Monday 25 April 2016

(025) Forge World - Legion Fellblade Unboxing.

I collected my Forge World Legion Fellblade Super-Heavy tank model at Salute last week. I sat down this weekend and went through the pieces to make sure that there weren't any missing (there weren't). I thought it would be nice to write blog post version of an unboxing video. This way anyone who is interested in this model, or considering buying one will know exactly what they're getting. For example; if I had know that the Fellblade kit comes with crew, I might not have bought additional tank crew separately!
 

(01) This is the Forge World Legion Fellblade kit as I received it inside the cardboard box it was shipped in.


(02) The assembly instructions & a guide to assembling and priming resin models. The instructions look like A4 photocopies, there are five pages printed double-sided on three sheets of paper.
 

(03) Part No: 19 'Gun turret'. This is actually a solid piece of resin and quite heavy.



(04) Part No: 20 'Hull top'.




(05 & 06) Plastic Super-Heavy Tank sprues, from the classic Baneblade kit I believe.



(07) Inside the main bag there are three smaller bags like this one. Below are the model pieces contained within:



(08) Part No's: 6 & 7 'Left hand hull' & 'Right hand hull'.



(09) Part No: 21 'Double accelerator cannon'. One of the barrels is a bit bent and will need to be straightened.



(10) Part No: 14 'Hull front'.



(11) Part No's: 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38 & 39. 'Track section[s] R2, L2, R4, L4, R1, L1, L5, R5, L6 & R6'. (Caption might not correspond to parts exactly).



(12) Part No: 13 'Engine'.



(13) Inside the main bag there are three smaller bags like this one. Below are the model pieces contained within:



(14) Part No's: 22, 23, 24 & 25. 'Lascannon[s] 1 LHS, 1 RHS, 2 LHS & 2 RHS'. (Caption might not correspond to parts exactly). Some of the barrels are a bit bent and will need to be straightened.



(15) Part No's: 5, 4, 3, 2, 49, 50, 9, 10, 48, 1, 40, 55, 56, 57 & 54. 'Exhaust x4, Exhaust pipe x2, Sponson pin x2, Sponson plate x2, Conduit RHS, Conduit LHS, Hatches x2, Gun mount x2, Front Plate, Primary power coupling x2, Tertiary power coupling x2, Secondary power coupling x2 & Targeting array x2'. (Caption might not correspond to parts exactly).



(16) Part No's: 16 & 15. 'Commander & Driver'.



(17) Part No's: 17, 58 & 8. 'Commander arm x2, Commander's shoulder pads & Hull bracket 1 x2'.



(18) Inside the main bag there are three smaller bags like this one. Below are the model pieces contained within:



(19) Part No's: 18, 43, 51, 46, 44, 45, 41, 52, 53, 47 & 42. 'Stowage, Door x2, Bolter cover, Barrels x2, Track guard LHS, Track guard RHS, Gun plate, Gun shield LHS, Gun shield RHS, Heavy bolters & Demolisher cannon'. (Caption might not correspond to parts exactly).



(20) Part No's: 26, 27, 28, 29, 12 & 11. 'Rear wheel R7, Front wheel R3, Front wheel L3, Rear wheel L7, Front wheel bracket LHS & Front wheel bracket RHS'. (Caption might not correspond to parts exactly).
 
 


So there it is, my Forge World Legion Fellblade unboxing. I hope someone out there finds this useful or informative!
 
 
 
 
Current Size of the Unpainted Legion: 311 models.
 
 
Currently Reading: 'The Last Wall' by David Annandale.
 
 

Wednesday 20 April 2016

(024) Salute 2016 & Age of Sigmar.

My name is Paul and I have a problem, I’m addicted to buying miniatures…
 
Winning, and buying things both feel great. This combination of positive stimuli can cause disastrous results if I am left unattended on eBay. I found a business seller who was listing a huge amount of Games Workshop products at enormous discounts (an Imperial Knight for a tenner!). There were only a few days left to run on their auctions and their listings didn’t seem to have attracted much attention. So I added a few things to my ‘watch list’, including a brand new and sealed box of Warhammer Age of Sigmar Stormcast Eternals Liberators.
 
I didn’t have a sudden urge to start collecting and playing Age of Sigmar. I had seen some awesome conversions online where people had used Stormcast Eternals Liberators to make Adeptus Custodes models. I thought a squad of them would be a cool addition to my Heresy Era Imperial Fists army, maybe as a bodyguard for Rogal Dorn, when Forge World make and release a model for him.
 
Here is a link to the conversion that inspired me and that I wanted to try and replicate:
 
 
Here’s a picture of one of his conversions:
 
 
Anyway, I sat watching the listing as the minutes ticked down to the end of the auction, the bidding just seemed to stall at about £17 and this is a £30 kit we’re talking about. I thought I’d leave it until the last moment and see how much the price shot up by. With ten seconds to go, it was still at £17, so I put a bid in at £18, expecting to be instantly outbid. But I wasn’t, I won. I instantly had an attack of buyer’s remorse. “I don’t need this kit!” “I already have tonnes of unpainted models, I don’t need more!” “I’ve already spent a lot this month, why did I spend another £18 on a whim?!”
 
 
"Oh well, at least now I can make a fun project out of converting them into Custodes” I thought. WRONG! There isn’t a bits seller on the face of this Earth selling the High Elf White Lions helmets or the Grey Knight Terminator Nemesis Force Halberds that I need for the conversion. Then, to add insult to injury I read a rumour online that Forge World are working on proper Adeptus Custodes models. So now I’m £18 out of pocket and stuck with a box of Stormcast Eternals I don’t need. I might have to try and resell them.
 
 
 
Age of Sigmar.
 
A couple of months ago I had a sudden urge to start a Warhammer Age of Sigmar army, but luckily the moment passed before I bought any models. I like the idea of starting a new game, without a massive backlog of models already waiting to be painted. I also like the idea of playing Age of Sigmar as a small-scale skirmish game.
 
A couple of weeks ago there was a post on Games Workshop’s Webstore Blog called “We love gaming events!” You can read it here:
 
 
It talked about a ruleset called ‘Battleplan – Clash of Empires’ written for a Throne of Skulls event at Warhammer World. This ruleset limits the armies taking part to thirty models. This is exactly the size game that I’m interested in playing and the size army that seems achievable to collect and paint. Also the models featured in the blog post were beautifully painted, and they were Wood Elves. I was inspired all over again… and this time I bought some models.
 
 
I am pretty much copying the army list described in the blog post:
 
A Spellweaver; A spellweaver is a wizard who can cast spells and resurrect fallen Wanderer models (Wanderers is the new Age of Sigmar name for Wood Elves).
 
A Nomad Prince: A Nomad Prince allows you to re-roll to-hit rolls of 1 on a D6.
 
Two Waywatchers; A Waywatcher gives nearby units an ability called ‘Invisible Hunter’ making them harder for the enemy to hit in the shooting phase.
 
Ten Sisters of the Watch: Sisters of the Watch are awesome archers.
 
Ten Wardancers; (Although I am going to use Dark Elf Witch Elf models to represent these) Wardancers are a fast moving melee unit.
 
Five Sisters of the Thorn; Sisters of the Thorn are fast moving cavalry.
 
A Treelord; Treelords are massive monstrous creatures.
 
That’s my thirty model army planned out. It’s very focussed on archery. I downloaded the Age of Sigmar rules and the war scrolls for all of these units, printed them out and laminated them. I absolutely love the approach that Games Workshop has taken with Age of Sigmar, a simplified, and free to download ruleset.
 
I do feel a bit guilty about buying more models and starting a new project when I already have so many un-started, and unfinished projects. So this Age of Sigmar project has to be different. It has to have rules so that it doesn’t become just another pile of models added to the backlog. These are the rules that I have decided upon:
 
1.  Thou shalt not purchase a new unit until thou hast painted all units already in thy possession.
 
2. Not a drop of paint shall be applied to the models in this army direct from a pot. Every brush-stroke must be thinned with water or mixed on a palette.
 
I am hoping to achieve two things by sticking to these rules; to prevent the project running away from me and to improve my painting techniques and habits.
 
 
 
SALUTE 2016
 
I got back from Salute 2016 at the ExCeL in London on Saturday night. It was an awesome weekend. I mentioned Salute on Facebook before Christmas and my brother asked me if I was going and if I’d mind if he went with me. I don’t get to see my brother very often, in fact the last time was four years ago, so I was more than happy to go to Salute with him. In fact I was more excited about going to Salute than I was about Christmas!
 
I seem to remember booking the time off of work to go to Salute last year, but I didn’t go. I wasn’t sure that I could handle the four hour travel time there and back in a single day. My brother suggested we stay in London on the Friday night before the show, and then booked us rooms on the super luxurious Sunborn Yacht Hotel in London. It’s basically a really posh cruise ship moored right outside the ExCeL centre. I’ve never stayed somewhere so fancy before.
 



 
On the morning of the show I saw an update from Carl, host of the ‘Independent Characters’ podcast on Facebook. He and some friends were queueing for the event about 9am, an hour before the event opened at 10am. I had heard rumours of huge queues in previous years. But after we had breakfast on the ship, (with a view of the Thames, the O2 Arena and Canary Wharf!) we wandered over to the ExCeL just after 10am, and walked straight in with no queue at all!
 
On entering we were given Salute goodie bags, which contained a guide book to the event, a special die with the South London Warlords logo on it, the Salute 2016 exclusive miniature and two free models from a new tabletop wargame called ‘Maelstrom’s Edge’. The South London Warlords are the gaming club that host and put on the Salute shows every year. The theme of this year’s Salute was Steam Punk, and the exclusive miniature is a Steam Punk woman called Mam’selle with a long rifle.
 




 


 
The first thing that struck me about Salute is how big it was, occupying three exhibition spaces within the ExCeL, one for queueing and two for the exhibitors and traders. This is the third tabletop wargaming convention I have been to now, and it dwarfed the others, many, many times over. The ExCeL too is a shockingly huge building, you can barely see one end of it from the other inside.
 
We decided to do a cursory sweep of all of the traders and exhibition games, and then come back and focus on the ones that we were really interested in. Unfortunately the show was so big and had so many traders and games on display that even after the six and a half hours we spent walking around the show we had barely scratched the surface. A show of this size desperately needs longer opening hours, or even to cover two consecutive days.
 
The Forge World stall had a huge queue at the beginning of the day, so I waited until just before we left to collect my Forge World order. I’m glad I did, it came in quite a large box. But here it is, my Fellblade Super-Heavy tank, tank crew and Imperial Fists doors.
 

 
The Forge World stall also had a selection of Black Library books and I was able to pick up book five and an advanced copy of book six in the ‘The Beast Arises’ novel series.
 
 
I was happy to see that Element Games had a big stall at Salute this year. Even if I hadn’t wanted to buy anything I would have liked to go and meet those guys. I buy a lot of my models from them and their service is fantastic. As it was I had had my eye on one of their starter airbrush bundles for a few weeks before the show. I nearly ordered one from them to collect at Salute, but I thought better of it. Airbrushes and compressors are expensive items and qualify for free delivery anyway, so there was no sense in lugging one home from London. I’m glad I waited, Element Games were offering a further discount on airbrush bundles bought or ordered at Salute. So I ordered an airbrush at the show and got a 20% discount instead of 15%.
 

 
I didn’t spend anywhere near as much at Salute as I thought I would, and I actually regret not spending more. Forge World were offering free shipping on orders placed at the event, and as anyone who has ordered from Forge World knows, their shipping costs really sting. I should have picked up a few other models I want from them and saved myself a tonne on postage. But I did buy a souvenir t-shirt, and some dice!
 

 
There were so many traders there and games and exhibitors that I’d never seen or heard of before and I would have loved to have picked up a whole range of diverse models to paint, but I kept getting put off by the combination of prices and fear of spending money. Which is ironic for a guy who ordered a £123 airbrush kit and collected a £170 tank at the show. Maybe next year I’ll buy more, smaller and cheaper items!
 
I was hoping to bump into the guys from ‘Beasts of War’, ‘The Independent Characters’, ‘The Overlords’ and ‘The Masters of the Forge’ and just say hi. But the event was so huge you could easily spend opening to closing in there and miss someone entirely. I did see Warren from ‘Beasts of War’ walking around though, he’s a lot shorter than I thought he’d be. I did see Jason from the ‘Overlords’ though and I even saw industry legend Michael Perry.
 
Overall it was an awesome weekend and an awesome experience. I would definitely love to go again. You can see a few of my pictures below, or view the whole album on my Flick Account here:
 
 





 
 
Current Size of the Unpainted Legion: 311 models.
 
 
Currently Reading: (Non-Black Library) ‘Just A Geek’ by Wil Wheaton.