprey in its Men at Arms series, ‘Ride Around Missouri’ by Osprey also looks at Shelby’s Great Raid in 1863, ‘Armies of the Adowa Campaign’ 1896 also by Osprey in its Man at Arms series.  Casemate Publishers offer up ‘Hill of Squandered Valour’ an account of the Battle of Spion Kop in 1900.  There are also reviews of American Forces in 1918, yet more on German Panzers, modern special operations vehicles in Iraq and Afghanistan, Vietnam Gun Trucks.  All good reviews; recommended! 

Hope you enjoyed this look at the magazine.  Its a super read!

GBS