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Thursday, August 29, 2024

Unmatched Battle of Legends, Volume 1: Alice

Big Trouble in a Small Package. Anyone up for a game of chess?

She's been through the Looking Glass and came back with a vorpal blade and the Jabberwock in tow. Catch her at the wrong size and it'll be checkmate for you . . .


Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
      Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogoves,
      And the mome raths outgrabe.

“Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
      The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun
      The frumious Bandersnatch!”

Catch her at the wrong size and it'll be checkmate for you . . .



Okay - here's the deal: Alice is undefeated in our games. She is sneaky, can change size, has the Jobberwock as her personal pet and uses neat gimmicks from the Lewis Carrol books. I think it's time for her to face the characters from "Unmatched: Cobble and Fog" or fight bad guy monsters and Martian Invaders from "Unmatched: Tales to Amaze".

Alice's cards.

My only complaint is the figure which had so much potential (this is the personal preference portion which represents what I want in a figure). The game designers went with a school girl, Anime look with the butch haircut (Brrrr . . . shudder) instead of a more Victorian look. I would have prefer the hair style from the cover art. I love the vorpal blade, love the clock, and love the potions; but, the anime feel ruins it for me. I personally would have liked her in an older looking Victorian, adventurers outfit and longer hair. My opinion.




To make Alice to look like she is standing on a stone floor, I used my handy dandy hobbly knife to make the lines and then used Citadel Contrast Space Wolf Grey to get the effect.


I always enjoy looking at my photos when I start posting them on the blog and as usual, Alice needs a little touch up here and there. Having said that, a versatile 28mm hard plastic figure for many games and if you play "Unmatched" do not, I repeat, DO NOT, underestimate this character.


Monday, August 26, 2024

The Genie from Unmatched: Houdini vs. The Genie

 

"The Genie is loose!"

To be honest with you, this was not my favorite figure to paint from the Unmatched games. Not because it isn't a good figure - I just couldn't get my "mojo" going with this figure. I'm probably going to go back and repaint his hair and flames. He needs to look intimidating and I did not pull it off.

Yeah. I'll grant you three wishes but the paint job on my face looks blah.

The Genie is one of two figures that comes with Unmatched: Houdini vs. The Genie and as all of the other figures, it is a hard plastic 28mm figure.


The Houdini figure painted up like a charm, and now looking at the box cover, I definitely need to do a better job on his face and the magical flames (yep it's a guilt trip but I want a great figure to look great painted too!)




The gold coins and jewels on the base are just hobby sand applied with water downed white glue and then seal with water downed white glue. I painted the sand black, dry brushed with shiny gold and then added some red and green randomly for jewels.


Thursday, August 22, 2024

Unmatched Battle of Legends, Volume 1: Medusa

"The Gorgon was made out of the terror, not the terror out of the Gorgon."

Bottom Line Up Front: This is the best Medusa figure I have come across. Medusa is one of the 28mm hard plastic figures that comes with Unmatched: Battle of Legends, Volume 1.







 

Monday, August 19, 2024

Unmatched Cobble and Fog: Mr. Sherlock Holmes

 

"Kali!"
Holmes chuckles. "Kali my deductive ass. Prepare for the ole' one-two punch."

Okay. The greatest detective of all time probably would not have said that! But I love that the hard plastic, 28mm figure of Sherlock Holmes from Unmatched: Cobble and Fog has him in a boxing stance. He was after all a great pugilist!


Another great feature is that he is molded as I imagine from his description in the stories and novels: Tall, thin and angular. Plus he has his pipe! Though to be fair, in the stories he usually smoked cigarettes.




A good comparison of the thin, taller Holmes to a 28mm figure from Pulp Figures.

I now have two Holmes figures; one from Wargames Foundry with pistol and the above. Talk about flexibility for gaming!


Thursday, August 15, 2024

Unmatched Cobble and Fog: Dracula

There is a new player in the game and now acts on a long contemplated plan for world domination, and infiltrates London to begin his reign of terror . . .


Since this is the "Year of Travel" I have rapidly become of a fan of the Unmatched series of games - a great system and great figures. One of the sets I purchased is Unmatched: Cobble and Fog which includes Dracula, Sherlock Holmes, The Invisible Man, and Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde. The figures are 28mm and are compatible with most major manufacturers. 


First up: Count Vlad Dracula (interestingly enough, though he has alias', the vampire's first name is never mentioned in the novel Dracula).


Dracula with his wolf buddies. GW Fenris Wolves from Warhammer 40K.

I made the base, which is hard plastic like the figure, by CAREFULLY(!) cutting lines in the base with my hobby knife and then painting it with Citadel Contrast Space Wolves Gray. I wished for other figures I would have thought of that sooner. I then put some static grass on the base with watered down white glue.

"He must indeed have been that Voivode Dracula who won his name against the Turk, over the great river on the very frontier of Turkey-land. If it be so, then was he no common man: for in that time, and for centuries after, he was spoken of as the cleverest and the most cunning, as well as the bravest of the sons of the land beyond the forest." - Abraham Van Helsing

"How ironic. A man, a mere mortal man, dressed as a bat to challenge me!"

"You come to our world . . ."

In the novel Dracula, our dear vampire is not killed with a stake through the heart (yep, I reread this great classic of Gothic fiction). Mina Harkness's narrative describes his decapitation by Harker's kukri (another reason to like Ghurkas) while Morris simultaneously pierces his heart with a Bowie knife (Murrica!) (Mina Harker's Journal, 6 November, Dracula Chapter 27). His body then turns into dust, but not before Mina sees an expression of peace on his face.

"*Sigh*. I might as well fight the werewolf too."

Monday, August 12, 2024

Hard Plastic Perry British Colonial Soldiers for Afghanistan and the Sudan

Here is the box I painted showing the variety of figures that can be done with the VLW 1 British Infantry in Afghanistan and Sudan 1877-85 plastic figures from Perry Miniatures.  There is enough infantry to make 3 British/Imperial units for the rule set The Men Who Would be Kings.

I did not do my "usual" painting style as I wanted to do them quickly;  but,  I like the finished product as it gives a good Toy Soldier vibe. I purposely painted each unit differently: (look at contemporary photographs as this is not unusual due to supply, slight differences between regiments, etc.




I (carefully!) cut the bayonets off of these figures to make a Rifles unit since they would use the sword bayonet.

An inexpensive way to build up a field force quickly. This is one of the their earlier plastic boxes and it is evident in the leaps and bounds with their newer hard plastic boxes.  Though their British metal sculpts are superior in animation this is, all in all though, a good financial deal.

Friday, August 9, 2024

Volley and Bayonet: The Conclusion of the Battle of Oberbratwurst

 The Battle of Oberbratwurst concludes:


Turn 4: The Franco-Bavarians. The Elector of Bavaria and his French counter-part launch local counterattacks to fend off the forces of the Grand Alliance. Careful positioning of the artillery provides much needed support as they slowly push back the Imperial army and all but decimate the Danish infantry. 

The English and Dutch are stopped in their tracks as the French reserve line fires a murderous volley into their ranks. To add insult to injury for the English, the English Foot Guards are defeated in melee by the Garde Francais. Viva la France!

The French Guard wave good-bye to the British Guards (far left unit with the white flag with the crimson cross of St. George with crown in the center).


Turn 4: The Grand Alliance. Prince Eugene definitely looked worried as the resurgent French led by the Irish and Swiss continued to stymie his movements on his right flank and center. Hesitantly, he launches a few regiments in an attempt to separate the French on his right from the Bavarians that had just routed the Danes. As fate would have it, they overrun instead 2 Batteries of French artillery.

The gun by itself represents an abandoned battery; Dutch troops captured it. Murray's Scottish Regiment is part of the Dutch Army.

The Duke of Marlborough, also sensing that a moment of crisis was approaching, throws his reserves into the fight; though they don't stop the French, they do destroy one French battery and force the others to abandon their guns.

Okay you Italian troops! Since you routed, you have to wear the crappy brown coats.


The rest of the cream of the Anglo-Dutch go stationary (see the results in Turn 5 below . . . )

Turn 5: "Who will recover my guns?" yells the French commander. Three batteries of abandoned guns were to my front. Prince Eugene's army had been stopped. The Anglo-Dutch cavalry had been repulsed and the English, Dutch and Scottish infantry had been given a bloody nose and appeared to be licking their wounds.

On my left, even though I had no cavalry, the French Infantry of that wing were strong and had taken charge of that part of the battlefield. They continued to advance, pushing back the Imperial Infantry and recapturing a battery of guns! GO TEAM BAVARIA!

In the center left, the Bavarians, led by the Elector himself, push back the allied infantry to their front, causing a Dutch regiment to route - they could sense victory! The French on the right dressed their ranks a formed up for the advance - through murderous close-range musket fire they stormed the Anglo-Dutch line and yelled triumphantly as they witness the backs of redcoats retreating and nervous cavalry falling back. And then, as the smoke cleared, I realized that the line they enemy had retreated behind was stationary with muskets leveled . . .

Okay, so what's happening? Yes, the Bavarians and French were successful in their advance; however, they took too many loses and 2 Infantry Divisions (not real divisions as we define them today; more like a grouping of regiments) out of 3 were now each only one "hit" away from Division Exhaustion. Once a Division is exhausted, it cannot advance toward enemy troops; and, if it takes any more hits, it has the chance of Division collapse. When a Division collapses in Volley and Bayonet, all units are permanently disordered, any disordered units are routed, all routing units head to the tables edge - you get the picture. Though I was successful in my attack, my forces were so weak that they were in danger of collapse.

Speaking of collapse . . .

Turn 5: The Grand Alliance. "READY! AIM! FIRE! To make a long story short, the Bavarian Division morale collapses. 

Exit most of the Bavarians . . . above are the last two BADLY  MAULED brave regiments.

Looking at the Franco-Bavarian line from the Allied perspective; note the absence of French and Bavarian units in the center - not good!

The French Division on the right almost collapses as two regiments rout. The only bright spot for me was the continuing resistance of my tough infantry on the left that once again pushes Eugene's finest back. As I gaze at the battlefield I come to an agonizing decision: I tell Honorable Son #4 that I concede.

So what happened?

Plain and simple, I was out-general-ed.

The victorious Duke of Marlborough with the 1st Foot Guards and Royal Scots Fusiliers in front of him.

Once my opponent crushed my cavalry on the left flank, he kept the initiative and kept the pressure on me. My cavalry made no impact during the battle - the Austrians, English, Scottish and Dutch simply rode them down.

Once I got my lines re-ordered, however, my infantry fought well. Looking back, I think I was too aggressive; instead of counter-attacking to grab the lost ground, I should have stayed stationary and taken advantage of the increased fire power to wear him down. Though my counterattack was successful, my army was too weak to advantage of the success.

Prince Eugene moves up to link up with the Duke after the victory.

All in all, a very exciting, faced paced and fun game that replicated linear warfare with successive lines and massed volleys. We really enjoy the speed and feel of Volley and Bayonet. Unlike other rules, it does not get into "tactical" details of individual unit formations, etc.; this is a game that lets you be the army general.

The English enter Oberbratwurst . . . Schnitzel and beer for everyone!