I immediately noticed one 20mm advantage, there are "more of them" per box. That means one PSC 20mm Russian Infantry box contains more than enough infantry to complete the full Russian Stalingrad platoon OrdBat I am after without the annoying need to supplement 'gaps' with expensive metals or begging unwanted LMGs from other people's plastic sprues, or buy another expensive 28mm "box" of figures. Besides that I literally have hundreds of other plastic (even metal) Russian figures I could pull in at a stretch to fill in any of those "silly gaps" + required support options, seriously NO PROBLEM. I am not going to purchase a 28mm Soviet Tank! Additionally I really like the PSC Soviet Infantry as I think they have plenty of character and are nicely posed. Therefore this is a "win-win" scenario for me (see below):
Hence the first Stalingrad Chain of Command (CoC) Platoon has now been primed in my preferred Airfix Acrylic (01) Grey. I hope to shadow the 28mm in 20mm as it progresses along (Note: Madness would mean I should also paint the 15mm PSC Soviet Infantry I have .. but I don't think I'll go there just yet)!
Note to self: This mean I am slightly updating my 20mm Russian WWII Infantry Painting Guide
Painting Prep Phase:
- Step 1: Fix washed plastic soldier to a base via UHU glue
- Step 2: Apply Airfix Acrylic Grey Primer (01)
- Step 3: (Next) Wash figures in Vallejo Brown Wash
20mm is the proper scale for WW2
ReplyDeleteI agree Simon
ReplyDeleteThe range of available kit in 20mm is IMHO the best although FoW do wacky stuff in 15mm
When you introduce armour 15mm/10mm had advantages but "tank cramming" on the battlefield is simply a distortion of the battlefield
Tank battalion country is 1/200 to 1/300 but I think you start to lose the flavour!
As it stands I have just simply spread (too) far and wide with my scales
lol:
ReplyDeleteso many scales and projects, so little time...
Spooky this post seems to be getting hit by a lot of "bots"
ReplyDeleteShadow Russians must mean something else