Hiya Internet!
On 12/6 I participated in a small Steamroller tournament and WON! Granted, it ended a round early due to me being the only undefeated player by round three due to the small amount of players, but a win's a win.
I've been working tirelessly (on and off) on painting my Highborn Covenant army and have made some decent progress, even getting close to a fully painted 35 point list!
I made an almost identical Gorten/Ashlynn list, but only had to use Gorten (whose feat is tremendous in tournament play, especially Kill Box!)
I learned a lot, but more importantly I learned from my previous mistakes and kept the scenario in mind at all times. This got me valuable control points in both my games. I also learned that pEiryss by herself can contest an entire zone if she's behind Gorten's wall and under the protection of his Solid Ground spell. Def 21 against ranged/Def 19 against melee/immune to blasts anyone?
I used the prize money to get a starter box for X-Wing, since a lot of people are into that game and it seems pretty interesting. A simple dogfighting game is vastly different from the current games I play, plus it requires minimum additional peripherals (i.e. terrain, large armies, model count, etc.). It looks promising and I taught my wife how to play it in about 5 minutes!
Here are some pics from the tournament. Notice the new blue jack and painted Horgenhold Forge Guard? They're not 100% complete, but are definitely acceptable for tabletop standard. I also painted about 50% of the Basher and finished Gorten (finally). Once I have the ATGM unit and Eiryss up to tabletop standard I can field a fully painted 35 point list!
Sorry about not having very many good pics, I was concentrating more on time rather than getting satisfying photos.
In other hobbies, I've put aside painting Malifaux models for a bit. I've been getting frustrated at painting them as they are not coming out the way I want them to. I realized that they are two completely different styles and I'll need to adjust how I paint them, but sometimes you've just got to step away and paint something else. Instead of approaching my normal "paint for completion" mentality, which means painting only the same army/models that will go toward completing a fully painted army, I've been bouncing from project to project, only painting what I desire to paint at the time. Treating it like a job isn't getting me anywhere and is causing burnout much faster, so i'll just paint whatever I am in the mood for. It's working wonders, which is why my Mercs are turning out so well. Next I plan on tackling more terrain, since I'm really in the mood to get my table done soon.
More pics and blog entries will be coming, hopefully more consistently. I may put up a batrep or two on some games like X-Wing.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Monday, October 13, 2014
Updates
So, my last entry was in mid August and now it is mid October. In between those times work had hit pretty hard, so a lot of side projects were put on hold, including upkeeping the challenge of a hobby item a week. I had, however, accomplished a few things here and there and even attended a local steamroller tournament.
This particular steamroller actually had prize support for best painted model and army, so I decided that instead of trying to win with my Mercs I'll try to take best painted with my Trolls - who do terribly in SRs due to their design being based solely on attrition with my brick and have no way of winning by scenario short of a single zone scenario. My beast list is the opposite focusing solely on killy killy stuff, but is very prone to assassination with such a squishy caster and I tend to overextend myself with it. I did end up winning both painting awards, but my games weren't so successful.
Well, I ended up playing a guy I faced before doing the exact same lists we played against each other and the exact same scenario. Instead of getting pulverized like I did before I actually came very close to winning, but I timed myself out. I've learned quite a bit between our last bout and even survived an assassination attempt by Molik Karn, which is quite a feat. Lesson of the game: don't waste time, and avoid assassination attempts with too many moving parts. Things I learned and applied from last time: don't overestimate units, both mine and his; it's okay to hold onto your feat until turn 4 sometimes - better to use it late when it's more useful than early and less useful, even if you have less units to benefit from it. He actually forgot I still had it by then, which came to my benefit. But really it was useless to use it the turn he popped his feat since they had a minimum defense of 16s around the board and tough.
Due to the loss the second game was much easier. I played against a beginner Khador using a Conquest and two units of Man-o-Wars. I decided to use my Doom/Mulg list as to not lock my last list in, plus Mulg can easily dispatch the Conquest on his own. The plan worked and Mulg killed it in one turn (although it used all his resources) and the Long Riders tied up the Manowars easily.
The last game was against a Cryx player. My trolls have an extremely hard time going against any Cryx players. When I first started playing in Mk I my meta was only my friends, which meant I never played against Cryx or even in tournaments. I never had to deal with Incorporeal or debuffs that much. So I only bought models that worked for the brick. Once into Mk II I lost interest in the Trolls and hadn't wanted to fill these weaknesses out since I already had a painted force. Thus Cryx, even mediocre lists, dominate my trolls. I'm not proud, but hey at least they look pretty when they die.
Because of my limitations to using my painted force I didn't do so well my third game in. Again my time became an issue, so it's definitely something I need to work on. Because I couldn't manage my time I didn't utilize a trample when I needed to and costed me the game. I could have trampled over and assassinated the caster, least of all been out of range of the unit causing me not to be able to heal or be healed. Mulg could have gotten the win, but I played a bit too conservative with him. Lesson learned: go for the win if it's a clear shot, learn to utilize the clock.
Here are some pics:
I actually started painting Mulg for the steamroller and utilized the challenge to motivate me. He ended up being mostly painted - I'd say about 75% - in time for the steamroller. Even though he wasn't finished he was the model I put up for best painted and won. I hadn't touched him since, being that he's such an overwhelming task with all the details. At least he's tabletop standard.
In the meantime I also got a coworker into Malifaux and played a demo game with him. He ended up buying the Pandora box and a Teddy - which made me jealous as I've always wanted to play as them. I have waaaay too many models as it is however and am completely fine with not having that crew. I already have several crews and have only played a handful of games so far.
I can't wait until that Dreamer box comes out, although I just want to paint Lord Chompy Bits. I've already got so many damn models I need to stop. I bought the Som'er Teeth Jones box and the University of Transmortis box and I still haven't even painted one crew yet.
And once I started accruing all this stuff I got the Hobby ADD again - I've decided to work on Infinity!
So I began by putting together some terrain about a week or two ago. I did all of it so far from foamboard. I have limited experience with it only through my papercraft terrain which was never completed (it is extremely time consuming to do properly). However, I've foraged through numerous tutorials and resources and felt comfortable diving right in. Let me tell you - building terrain is awesome, and foamboard is the bee's knees.
Here's a WIP:
This particular steamroller actually had prize support for best painted model and army, so I decided that instead of trying to win with my Mercs I'll try to take best painted with my Trolls - who do terribly in SRs due to their design being based solely on attrition with my brick and have no way of winning by scenario short of a single zone scenario. My beast list is the opposite focusing solely on killy killy stuff, but is very prone to assassination with such a squishy caster and I tend to overextend myself with it. I did end up winning both painting awards, but my games weren't so successful.
Well, I ended up playing a guy I faced before doing the exact same lists we played against each other and the exact same scenario. Instead of getting pulverized like I did before I actually came very close to winning, but I timed myself out. I've learned quite a bit between our last bout and even survived an assassination attempt by Molik Karn, which is quite a feat. Lesson of the game: don't waste time, and avoid assassination attempts with too many moving parts. Things I learned and applied from last time: don't overestimate units, both mine and his; it's okay to hold onto your feat until turn 4 sometimes - better to use it late when it's more useful than early and less useful, even if you have less units to benefit from it. He actually forgot I still had it by then, which came to my benefit. But really it was useless to use it the turn he popped his feat since they had a minimum defense of 16s around the board and tough.
Due to the loss the second game was much easier. I played against a beginner Khador using a Conquest and two units of Man-o-Wars. I decided to use my Doom/Mulg list as to not lock my last list in, plus Mulg can easily dispatch the Conquest on his own. The plan worked and Mulg killed it in one turn (although it used all his resources) and the Long Riders tied up the Manowars easily.
The last game was against a Cryx player. My trolls have an extremely hard time going against any Cryx players. When I first started playing in Mk I my meta was only my friends, which meant I never played against Cryx or even in tournaments. I never had to deal with Incorporeal or debuffs that much. So I only bought models that worked for the brick. Once into Mk II I lost interest in the Trolls and hadn't wanted to fill these weaknesses out since I already had a painted force. Thus Cryx, even mediocre lists, dominate my trolls. I'm not proud, but hey at least they look pretty when they die.
Because of my limitations to using my painted force I didn't do so well my third game in. Again my time became an issue, so it's definitely something I need to work on. Because I couldn't manage my time I didn't utilize a trample when I needed to and costed me the game. I could have trampled over and assassinated the caster, least of all been out of range of the unit causing me not to be able to heal or be healed. Mulg could have gotten the win, but I played a bit too conservative with him. Lesson learned: go for the win if it's a clear shot, learn to utilize the clock.
Here are some pics:
I actually started painting Mulg for the steamroller and utilized the challenge to motivate me. He ended up being mostly painted - I'd say about 75% - in time for the steamroller. Even though he wasn't finished he was the model I put up for best painted and won. I hadn't touched him since, being that he's such an overwhelming task with all the details. At least he's tabletop standard.
In the meantime I also got a coworker into Malifaux and played a demo game with him. He ended up buying the Pandora box and a Teddy - which made me jealous as I've always wanted to play as them. I have waaaay too many models as it is however and am completely fine with not having that crew. I already have several crews and have only played a handful of games so far.
I can't wait until that Dreamer box comes out, although I just want to paint Lord Chompy Bits. I've already got so many damn models I need to stop. I bought the Som'er Teeth Jones box and the University of Transmortis box and I still haven't even painted one crew yet.
And once I started accruing all this stuff I got the Hobby ADD again - I've decided to work on Infinity!
So I began by putting together some terrain about a week or two ago. I did all of it so far from foamboard. I have limited experience with it only through my papercraft terrain which was never completed (it is extremely time consuming to do properly). However, I've foraged through numerous tutorials and resources and felt comfortable diving right in. Let me tell you - building terrain is awesome, and foamboard is the bee's knees.
Here's a WIP:
It's not much to look at right now (it is a WIP after all) but you can see the general idea. I used miter cuts to hide a lot of the joins and also cut the perimeter at the base board to make it stable as well as hide joins. The result is spectacular and have since added more details. Once I finish the basic part I will take more WIP pictures to show you everything up until painting, and that's when this thing is really going to shine.
I haven't had this much fun with the hobby in a long time! I always said the one part I hate most is the modelling portion. I love the playing, and I love the painting even more, but I hate the gluing, the filing, the pinning, all the modeling parts. It's the reason why I almost never convert, or make elaborate bases, and why a lot of my models never get put together or painted. It's the opposite for terrain. It gets me motivated and utilizes my creativity much more and just gets me imagining like a kid again. With what I've started I've realized just what's possible, and pinterest definitely fuels the fire.
You'll see exactly what I'm talking about once I get finished with this piece.
I also decided to put all the models I have purchased over time for Infinity. I put together every box and blister I own for Infinity short of the O-Yoroi pilot from the bootleg series, since that's really just a vanity model. I've decided to get going on them and paint them to a tabletop standard, rather than the weeks-long session I did on the first model I painted. We'll see if that happens...
Anyway, that's what I have. Hopefully I'll have more pics of the terrain and what I'm going for next!
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Challenge Accepted!
It's been another long break since an update, but work has been busy and life pulls no punches. It's 3 in the morning and I just finished painting a jack. I planned on putting it up on this blog but this laptop needs to reformat the darn SD card which would erase all the pictures I have on it, so I'll put it up later when I back the files up.
I've been busy on the hobby front. I've been introducing Puppet Wars to several people and it's always with positive reviews. It truly is an amazing game, and is extremely well balanced. The models are superb and the wife and I plan on painting them soon.
Speaking of painting my friend Reuben and I have begun an interesting development. We were texting each other about painting backlogs and how we want to minimize them. I then said we should challenge each other weekly about our hobby list. We'd pick out an item to finish and give each other a week to finish them. The first thing we started on was simple enough: paint a Warmachine Solo. He painted a wicked looking Manhunter for his Khador force and I painted my Gorman Di Wulfe model. I hated the paintjob I gave him, especially when compared to his superb job. Still, I stuck to the challenge and finished him off. I later intend on stripping the model bare and starting over, but only after my army is fully painted (in short, never lol).
Week 2 I issued the challenge of painting a warjack. He painted a great looking Buccaneer. I decided to paint one of my two mules.
In keeping with my theme of making a ragtag looking crew for my mercenaries I decided to use a color I was not familiar with: yellow. Lately I've been trying out colors that instill the fear of God in me. For Gorman it was brown. That experiment proved unsuccessful, as brown is a color that always eludes me. I must have tried at least 20 different recipes for brown in my painting life, and only one was ever successful in my eyes and for the life of me and I cannot remember the recipe! It was on my first ever troll model, the Troll Impaler. I accidentally stumbled upon it by mixing old colors that are currently out of production (although I stilll have them) but there was a third color I threw in that I can't remember. Long story short I've never been able to recreate it, though I've tried several times. My troll army was an exercise in browns and blues, two colors I've never tried before them, and the blues were extremely successful. The browns - well, let's just say that every troll in that army has a different version of brown that I tried.
Bright colors have always been my forte. They are easy to contrast, and black is always great as an accent color to them. I have two different recipes for black that are extremely easy to apply. My metal turns out dark and compliments the brights. Red is always striking, blue is always a good midway point between light and dark, green makes interesting schemes, purple makes a good combination with several colors, I've even painted a whole army pink with my Slaanesh army which won several awards. But earth tones aren't nearly as easy to deal with.
First off earth tones don't have as easily an attainable striking quality - at least in my eyes. It's hard to have that wow factor with a brown or olive, as they don't quite separate themselves from the table as easily as Red or Blue. Most earth tones don't lend well with bright highlights - you have to use a muted version of its highlight equivalent such as bone rather than white. Their shades are also elusive, using dark tones of brown and red or even black to make the earth tone stand out.
Even neutral colors lend themselves easier to work with, as grays can be done in so many ways such as having your base be a light grey and contrast the shading with dark gray or black and highlight in white. Making that wow factor on the table with olive or brown is extremely difficult.
With that said I painted olive for my warcaster Gorten a while back, and although he's not done I am impressed with him. Still, I notice he doesn't quite get the attention that my trolls do from a passerby on the table. The tricks I pulled on him to make him stand out are much more subtle than my usual paint jobs and thus take a close look to see what I've done.
So I decided to use yellow on my first complete jack for the army. One: yellow can be an earth tone with brown shading. This will help me tackle my difficulty with earth tones by learning a new recipe and a new way to look at yellow. When I painted my Bad Moon Orks it taught me a speed painting recipe for yellow but didn't teach me anything new, since I always treated yellow as a bright color and used my usual techniques on them. When I painted my Hsieng for my Yu Jin Infinity models (which can be viewed in my earlier posts - much earlier) I learned a new way to paint bright yellow by using orange as the shade. But I've never used yellow in the context of an earth tone, mostly because I'd be using brown to shade it and brown terrifies me.
By tackling this color I felt I could add another tool to the box and finally not have brown elude me.
Although I won't have the pictures up until later, I am pleased to say that I have succeeded! Brown isn't so scary in the context of yellow now that I understand a good progression of color for it. I started with a basecoat of golden brown then a golden brown and bright yellow mix. This created a sandy yellow, much like Iyanden Darksun from the GW line (out of production). I debated starting out with a sand brown, but that it was much too neutral to be successful. If you're ever in doubt about a color progression mixing is a great way to mitigate that. You will always have a smooth transition of color because essentially all your colors are involved in all the steps.
After basecoating the whole model with these two layers I gently sprayed a highlight coat of the bright yellow, keeping in mind not to entirely coat it and lose the earthy tone of yellow below. I then did something I usually don't do, and honestly used to think was a waste of time and ineffective. I shaded after I did my highlighting.
When I first became a serious painter I used to exclusively use the layering technique, which involves basecoating your model entirely with your shade. I thought this was the only logical way, as your basecoat is in the recesses and makes a more manageable way of applying shade. I never liked the way blacklining looked, and applying your shade after your base/main color looked odd to me as you could tell that the shading didn't look natural. Although I found that it made the shade smoother since you were applying it onto your base therefor letting the bottom layer slightly show through I never liked the "controlled" shading look.
With airbrushing, however, it looks much more natural and much more gradual. By only having the idea of putting your shade on first I never understood why my shades were so starkly contrasted by my highlights. It's because when you put your shade on first - for this example, Burnt Umber, or a very dark brown - you only get pure brown, or dark brown. Then you spray or paint on your base and highlights, all making a base of dark brown rather than the base you're wanting, in this case brown-yellow. The darkest shade is therefor made pure dark brown, rather than looking like the model is yellow and the shade is a darker yellow with a hint of brown, if that makes sense.
Before my airbrush I used to alleviate this by putting mixing medium in my paints and making them translucent, showing the base color through the shade.
With an airbrush, however, this process is extremely simple and successful. By carefully - and lightly, I might add - applying the shade to the recesses you don't lose your base color. For the heavier shading you can keep applying it to get it however dark you want it, up to the point you get pure shade (dark brown in this case). This was quite a revelation to me, and I plan on applying this knowledge as another tool in the box.
This resulted in the forthcoming paintjob I will be posting, and it's close to one of my favorite paint jobs to date. The result was a subtle blend of browns and yellows, where my shade was not the dominant force of the model but rather the base color is - which was always one of my weaknesses in previous paintjobs.
I always love when I learn a new technique in painting. It makes me smile thinking to myself, "Man, if I could just show this work to myself ten years ago and say 'Yeah, you'll get this good eventually!' "
I mean, isn't that what it's all about? I remember thinking to myself when I'd see incredible paintjobs in White Dwarf or at a tournament that I wish I could paint that way, or wonder how they did it, and now knowing that I've figured it out. It's not as elusive as I once thought, attaining a higher level is only a model away. I can't wait until ten years from now I will say to myself, "If only I could show this work to myself ten years ago..."
We can all be like that if you only have the drive. I constantly hear people say that they'll never be able to paint like how I do, and I always say the same thing. I tell them that they can, all it takes is practice. I tell them my first model was hideous. It was a Space Marine Captain that couldn't pick a color he liked. The face was burnt to hell, the gold was atrocious, the silver was caked, the robe was bland. I only started painting when I was a kid and only had 8 colors to choose from. I thought I could never understand how people do it so well, like it was some sort of holy grail that only the elite could achieve. I remember being told the first day I painted in a GW Store to use Chestnut Ink, then feeling silly asking what ink does and being told that it adds definition - nodding my head like I understood and having no idea what that meant.
Everyone can paint. Everyone can learn how to be better at it. All it takes is time and practice, with a few good tips from other people's work. We live in an age where the most advanced techniques and tutorials are available at any moment and your pool of knowledge is worldwide. When I began painting all I could do was experiment and wait for the next White Dwarf magazine to come in or get a tip from a stranger.
I remember the first time my eyes opened about painting. My friend Derrick and I were painting together. He was painting his Sisters of Battle army and I noticed his red looked great. He told me about layering maroon with bright red then highlighting it with orange and it blew my mind. Orange on red! It was so simple! I painted a lot of red that summer...
Well, I went on a tirade about painting. But the point is this: if you want to get better at painting, then paint. You'll only know how much you can do when you do it. And don't get frustrated too much. Lately I've been struggling with this with browns. But do what my wife tells me to do - walk away from it and take a break. Read up on how others paint that color. Then go back to it later.
Feel free to ask me any questions on my recipes. I will gladly give away my secrets to anyone who wants it!
I... love... painting!
I've been busy on the hobby front. I've been introducing Puppet Wars to several people and it's always with positive reviews. It truly is an amazing game, and is extremely well balanced. The models are superb and the wife and I plan on painting them soon.
Speaking of painting my friend Reuben and I have begun an interesting development. We were texting each other about painting backlogs and how we want to minimize them. I then said we should challenge each other weekly about our hobby list. We'd pick out an item to finish and give each other a week to finish them. The first thing we started on was simple enough: paint a Warmachine Solo. He painted a wicked looking Manhunter for his Khador force and I painted my Gorman Di Wulfe model. I hated the paintjob I gave him, especially when compared to his superb job. Still, I stuck to the challenge and finished him off. I later intend on stripping the model bare and starting over, but only after my army is fully painted (in short, never lol).
Week 2 I issued the challenge of painting a warjack. He painted a great looking Buccaneer. I decided to paint one of my two mules.
In keeping with my theme of making a ragtag looking crew for my mercenaries I decided to use a color I was not familiar with: yellow. Lately I've been trying out colors that instill the fear of God in me. For Gorman it was brown. That experiment proved unsuccessful, as brown is a color that always eludes me. I must have tried at least 20 different recipes for brown in my painting life, and only one was ever successful in my eyes and for the life of me and I cannot remember the recipe! It was on my first ever troll model, the Troll Impaler. I accidentally stumbled upon it by mixing old colors that are currently out of production (although I stilll have them) but there was a third color I threw in that I can't remember. Long story short I've never been able to recreate it, though I've tried several times. My troll army was an exercise in browns and blues, two colors I've never tried before them, and the blues were extremely successful. The browns - well, let's just say that every troll in that army has a different version of brown that I tried.
Bright colors have always been my forte. They are easy to contrast, and black is always great as an accent color to them. I have two different recipes for black that are extremely easy to apply. My metal turns out dark and compliments the brights. Red is always striking, blue is always a good midway point between light and dark, green makes interesting schemes, purple makes a good combination with several colors, I've even painted a whole army pink with my Slaanesh army which won several awards. But earth tones aren't nearly as easy to deal with.
First off earth tones don't have as easily an attainable striking quality - at least in my eyes. It's hard to have that wow factor with a brown or olive, as they don't quite separate themselves from the table as easily as Red or Blue. Most earth tones don't lend well with bright highlights - you have to use a muted version of its highlight equivalent such as bone rather than white. Their shades are also elusive, using dark tones of brown and red or even black to make the earth tone stand out.
Even neutral colors lend themselves easier to work with, as grays can be done in so many ways such as having your base be a light grey and contrast the shading with dark gray or black and highlight in white. Making that wow factor on the table with olive or brown is extremely difficult.
With that said I painted olive for my warcaster Gorten a while back, and although he's not done I am impressed with him. Still, I notice he doesn't quite get the attention that my trolls do from a passerby on the table. The tricks I pulled on him to make him stand out are much more subtle than my usual paint jobs and thus take a close look to see what I've done.
So I decided to use yellow on my first complete jack for the army. One: yellow can be an earth tone with brown shading. This will help me tackle my difficulty with earth tones by learning a new recipe and a new way to look at yellow. When I painted my Bad Moon Orks it taught me a speed painting recipe for yellow but didn't teach me anything new, since I always treated yellow as a bright color and used my usual techniques on them. When I painted my Hsieng for my Yu Jin Infinity models (which can be viewed in my earlier posts - much earlier) I learned a new way to paint bright yellow by using orange as the shade. But I've never used yellow in the context of an earth tone, mostly because I'd be using brown to shade it and brown terrifies me.
By tackling this color I felt I could add another tool to the box and finally not have brown elude me.
Although I won't have the pictures up until later, I am pleased to say that I have succeeded! Brown isn't so scary in the context of yellow now that I understand a good progression of color for it. I started with a basecoat of golden brown then a golden brown and bright yellow mix. This created a sandy yellow, much like Iyanden Darksun from the GW line (out of production). I debated starting out with a sand brown, but that it was much too neutral to be successful. If you're ever in doubt about a color progression mixing is a great way to mitigate that. You will always have a smooth transition of color because essentially all your colors are involved in all the steps.
After basecoating the whole model with these two layers I gently sprayed a highlight coat of the bright yellow, keeping in mind not to entirely coat it and lose the earthy tone of yellow below. I then did something I usually don't do, and honestly used to think was a waste of time and ineffective. I shaded after I did my highlighting.
When I first became a serious painter I used to exclusively use the layering technique, which involves basecoating your model entirely with your shade. I thought this was the only logical way, as your basecoat is in the recesses and makes a more manageable way of applying shade. I never liked the way blacklining looked, and applying your shade after your base/main color looked odd to me as you could tell that the shading didn't look natural. Although I found that it made the shade smoother since you were applying it onto your base therefor letting the bottom layer slightly show through I never liked the "controlled" shading look.
With airbrushing, however, it looks much more natural and much more gradual. By only having the idea of putting your shade on first I never understood why my shades were so starkly contrasted by my highlights. It's because when you put your shade on first - for this example, Burnt Umber, or a very dark brown - you only get pure brown, or dark brown. Then you spray or paint on your base and highlights, all making a base of dark brown rather than the base you're wanting, in this case brown-yellow. The darkest shade is therefor made pure dark brown, rather than looking like the model is yellow and the shade is a darker yellow with a hint of brown, if that makes sense.
Before my airbrush I used to alleviate this by putting mixing medium in my paints and making them translucent, showing the base color through the shade.
With an airbrush, however, this process is extremely simple and successful. By carefully - and lightly, I might add - applying the shade to the recesses you don't lose your base color. For the heavier shading you can keep applying it to get it however dark you want it, up to the point you get pure shade (dark brown in this case). This was quite a revelation to me, and I plan on applying this knowledge as another tool in the box.
This resulted in the forthcoming paintjob I will be posting, and it's close to one of my favorite paint jobs to date. The result was a subtle blend of browns and yellows, where my shade was not the dominant force of the model but rather the base color is - which was always one of my weaknesses in previous paintjobs.
I always love when I learn a new technique in painting. It makes me smile thinking to myself, "Man, if I could just show this work to myself ten years ago and say 'Yeah, you'll get this good eventually!' "
I mean, isn't that what it's all about? I remember thinking to myself when I'd see incredible paintjobs in White Dwarf or at a tournament that I wish I could paint that way, or wonder how they did it, and now knowing that I've figured it out. It's not as elusive as I once thought, attaining a higher level is only a model away. I can't wait until ten years from now I will say to myself, "If only I could show this work to myself ten years ago..."
We can all be like that if you only have the drive. I constantly hear people say that they'll never be able to paint like how I do, and I always say the same thing. I tell them that they can, all it takes is practice. I tell them my first model was hideous. It was a Space Marine Captain that couldn't pick a color he liked. The face was burnt to hell, the gold was atrocious, the silver was caked, the robe was bland. I only started painting when I was a kid and only had 8 colors to choose from. I thought I could never understand how people do it so well, like it was some sort of holy grail that only the elite could achieve. I remember being told the first day I painted in a GW Store to use Chestnut Ink, then feeling silly asking what ink does and being told that it adds definition - nodding my head like I understood and having no idea what that meant.
Everyone can paint. Everyone can learn how to be better at it. All it takes is time and practice, with a few good tips from other people's work. We live in an age where the most advanced techniques and tutorials are available at any moment and your pool of knowledge is worldwide. When I began painting all I could do was experiment and wait for the next White Dwarf magazine to come in or get a tip from a stranger.
I remember the first time my eyes opened about painting. My friend Derrick and I were painting together. He was painting his Sisters of Battle army and I noticed his red looked great. He told me about layering maroon with bright red then highlighting it with orange and it blew my mind. Orange on red! It was so simple! I painted a lot of red that summer...
Well, I went on a tirade about painting. But the point is this: if you want to get better at painting, then paint. You'll only know how much you can do when you do it. And don't get frustrated too much. Lately I've been struggling with this with browns. But do what my wife tells me to do - walk away from it and take a break. Read up on how others paint that color. Then go back to it later.
Feel free to ask me any questions on my recipes. I will gladly give away my secrets to anyone who wants it!
I... love... painting!
Monday, July 21, 2014
Puppet Wars and more Warmachine practice
Today's my birthday! Yaaay!
On Friday I received my gift in the mail of Puppet Wars: Unstitched. I've wanted to get this game since I first saw it around a year or so ago. The models look superb, the gameplay seems solid and it's all based on my favorite game (thus far) of Malifaux!
I started piecing it together on Saturday and finished yesterday. The models were a cinch to put together. They even gave the models pegs to use as pins to the bases and have pre-made holes in the base so you don't have to put in any effort to have them stable! This is a relief since a lot of these models are standing on small pegs for legs, and in the case of the December Acolyte just sharp points.
Of course I had to go and be complicated to make pretty minis and decided to put them on resin bases within 30mm bases as opposed to the 25mm base they come with. It was definitely worth the extra effort as the plank inserts make them look amazing and fully emerges the model into the idea that they are puppets fighting in an attic. I got these resin bases from Full Borer Miniatures, and he's great with the casting time and communication. Give him a shot for some excellent work. He is even open to custom jobs, but you'd need to discuss details with him - and if he's doing that for you I'd suggest putting in a tip for his great effort.
So I assembled them, drilled a hole in the resin insert, glued the insert to a 30mm base, and finally glued the models to the base. They look fantastic and are extremely solid!
So Kristy and I played a game last night. Overall the mechanics are solid and the rules are quite clear, other than not being able to identify when you shuffle the deck. I couldn't find anything on the ruling and assumed that you only shuffle when you run out of cards, which seems logical considering you don't go through many during each Animation Round.
What I like is that it is Malifaux Lite, essentially. It streamlines all abilities and attacks to use a mechanic based on flipping more cards rather than doing math (i.e. + and - flips become a single target defense and multiple flips to beat that). I also love the fact that you can discard as many cards as you want to add suits and you pick the highest numeric value of it all.
We both used lists that were pre-made in the rules, with my wife using Lady Justice's crew and I used Seamus'. Gathering from that one game I've seen how annoying it can be to play against a Seamus crew, especially if his control hand is filled with Crows. However with the mechanics of using a poker deck the more Crows you use the less you draw in your hand later on, which makes this an awesome mechanic to create balance. I noticed that I would take hardly any damage at all and be filled with Crows, then over the next round all I drew were the other suits and would only have the crows left over from my previous (if any). This would force my crew to use dodges rather than damage prevention or other abilities, and I'd be forced to rely on flips (which have a reduced chance of getting a crow since I used them all) or save the one last crow I have to ensure I get an ability or damage prevention off.
She was just getting the hang of tabletop gaming, and although PW:U is a board game it is essentially and streamlined TTG, and that takes getting used to at first. She didn't utilize the crew's abilities as much since she was just getting the hang of the system she missed out on a lot of their strengths. She realized that she needed to get rid of Seamus rather than attack the pawns and Misaki a bit late, and didn't realize she could use the Austringers to do so. She also didn't know that the edge of the board was wider than she thought since it was darker than the rest and harder to see. We're going to be using the same crews until she's used to how they work before we switch things up.
Overall it was a blast and it's a great and simple system to understand. Once you get through one complete Animation Round the rest is a cinch.
This weekend I also played several games of Warmachine.
I played a small game of battle box against Christian's legion using my Cryx. This would be my first game using Cryx so it was a brain buster. Although I knew of several combinations for the box set implementation is always tougher than theory. I found it difficult to do what I wanted, which is cast Crippling Grasp on the caster first or second turn. In theory it shouldn't be hard, but it always comes down to a single roll that requires average dice, so there is a great chance of failure. Failure also meant being down 4 focus with nothing to show for it. I did, however, learn to use her feat in conjunction with crippling grasp, that way it is easier to hit and be less wasteful with focus. I just have to remember to use it, and make sure that I am within range to do so.
Another thing I realized is that you are left using a lot of resources for a single maneuver. It sometimes took one arc node running (1 focus), then 3 focus for Parasite, 1 for Magic Boost, and you're only left with giving less than max to your Slayer to finish the model off. It takes quite a bit of forethought to make it work, and all the while your models are left open to counter attack easily.
I also played a battle box game to demo it for a new Retribution player (whose models I showed earlier). He grasped the concepts well enough and is eager to learn more.
The next day I played a practice game against Reuben's Butcher list. I wish we had a steam roller packet to practice scenario, but it was a quick pick up game so we just did standard assassination. I personally saw it as a grudge match, since every time I've played against pButcher I have been unable to kill him. Sure, I've won a few via scenario, but I've never personally assassinated him.
I used my Gorten list since I've been playing Mercs a lot recently. If I weren't locked into a list and saw Butcher as a potential enemy list, this would definitely be my ideal matchup. In the past when we've played I've always had an uphill battle against his Butcher, since I use troll brick and Ret have an issue with high armor. My Gorten list has enough tricks up its sleeve to deal with most lists, and it seems like on paper I'd be able to deal with the butcher.
It started off smooth, although he did a stacked flank of skirmishers to my left which I left hardly anything to defend with. Since I deployed almost all my force to the center and right, he counter deployed his two units of Eliminators and 2 Manhunters opposite. The only things deployed directly opposite to these skirmishers were Thor and his Basher, and technically a Gunner and Driller (they were deployed on Gorten's left).
He ran his skirmishers up my left and walked his remaining forces as far forward as possible. I countered by free advancing my Basher to confront the skirmishers (a slam then his Flak Field would be more than sufficient for those low ARM models), but realized I was too short to pull it off and instead ran to engage the Manhunters. The rest of my army advanced or ran forward to prepare for round 2.
To counter the Basher he charged it will all his available skirmishers and destroyed it. He knew that the flak field was too dangerous to leave alone, however I didn't expect to see 6 solos take it down so easily. I expected it would live to flak field once, which was all it needed, but it died too quickly. The rest of his army cautiously advanced. His Beast 09 was forced to do nothing since Eiryss D Bolted him and the ATGMs knocked him down with Thunderstrikes.
On my turn I countered his skirmishers by running up my gunner to engage an eliminator and a Manhunter. It's funny at this point because Reuben always says, "Interesting..." whenever I try something he didn't see before, which he promptly did when I ran the gunner to engage. I then had Gorten cast his AOE spell on the gunner (back strikes help make it accurate, although since he was engaged it was still tough). The gunner came out lightly charred though the other two couldn't handle POW 14s. Since I was directly in front of the remaining skirmishers and the AOE was centered on my gunner he couldn't charge it since the template would kill them, and he couldn't charge anything beyond it as well. This held off the skirmishers for that crucial turn.
Gorman di Wulfe got a lucky black oil deviation and instead of hitting just the Kodiak he drifted onto the Butcher and his War Dog as well as the Kodiak! It was exactly the thing I needed to dominate the game. Gorman died next, but it was a glorious way to go down.
He couldn't do much in response, just set up his skirmishers for next round and pick up his jacks. Every one of them got knocked down or Black Oiled. Two of them were marshaled and thus couldn't do anything about it, one was D Bolted again, and the other had to give up his move or action. The butcher just clutched onto his Focus as he was unable to do anything else and moved away from Gorten.
The game ender was next. I moved Gorten into range, casted a rock wall in front of him, and popped his feat. I moved all enemy models in range toward my table edge to bring the butcher closer and his skirmishing flankers further away from counter attack. I didn't have the foresight to see his other models ending up engaged with my Hammer unit, but a quick aiming Thunderbolt shot pushed them all out of the way. I ended up shooting Eiryss' D Bolt into the Butcher to get rid of that pesky Focus and had the weaponmaster Hammers charge the butcher unguarded. They made quick work of him and the game was over.
Overall it was great practice. My army worked out exactly as I planned and I even got to implement a few combos I only thought of previously and had never got to use, such as Gorten's AOE to deny low ARM infantry. Most of all I finally got to kill the Butcher and end his tyranny.
Monday, July 14, 2014
Retribution Battle Box
Here's a quick paint job I did for a friend's Retribution starter:
I had fun painting them, although I will admit I went much quicker and simpler for these models than I usually do. I'm trying to systematically get all my "to-do" hobbying out of the way. I've had this guy's models for what seems like an eternity, and bless his patient heart he hasn't minded (at least so he's told me).
He seems happy with the job and this week we're going to try a few introductory games.
This leads me to my next topic: organization.
Until recently my hobby time has been purely whimsical. I'll usually go through spurts of determination, planning for days or weeks of what I intend to do and then once I begin I don't follow through and move onto another fancy. I have recently made myself painfully aware that I am nowhere near completing my resolutions at the beginning of the year. What was once thought of as easily achievable quickly turned into quicksand that seemed impossible to finish. What started as one Malifaux crew turned into 3. What started as a simple paper terrain board turned into a fully functioning foldable 3 dimensional Venice-themed extravagance. What started as a small mercenary army turned into 2 larger mercenary armies. What started as 7 models to paint for Trollbloods remained 7 models for Trollbloods.
So once this pile of unresolved items truly sank in I decided to get organized. I was truly inspired by my wife's recent breakthroughs using organization to reign in your goals that I took the same steps for my hobbies. I decided what was a priority, then listed out things I really want to finish, and then finished by listing things I'd like to see happen. Once I listed those long term goals out I made step by step short term goals to make bite sized chunks of hobbying easy to manage, as well as dates for those goals to be achieved. Now that I've done this I can easily tell you this: if you have a huge backlog of painting, modeling, or anything otherwise, this approach is invaluable.
In a matter of one weekend I managed to finish several goals that seemed to be huge mountains until I put them on paper. I made my table plans for my Malifaux foldable terrain (which I've also started on getting it built). I finished my commission job for the Retribution, which has been hanging over me for months. I finished Eiryss' cape, which is the second to last step to finishing this conversion that I started in December of 2012. Plus I organized my paints to make it much easier to get down to business.
All this because I made a concrete plan, a time to finish them, and the conviction to see them through.
I highly suggest that you attempt this approach as well. Once I get home I'm creating dates for my remaining goals and will keep you - or at least, those of you I assume to exist and read this - updated.
I had fun painting them, although I will admit I went much quicker and simpler for these models than I usually do. I'm trying to systematically get all my "to-do" hobbying out of the way. I've had this guy's models for what seems like an eternity, and bless his patient heart he hasn't minded (at least so he's told me).
He seems happy with the job and this week we're going to try a few introductory games.
This leads me to my next topic: organization.
Until recently my hobby time has been purely whimsical. I'll usually go through spurts of determination, planning for days or weeks of what I intend to do and then once I begin I don't follow through and move onto another fancy. I have recently made myself painfully aware that I am nowhere near completing my resolutions at the beginning of the year. What was once thought of as easily achievable quickly turned into quicksand that seemed impossible to finish. What started as one Malifaux crew turned into 3. What started as a simple paper terrain board turned into a fully functioning foldable 3 dimensional Venice-themed extravagance. What started as a small mercenary army turned into 2 larger mercenary armies. What started as 7 models to paint for Trollbloods remained 7 models for Trollbloods.
So once this pile of unresolved items truly sank in I decided to get organized. I was truly inspired by my wife's recent breakthroughs using organization to reign in your goals that I took the same steps for my hobbies. I decided what was a priority, then listed out things I really want to finish, and then finished by listing things I'd like to see happen. Once I listed those long term goals out I made step by step short term goals to make bite sized chunks of hobbying easy to manage, as well as dates for those goals to be achieved. Now that I've done this I can easily tell you this: if you have a huge backlog of painting, modeling, or anything otherwise, this approach is invaluable.
In a matter of one weekend I managed to finish several goals that seemed to be huge mountains until I put them on paper. I made my table plans for my Malifaux foldable terrain (which I've also started on getting it built). I finished my commission job for the Retribution, which has been hanging over me for months. I finished Eiryss' cape, which is the second to last step to finishing this conversion that I started in December of 2012. Plus I organized my paints to make it much easier to get down to business.
All this because I made a concrete plan, a time to finish them, and the conviction to see them through.
I highly suggest that you attempt this approach as well. Once I get home I'm creating dates for my remaining goals and will keep you - or at least, those of you I assume to exist and read this - updated.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Slayer
On a whim (while attempting to clean the mess that is my hobby room) I decided to paint one of my few Cryx models I bought from a friend of mine.
He had bought the battle box for Cryx as well as a few other models for a Journeyman league a few months back. He didn't like them at first (he comes from Khador after all, so smashy smash is all he knows) due to low armors and a requirement of synergy and order activation that doesn't exactly leap off the page to all players. I gave him a few pointers on the box's combos and he started winning almost every game in the league. However toward the end he wasn't able to keep up with the league and it slowly fell to the wayside.
He didn't like his paint job either, since he says he rushed it for the points in the league. So when he offered them to me at less than half the retail price I couldn't refuse. I putting models together is my least favorite part of the hobby. This doesn't mean I'm not skilled at it, it's just the most frustrating in my opinion. I tend to shy away from conversions since it seems more of a hassle to me for little gain, as opposed to a great paintjob which stands out even on a standard model. I mean, think about it - imagine the multitude of gamers who painstakingly convert their minis with creative and awesome conversions, and it's either unpainted or not painted well. I've got some outstanding models that are great conversions, inculding my Eiryss, and no one really goes "Wow!!!"
Now imagine a standard, run of the mill, average model with an amazing paintjob. Those are what get the compliments.
Now being the vain little person that I am I'm all about the compliments :) . But seriously though, I find it more satisfying to put my efforts into painting rather than modeling. And who hasn't been left wanting to throw little metal men against the wall when the glue just won't act the way you want it, or YOU BREAK A DRILL BIT DEEP IN A FREEBOOTER'S FOOT.
I put more emotion into that because it's my latest frustration regarding models. I had the perfect drill hole (phrasing!) in that freebooter, and decided to just go a little more and BAM. Broken drill bit, stuck in the model.
It was pretty much the only place I could pin him to the base, too, leaving me forever scared of the model breaking from the base. It frustrated me so dearly that I didn't glue models together for nearly a month.
Anyway, off topic.
So a few months back I bought the Cryx stuff. I hadn't done anything with them, other than move them from one side of my table to another. I almost sold them off and would have if I hadn't forgotten them at home when I went to a Bits Bazaar at Fat Ogre.
Recently his friend Jeff has moved in with him and we've found more time to game together. However with 3 players it tends to be odd for Warmachine. So we've played 2 games of 2 v 1, where I played two separate armies against their two armies. We've played at 35 points so far, where I activate one of my armies first, then one of theirs activates, my second activates, and lastly the last of theirs activates. It seems to work, although feats that last a round like Ashlynn's and Gorten's seem to be much more devastating since they last essentially 4 turns rather than 2.
He texted me last week asking about the idea of doing multiplayer in that format but strictly battle boxes. I thought it was a great idea and told him that they'd be at an advantage considering that my boxes aren't great. Gorten is only at 8 points, Madrak has no heavies and his feat is useless in BB, and Kaelyssa doesn't have much in the way of damage. Then it struck me that I have the Cryx BB now, and then I was in business!
Denny's box is so fantastic. It's 14 points, has great synergies, and is able to deal with a multitude of army types. Her debuffs are universal, able to hit high def or high arm simultaneously. Speed debuffs are the best in the game in my opinion and greatly hinder your ability to function. The only weak spot is that there is only one damage dealer in the Slayer, but a P+S 22 strike against a debuffed model spells doom for most, and cripple at the least.
Deneghra herself is prone to assasination, since she isn't very durable and doesn't like to be on the front lines. Due to BB format she'd be more prone to assassination, since there isn't much screening her and the jacks in her box prefer to strike ahead of her.
However her spells greatly mitigate this. One tactic I have is if they get first turn and run toward the center (lets say average speeds of 5 they'd be 20" up considering deployment, 28" away from my table edge and 18" away from my deployment). I then run an arc node jack 14" up, making him 4" away from the enemy - and hopefully in LOS of the caster. Deneghra then casts Crippling Grasp on the caster. With FOC 7 and a boost she has good odds of hitting most caster defenses. If she misses then they will need to deal with the arc node jack, diverting precious resources to dispatch it and most likely in an uneven fashion (a 7 point jack dealing with a 4 point jack is a win in my opinion). That jack or caster sent to deal with it is one less model that the rest of my army needs to mess with, keeping the odds lopsided in my favor (with 14 points to start off with as well, I may still have an even number of points thereafter). If they ignore it that's a jack in key position for arcing next turn, or even charging the caster (with a debuff on it it's definitely got a chance of hurting). Worst case scenario I try with my remaining two arc nodes to do it again.
If the debuff succeeds then the caster is at -2 SPD STR & DEF, and without something like Banishing Ward it's on them for essentially the remainder of the game, which is why I only need to succeed once. With the speed debuff he can't charge or run, with an average speed of 5 he can only move 3" at a time, also slowing down jacks since they'll need to be within control range. If the jacks manage to charge out of it then the turn after they aren't allocated anything and are easy prey (however if they manage to knock out my slayer it may still be an uphill battle).
Once debuffed it's a matter of picking and choosing when to strike. It will be easier to find an assassination vector, and if they turtle up then remove one model at a time with the slayer. Couple this with Denny's feat and retaliation is almost impossible short of ranged attacks and Denny has stealth.
It's a solid strategy and I'm eager to test it out on the table top.
He had bought the battle box for Cryx as well as a few other models for a Journeyman league a few months back. He didn't like them at first (he comes from Khador after all, so smashy smash is all he knows) due to low armors and a requirement of synergy and order activation that doesn't exactly leap off the page to all players. I gave him a few pointers on the box's combos and he started winning almost every game in the league. However toward the end he wasn't able to keep up with the league and it slowly fell to the wayside.
He didn't like his paint job either, since he says he rushed it for the points in the league. So when he offered them to me at less than half the retail price I couldn't refuse. I putting models together is my least favorite part of the hobby. This doesn't mean I'm not skilled at it, it's just the most frustrating in my opinion. I tend to shy away from conversions since it seems more of a hassle to me for little gain, as opposed to a great paintjob which stands out even on a standard model. I mean, think about it - imagine the multitude of gamers who painstakingly convert their minis with creative and awesome conversions, and it's either unpainted or not painted well. I've got some outstanding models that are great conversions, inculding my Eiryss, and no one really goes "Wow!!!"
Now imagine a standard, run of the mill, average model with an amazing paintjob. Those are what get the compliments.
Now being the vain little person that I am I'm all about the compliments :) . But seriously though, I find it more satisfying to put my efforts into painting rather than modeling. And who hasn't been left wanting to throw little metal men against the wall when the glue just won't act the way you want it, or YOU BREAK A DRILL BIT DEEP IN A FREEBOOTER'S FOOT.
I put more emotion into that because it's my latest frustration regarding models. I had the perfect drill hole (phrasing!) in that freebooter, and decided to just go a little more and BAM. Broken drill bit, stuck in the model.
It was pretty much the only place I could pin him to the base, too, leaving me forever scared of the model breaking from the base. It frustrated me so dearly that I didn't glue models together for nearly a month.
Anyway, off topic.
So a few months back I bought the Cryx stuff. I hadn't done anything with them, other than move them from one side of my table to another. I almost sold them off and would have if I hadn't forgotten them at home when I went to a Bits Bazaar at Fat Ogre.
Recently his friend Jeff has moved in with him and we've found more time to game together. However with 3 players it tends to be odd for Warmachine. So we've played 2 games of 2 v 1, where I played two separate armies against their two armies. We've played at 35 points so far, where I activate one of my armies first, then one of theirs activates, my second activates, and lastly the last of theirs activates. It seems to work, although feats that last a round like Ashlynn's and Gorten's seem to be much more devastating since they last essentially 4 turns rather than 2.
He texted me last week asking about the idea of doing multiplayer in that format but strictly battle boxes. I thought it was a great idea and told him that they'd be at an advantage considering that my boxes aren't great. Gorten is only at 8 points, Madrak has no heavies and his feat is useless in BB, and Kaelyssa doesn't have much in the way of damage. Then it struck me that I have the Cryx BB now, and then I was in business!
Denny's box is so fantastic. It's 14 points, has great synergies, and is able to deal with a multitude of army types. Her debuffs are universal, able to hit high def or high arm simultaneously. Speed debuffs are the best in the game in my opinion and greatly hinder your ability to function. The only weak spot is that there is only one damage dealer in the Slayer, but a P+S 22 strike against a debuffed model spells doom for most, and cripple at the least.
Deneghra herself is prone to assasination, since she isn't very durable and doesn't like to be on the front lines. Due to BB format she'd be more prone to assassination, since there isn't much screening her and the jacks in her box prefer to strike ahead of her.
However her spells greatly mitigate this. One tactic I have is if they get first turn and run toward the center (lets say average speeds of 5 they'd be 20" up considering deployment, 28" away from my table edge and 18" away from my deployment). I then run an arc node jack 14" up, making him 4" away from the enemy - and hopefully in LOS of the caster. Deneghra then casts Crippling Grasp on the caster. With FOC 7 and a boost she has good odds of hitting most caster defenses. If she misses then they will need to deal with the arc node jack, diverting precious resources to dispatch it and most likely in an uneven fashion (a 7 point jack dealing with a 4 point jack is a win in my opinion). That jack or caster sent to deal with it is one less model that the rest of my army needs to mess with, keeping the odds lopsided in my favor (with 14 points to start off with as well, I may still have an even number of points thereafter). If they ignore it that's a jack in key position for arcing next turn, or even charging the caster (with a debuff on it it's definitely got a chance of hurting). Worst case scenario I try with my remaining two arc nodes to do it again.
If the debuff succeeds then the caster is at -2 SPD STR & DEF, and without something like Banishing Ward it's on them for essentially the remainder of the game, which is why I only need to succeed once. With the speed debuff he can't charge or run, with an average speed of 5 he can only move 3" at a time, also slowing down jacks since they'll need to be within control range. If the jacks manage to charge out of it then the turn after they aren't allocated anything and are easy prey (however if they manage to knock out my slayer it may still be an uphill battle).
Once debuffed it's a matter of picking and choosing when to strike. It will be easier to find an assassination vector, and if they turtle up then remove one model at a time with the slayer. Couple this with Denny's feat and retaliation is almost impossible short of ranged attacks and Denny has stealth.
It's a solid strategy and I'm eager to test it out on the table top.
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Steamroller 6/28/2014
So last Saturday I took part in a small (I think 8 or 10 man) Steamroller tournament. This time I decided to take my Mercenary army, of the Highborn Covenant. I have a lot of fun playing this army and it seems to be highly competitive (at least in casual games). In theory it can take on all scenarios and most army lists, at least much better than any of my trollblood lists. This is in theory, of course, and my experience with my half-cooked schemes usually end in tear-soaked agony.
Although I don't have very much experience with this army (I've only played with them a handful of times) it's a great army and easy to play. Since I'm in the mood I'll go ahead and explain how I came up with the idea for the army...
At the time I had a complete Troll army, with enough stuff to make several different satisfying lists, as well as a complete Retribution army, which I have 3 casters and enough stuff to make varying lists. I had extensive experience with my Trolls as they were my main faction (I know my Madrak list like the back of my hand) and had success with them, seeing them adapt to many situations and take on a lot of different lists in the process. Their main weakness was incorporeal or equivalents, like Menoth denial lists. In my Madrak list I have 2 magic weapons and that's it, one of which belongs to Janissa who rarely sees combat if I can help it. My alternate eDoomshaper list also only has 2 magic weapons, one for Mulg (who will always take care of it) and the other to Doomy himself, and if he's trying to melee something then something has gone terribly wrong. Both lists were pretty hardy against shooting, with Madrak brushing it off while slowly advancing and Doom/Mulg would be extremely fast and usually get a turn 2 charge. The problem with both is that you'll see it coming a mile away, you'll just be hard pressed to stop it. There wasn't a lot of shenanigans outside of Madrak's Feat, Doomshaper's Feat and Goad abilities, and power attacks (there's nothing a double hand throw can't fix!). And although Doom's list is fast, I was usually being outmaneuvered. I would alleviate this with Long Riders, but in Madrak's list I would be horribly flanked and almost never get the charge (mitigated with a minimum of ARM 20 and DEF 14+ army wide with a wall in front).
Anyways, I digress. Long story short, although far from boring I sought a different approach to the game.
With my Retribution it was a different story. I centered my armies around the assassination. Vyros made a strong army with the Hydra and Phoenix doing the heavy damage with the Sentinels as back up. He can give a jack the ability to ignore forests for LOS, making a fully camped Hydra shoot 15" with impunity, or a Phoenix charging through a forest when the enemy thought for sure it wouldn't be able to. His feat is lackluster, but giving Sentinels +2 ARM is priceless when coupled with weapon master and vengeance. My Kaelyssa list was even sneakier. She kept the ability for the Hydra to shoot powerful fully boosted POW 15s at a caster through Phantom Seeker. If going against a Caster then Backlash reigned supreme with sentinels and mage hunters on the field. Mage Hunter assassins need no explanation. Eiryss always does her thing. And Narn, oh Narn. I love the guy, even if he only kills one grunt the whole game. His shenanigans are perfect for the army. I deploy him directly across the caster, who most likely has a unit guarding him. He uses his insane speed to charge a model (and with acrobatics he can charge someone in the back) and once he kills it he sprints to hug the caster! At that point it doesn't matter what he does. Either the caster has to spend resources to kill him by using focus, or he'll have to move a unit or jack in to finish the job. Most people don't use a singular solo for the risk of a whiff against DEF 15, so he tends to attract more points than he's worth, essentially distracting enough of the force for my army to approach unscathed. If he ignores it, well that's 2 weapon master attacks at a high MAT swinging at your caster, who unless he has Parry is not getting away without risking death. Couple that with 2 Assassins close behind and you've got a pickle.
Long story short (again) it's full of shenanigans, but hardly has the staying power I like and isn't great at scenario, since it's entirely built for the assassination. I have no tarpit units (I don't want to buy houseguard purely for the reason that I have too many models as it is) so zone control is hardly my forte. I also have trouble using scalpel like armies and tend to fold like a house of cards if one thing goes wrong (like someone who brings waaay too many AOEs to the party!).
So I was thinking of new armies I could try for a change of pace. I remembered that I've always wanted to paint the Gorten model since the game first came out. I feel that he's one of the best representations of the steampunk side of WM (one which I feel is being lost through time). His model has so much character, it looks like he's just a tank and can take whatever damage you try to dish!
So I thought, what goes with a Gorten army?
Gorten has an amazing feat and tried to think of units that compliment it. I originally thought I'd go for Searforge commission. It has a great theme and several units I wanted to paint. The Hammer dudes have that same character as Gorten, like those pistons are gonna punch a hole in your chest. I'm not a huge fan of the High Shields, but they still look cool as hell. I rounded it out with Thor and 2 Bashers for speed, and the fact that Bashers look and work like total badasses. I included the Hordes mini 'lock with the bear as his rules oozed flavor, and the models were fierce. All in all it was looking like a decent army and I was about to purchase it.
Once I thought more on the list the less I liked it. It was very slow, with only 3 "fast" models. If I went against a fast army like Circle I'd be toast, since they can outmaneuver as well as out shoot me. For Zone control it didn't seem bad, but there were better armies out there and they were numerous. For shenanigans it was almost non existent. I got this idea in my head like it's exactly like my trolls, except even slower and less tanky.
I explored the other contracts at this point and came across Highborn. I love the fluff. Then I read the Mule. Then I read the Arcane Tempest Gun Mages. Then I read Ashlynn. Then I ordered my army.
It was everything I was looking for. It looked mean on the table top, all the models were beautiful, and it kept the models I wanted to use in the original list I made. It was also a changed to become a vastly shooting army, which was the drastic change I needed. I didn't realize that I have never played a predominantly shooting army, being that I always felt melee to be more efficient in this game with charge boosts and having generally more attacks than shooting - which usually has ROF 1. On top of all this it had one of my favorite elements: shenanigans.
Shenanigan 1: Shooting is at very long range.
The mules can have a 16" shot with arcing fire. The Gun Mages have a 14" shot. Gorten has a powerful 12" POW 16 shot (boostable!). His Gunners have a 12" shot (boostable!). Eiryss has a 12" shot (tear inducing!).
Shenanigan 2: Accuracy
I don't know if you'd count it as a shenanigan, maybe more like a perk. Mules have RAT 7 most shots. ATGM have a RAT 7/8 naturally. The Gunners have a RAT 6 for crying out loud! And Eiryss has the highest natural RAT in the game with 9!
Shenanigan 3: Soooo much knockdown
In my Ashlynn list everything knocks down, slams, or throws. EVERYTHING. I'm talking ATGM, Mules, Dannon and Bull, Hammers, everything. The Freebooter doesn't, but don't let it get to something that is knocked down because then it has the highest damage output in the game.
Gorten's list is no slouch either. Thor has a Basher and a lot of the same elements are in his list as well.
Against a traditional list this army is extremely frustrating, trust me. One friend of mine refuses to play against it anymore (which I hate to use to brag, sorry). Some games I've played the majority of my opponent's army spends a significant amount of time knocked down. Some casters make armies immune to KD, but even those have its limits. Understanding what gives the immunity is what helps me get KD spread out even in KD denying lists. Some casters require to be in CTRL range, so I just slam and throw the ones in the front and back further from the caster. Others naturally have it, and I just leave them for last or concentrate fire to outright kill it.
Shenanigan 4: The casters.
Oh, the casters. First my favorite, Gorten. His Feat has a feared reputation. It has so much utility it's hard not to find a situation in which it is useful. In kill box he slides them into the zone for at least 2 points automatically (as long as the caster isn't in the 2" circumference of the center). For assassination you use the wall and some planning to slide them into the opportune placement for charges and shooting. With -3 def everything in this high RAT army hits even casters reliably. Move Eiryss into position for the disruptor bolt for reassurance, then hit him with Gorman's Black Oil for overkill. Now the caster is at -7 DEF, nothing misses short of snake eye rolls. If he for some reason survives because his name is the Butcher (which has happened before lol) then he doesn't gather Focus and has to give up a move/action next turn with -3 SPD - no retaliation will happen people.
At 50 points survival would be a miracle. I usually slide them close to the hammers, then shoot everything at the caster. If he's not dead at that point then the hammers, well hammer it home.
Ashlynn is a whole other beast - one of which I've had less success with personally. Her feat is extremely annoying for the opponent and boosts my army's ability to critically hit to almost guaranteed proportions. I'm usually shocked when I don't critical, especially when I boost. After the turn is over retaliation is usually blunted. It's usually nonexistent due to crits making everything knocked down for the most part. If I'm in range it sometimes means the assassination succeeds.
My only problem with her is that I overextend her and overestimate the power of her feat. I sometimes feel too invincible and will throw out Ashlynn on her own during feat turn. DEF 17, Admonition, and ARM 17-20 with whatever attack dice I choose? She'll live.
Well, she dies pretty often despite all this.
So as long as I'm careful, and only put her in the thick of things with infantry she can easily dispatch and smartly use Admonition, then she usually performs better. Her shenanigans tend to support the army better than herself rather than Gorten's who makes it easier to kill things with.
All of these things make a fun army that's difficult to get a hold of. In scenario it performs much better than my Trolls and Ret. They hold zones better, they deny movement and also have plenty of ranged abilities to keep the enemy at bay. It has the stopping power to take down heavy armor (as long as you match up the right units against it) and if need be reliably take difficult models out of the mix (you may have a crazy ARM 50+ jack, but if I keep throwing it back from 16" it ain't catching anything!). For example against a Khador army using the Behemoth I would consistently push it back with ATGM and perhaps knocking it down on a lucky crit. If 7 ATGM hit it from 10" away with Thunderbolt it's going to be pushed far enough away to be denied the charge. If need be I shoot 16" away with the Mules. They have a decent chance at damage and a 44% chance to crit for the throw. Then I hit it with Eiryss' disruptor bolt. Now the Behemoth is around 16+" away, knocked down, and can't be allocated focus to shake effects. If it gives up its movement then it is much further away from effectiveness/contesting/charging. It's not able to boost attacks and if it misses the blast damage is ignored by Gorten. I can either continue to harass the Behemoth or tackle the next closest threat and systematically hold them at bay.
Anyway, I've made this entirely too long and didn't even talk about the Steamroller. I'll get back later, but I've got to go home now.
Edit: A day later and I will finish my extremely long train of thought...
All in all I have a bigger bag of tricks when it comes to this army. Usually what ends up happening is that an opportunity will present itself for exploitation around turn 2 or 3 of the game. This is much easier with Gorten and his potentially game ending feat. In order for most casters to be effective they will need to be close enough to the action to be in reach of Gorten's CTRL. Effectively this can be a huge range. If I place a model, say my driller which is usually right next to Gorten as a deterrent, at 7" away from Gorten, then Gorten declares a charge using his Gutter weapon on the model. He gets a successful charge with a weak weapon against a high ARM target usually resulting in no damage, and a small amount if it does. Once the charge is complete my Feat's threat range is 10", resulting in a total range of 17". This strategy is always available to me since it is not dependent on the enemy's board state short of being swarmed in front of me - and if that's the case then a blast from a Mule will clear that right up without fear of blast damage. All that is needed is at least one friendly model relatively close to Gorten. If we're playing a Steamroller and I went first, then 7" of the board is cleared up from deployment alone. So on turn two with this combo my range is 24" from the board edge if done in a straight line. Essentially on turn two a lane is covered from deployment to halfway up the board at 10" wide from CTRL. Some fast casters may be in that zone already on turn 2. If I went second then it would be 27", with the fact that they went first and probably ran or advanced even closer.
Another tactic is to cast strength of granite earlier in the game, say turn 1, on the driller. Turn 2 you have the driller throw Gorten a total of 9". Gorten activates and advances 4" and pops his feat. That's a threat range of 23", which is almost inescapable from most points on the board.
Once he is in range Gorten places a wall in his CTRL range. This is usually done to single out the caster while everything else gets pushed by the feat. If the caster is hiding behind a model you can place the wall to stop the push from affecting the caster while all screening models get slid 8" away. You can also slide the caster closer if he's unprotected and is just too far for models to charge or shoot.
Once the caster is slid to where he's needed then it's time to put on the hurt. I usually like to perform overkill in case your best efforts don't succeed (theoretically all your rolls can be snake eyes... you laugh, but this has happened!). I will move Eiryss into range and shoot the disruptor bolt to get rid of focus on warcasters. I then move Gorman into range to black oil the target, making his -3 DEF stack to -7. Then at that point everything can hurt the victim and handshakes will occur.
With Ashlynn these opportunities are much harder to find. She has a great feat and it helps with the entire army. However I find it difficult opening up the assassination with her, being that most casters won't stay close enough for her to charge. Usually what I end up keeping in mind is just killing the rest of the army and dealing with the caster later when he has no other models. If an opportunity presents itself for the charge I will take it, but most savvy players won't let that happen.
So, extremely long story short, I love playing this army and it has a tendency to do better than my previous ones. Although I love them, my Mercs are my more competitive list.
So, onto the original topic, the Steamroller on Saturday.
It was a small one. On a whim earlier in the week I decided to put my models together and just take the Highborn. I only have one fully painted model, but I've already shown off my trolls and don't need to play them for vanity's sake.
So my first game was against a good friend of mine named Monty. He has recently gotten into the game a few months back and plays Khador. Since he's just started out he's never played against this army, since it has a lot of elements that are not newbie friendly. It was a kill box scenario with objectives and a central control zone. He was using pIrusk, which he has found recent success with, along with a Winter Guard Death Star and a unit of Kayazy. I deployed my Hammer unit opposite of his assassins, thinking that they will need that MAT 7 against them and their slow speed is mitigated by the assassins' fast one so they will eventually be meeting in combat. I deployed Thor and his marshaled Basher on the WG side which was also my objective to destroy. I figured either I get to the objective and destroy it fast or if the WG plant in front of it they will have a hard time getting rid of it while I constantly use my Flak Field. The Basher is interesting in that it's hard to cripple a system until he's about to die anyway. With those as my flanks I deployed Gorten, his Driller and the Gunner in the center with the ATGM and their two mules in the center right. From these positions I have the option of threatening both sides throughout the game with some of the longest ranges.
I then deployed Eiryss and Gorman advanced up the center right. This way they were still within the protection of Gorten's Solid Ground, mitigating their one weakness to blast damage, while still being in effective range to assist the right flank and eventually circle to the caster once everything hits the fan. I tend to find that those who deploy two different and equally strong flanks tend to stay separated when pitted against my Mercs.
My first mistake was deploying Eiryss and Gorman opposite of his Sylys Wyshnalyrr, which I thought was close to his caster. He deployed his caster on the far left flank with Sylys in the middle for some reason. He later confessed it was on accident, which I told him it worked since I thought his caster was hiding behind the marshaled jack that Sylys was near!
He advanced his army's line up rather far while I ran most of mine up, short of Eiryss and Gorman due to fear of overextending my caster threats too far. Most of the time I try not to rely on them, instead I use them to dictate the flow of the battle simply by their locations. If I place them in the middle then the caster tries to avoid their threat range, which I then follow with running them to a flank and tunneling them into where I want the assassination to take place. Due to Solid Ground and Stealth they are extremely hard to get rid of, short of high speed shooters getting within 5" or things that ignore stealth. If something is on the board that does ignore stealth then I place them behind Gorten's wall. If Irusk is in range to place his spell to get rid of Eiryss, then that's much less focus to worry about to make his jacks effective or cast other inhibiting spells.
Once in range of each other he moved his WG within spray range and my eyes closed with prayer. Even though I have high defenses, sprays mitigate that with a volume of hits. Statistically one of these are bound to hurt something they shouldn't and my theory turned out correct. Eiryss came out alive, although short of breath and heart pounding. Six out of Seven ATGM weren't so lucky though, and that put a huge dent in my plans since he also managed to kill the Jack Marshall. No boosts for the mules now! He also ran the assassins to engage my Hammer unit.
The retaliation was swift. My Basher crashed into his lines and killed a few WG, but his main mission was to cause disruption. By engaging a majority of his unit he was forced to deal with a high ARM model that's hard to cripple and has the ability to burn his unit down slowly. For one model he's a great tarpit, even against that tough unit. Should they combine melee attack they may damage it, but it would still be a slow enough process to effectively take the unit out of the game. Not bad for a 7 point model!
One Mule took a pot shot at the jacks and managed to crit one and throw him back. The other one hit the WG in front of Gorten and took some out.
Gorten took the opportunity to charge 7" at a WG soldier and missed, but the point wasn't to kill him. I used his feat to slide everything to the left, including his caster which he kept at 2" from the Kill Box. It also slid the Assassins out of melee and into a forest, which just felt dirty. I then moved Eiryss parallel to the caster and shot him with the disruptor bolt.
During his turn he finally understood the power of Gorten's feat. He only thought it slid him, but I had to explain that it gave him a -3 SPD, so his caster couldn't get out of the kill box and had no focus, his jacks were neutered, and his assassins could only move 2 inches through the forest. The other flank was moved out of engagement for the most part and missed all their shots due to the -3 RAT. The only unaffected model failed his charge to my basher. The end of his turn gave me 2 VP for kill box.
During my turn I cleared out the control zone of enemy models with my right flank models. My hammers charged the assassins killing some and 4 of them outright murdered the jack protecting Irusk. I had Eiryss sit still and shoot another disruptor bolt for good measure on Irusk while Gorman threw oil on him. I ended the turn dominating the control zone.
The next turn was extremely quick since it was essentially over. Being unable to even contest the zone he decided to end the game since at the end of his turn I'd still dominate the zone no matter what and won. He cursed me then quickly began talking about Gorten's feat and used his favorite phrase of "It's unbeatable!" to describe it. He tends to cry foul a lot when he first experiences what he perceives is cheesy. He's only played Warhammer before Warmachine, so in his experience he'd probably be right. But in WM there's always a hard counter to everything, which I learned in my next game.
Being high up in the winner's bracket I faced a Cryx player. Not only do I have very little experience playing against Cryx, I also feel that Cryx tends to be the most competitive army out there tying with Legion. Of course it's only an opinion, and one that is most likely wrong, but the majority of tournament players out there use Cryx so I must be in the ball park.
Remember when I was talking about hard counters? Try two lists of incorporeal spam. One had 2 battle engines and Skarre.
I knew that it was over before it began (which may be my downfall, but I know the difference between an uphill battle and one that would take a miracle to win). I've been planning to buy Aiyana and Holt for my army to mitigate the fact that I have very limited access to magical weapons. I have the ATGM, but all it would take is to engage them and they'd be useless. I've been meaning to buy a friend of mine's A&H, but keep forgetting and instead replaced them with Dannon Blythe and Bull, who I find isn't as effective as I want them to be.
So let me lay out the situation for you:
I knew he'd pick Skarre. I figured I would lose. Even if I took Gorten, who I feel is my stronger caster, I can't push battle engines which negates his feat if he decides to plop them in front of his army. Soul tokens on the battle engines would negate Eiryss' effectiveness. My only unit that can be effective is the ATGM, and his army definitely has the speed to engage them. Since only their guns have magical weapon they'd easily be useless.
So I decide to pick Ashlynn so I wouldn't be locked in my last game with my list. It was brutal.
I killed a few models with the ATGM. That's about it, I got 7 army points. He used his battle engines to engage most of my army that would be effective for a caster kill, blocking in Ashlynn from using admonition or going for an assassination. Everything else was incorporeal. Even Skarre's spell negated Ashlynn's feat. All in all it was bad.
Lesson learned, A&H would be much more effective in my army, even when I'm not against incorporeal spam.
My last game was my redeemer. I was facing a Cygnar player who was locked in to his Jeremiah Kraye list. This army was very small and was light cavalry spam, coupled with Ol' Rowdy as his only heavy jack. I decided to stick with Gorten. Kraye will most likely be within range of the feat, and even if he isn't dragging cavalry to their dooms and neutering their movement the next turn was too sweet to pass up.
He got first turn and ran with it! With his advance deployed Hunters he moved them up and shot at my caster in his deployment zone. Of course, with his focus he's at ARM 24, so nothing happened. He moved the rest of his army up, using his light cav move to shift his army more on my right flank against my ATGM.
On my turn I used the fact that he moved so far up to my advantage. I advanced my mules and shot at the Tempest Blazers at the front of his army. I got a crit on the center one of 3, while the other two were just close enough to also get thrown. They were thrown into the unit behind them, knocking a total of 7 horses down. 2/3 Tempests were killed outright. It was an amazing shot with a perfect result and I couldn't have asked for more. The ATGM killed the last remaining Tempest.
The Hammers ran into one of the control zones getting ready to charge an obelisk objective. The basher was advanced through Thor and got ready to slam either the objective or a hunter next turn. Gorten and his retinue advanced behind a peice of terrain to gain cover and block charge lanes.
His turn of recovery went quickly. He couldn't do much on the flank with his horses since they were all giving up actions to move and the ones behind them couldn't do anything else but run. Kraye moved forward into the control zone and made Rowdy double his base SPD. The Hunters eliminated Thor making the Basher autonomous. Lastly Rowdy charged the driller and destroyed it. placing him close to but not engaging Gorten.
My turn was the reckoning.
I had Gorten charge Ol' Rowdy to get closer to Kraye. He didn't do anything with Gutter, but that's the point. I popped his feat and Rowdy was moved out of engagement and Kraye was slid into Gorten with full focus. He didn't kill him but gravely wounded him.
I then charged the hammers into Kraye and it was over. I would have destroyed an obelisk and get zone control but my opponent insisted I just finish it, and I knew I wasn't getting first anyway. It was over pretty quick.
All in all it was a good learning experience. I learned the most with my Cryx game. I know that I defeated myself before the game even started, but some games you learn to recognize are hopeless. I'm aware that sometimes I out think myself and make situations more complicated and dire than they truly are, especially if I feel pressured to carry out the assassination. However when you only have a few effective models against 50+ points of models then it becomes hard to justify hope. Lesson learned? Aiyana and Holt.
They're effective even against typical armies due to being able to essentially give -2 ARM to a unit. That can be devastating against the hammers, and even ATGM become a threat. Couple the ATGM with Ashynn's feat and Crit Brutal Damage and they're amazing.
Well, that was an extremely long post, but I hope you enjoyed it, although I don't know if anyone reads this anyway.
Happy gaming!
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