Nice to see everybody is still out there!
:)
The ongoing adventures of a boy who never grew out of making and playing with plastic model kits (and even some metal ones too). Also a wargamer in search of the perfect set of wargaming rules for WWII Land and 20th Century Naval campaigns.
Tuesday, 26 April 2016
Monday, 25 April 2016
Gone Plain Bonkers .. WWII Scale Creep
I promised myself never to do this but put a simple bit of temptation my way and after twenty years of resisting the fatal lure I go bonkers and get a 15mm WWII army. Three in fact, US, German and Russian (the Brits had all gone otherwise it would have been four)! All from a local hobby store(?) called Boyes (rather a department store with local managers discretion to add esoteric collections here and there) selling off a large part of their 'toy line' as 'dead lines' (boo hoo). I guess it must have been a bit like the Hobbycraft experimentation with FoW and GW stuff (now dead). Well at a third of the RRP price or less the PSC 15mm (£5 a box) was too good a 'steal' and I even succumbed to their half price (£10) Perry's WWII 28mm Plastics lure, again put a hole in my wallet (blown the toy budget for the first six months of the year). That means I have the insane "biggies" of 28mm too (just two packs, one DAK and one 8th Army, for a skirmish in the desert).
Once started you cannot stop (see below for some pocket money Zvezda Russian tanks that appeared in my shopping trolley!):
Why?
I have a perfectly good unpainted hoard [and then some] in 20mm (1/72 or 1/76 if you like), in fact I also have micro scale 1/300 (or 1/285 if again you like) plus a 1/200 (Skytrex Action Force) vehicles and infantry and 10mm Pendrakon infantry.
Madness .. how can I defend the indefensible? I claim "hobby insanity"!
The Defence's case rests on "being sociable" as I have wargamer friends who collect in the respectable 15mm range and model in the 28mm for skirmish (Chain of Command) games. 20m WWII gaming seems to be a rather niche area, accessible to all but people seem to move on from it (though not grow-up). Well there's another two (or should that be five) 30 Day Challenges ahead of me for this year ;)
PS Fear not Paul I will get round to finishing off the Fairey Battle in time for the hundredth anniversary ;)
Once started you cannot stop (see below for some pocket money Zvezda Russian tanks that appeared in my shopping trolley!):
Why?
I have a perfectly good unpainted hoard [and then some] in 20mm (1/72 or 1/76 if you like), in fact I also have micro scale 1/300 (or 1/285 if again you like) plus a 1/200 (Skytrex Action Force) vehicles and infantry and 10mm Pendrakon infantry.
Madness .. how can I defend the indefensible? I claim "hobby insanity"!
The Defence's case rests on "being sociable" as I have wargamer friends who collect in the respectable 15mm range and model in the 28mm for skirmish (Chain of Command) games. 20m WWII gaming seems to be a rather niche area, accessible to all but people seem to move on from it (though not grow-up). Well there's another two (or should that be five) 30 Day Challenges ahead of me for this year ;)
PS Fear not Paul I will get round to finishing off the Fairey Battle in time for the hundredth anniversary ;)
Labels:
1/200,
1/72,
1/76,
15mm,
15mm PSC,
15mm WW2,
20mm,
28mm,
28mm WWII,
Chain of Command,
Fow,
Perry's Miniatures,
Thirty Day Challenge,
WW2,
WWII
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