Reaper Miniatures
Pinnacle Entertainment
Arcane Tinmen
With the use of Kickstarter as a full price pre-order sit by larger companies, or a repository of STL, it's still nice to see someone providing a true deal with a Kickstarter for metal figures.
The Daniel Mersey's Knights of the Round Table Kickstarter covers 35 28tmm metal miniatures from Arthurian Lore.
Still thirty years after Episode #64....
The Azure Dream is set for a pleasure cruise.... Captain Ne'vets Aharo had a party cruise planned, raucous entertainment, music playing, with the only requirements was to maintain life support and keep the drinks flowing. Tarrie Prolek, former pilot extraordinaire, was hoping his Kessel Rum Bowls would do the trick for awhile. Quality was not as important as quantity.
The Azure Dreams, leaving Orocco. |
Evus, the Cruise Director/MC, inspected the reinforced refreshers, and planned some diverse party karaoke to test the waters with this bunch. Sid, child prodigy/security, had the slightest look of concern on her normally emotionless face.
As the ship passengers embarked upon the ship, they were met with a giant holo-vid projection of Evus welcoming them, pointing the direction of the cabins, then pointing back to the bar. It was amazing that premium holo-vid projector installed in the carcasses of two disabled R2 units they had stolen in a moment of blackout drunkenness only two night prior. It almost looked professional!
Standing behind the bar, just under the projected image of Evus' junk, was Tarrie, polishing glasses and triple-checking the chill level of the Kessel Rum.
Luckily the glass he was holding fell safely into the bar sink, as a member of the Oroccan Royal Family stepped onto the vessel. Tarrie quickly dried his hands, straightened his bolo tie, and waltzed over to greet this royalty, only to realize it was Jeffe, the idiot nephew to King Arcturo.
"I've taken dumps in smaller ships... and had them blown up!"
"Hold on, Jel Jeffe."
"Correct, use my title, ship peon."
"I understand this ship is smaller than your accustomed to, but let our hospitality makes things seem far grander than they are...." and with that Tarrie handed the nephew a neon red drink in the finest glassware available on the ship.
And with one sip, Jel Jeffe was content. "This is pretty good, I think the rest of the family will love this when they get on board."
Sid's ears perked up. She knew a party cruise was going to be tough to keep under control, but Ne'vets had not briefed them that the passengers were the royal family of them planet of their port of call.
The rest of the royal family filtered onto the ship, easily placated with booze and aggrandized demands for respect, for Sid, the biggest problem was that there were not enough rooms for the royal support staff.
To distract this logistical nightmare, Evus requested everyone back to the bar for a Bon Voyage Happy Hour back at the main bar. With the royal family and their entourage distracted, Sid could scurry throughout the ship for every spare cot, oversized crate, and collection of pillows to find some place for everyone.
Tarrie had two vats going behind the bar, one for the bright red Kessel Rum, and one for a blue and white swirling product to entice the fancier members of the family...
It was still Kessel Rum.
With the passengers placated, it was time for the Captain's grand entrance. He schmoozed the ladies, bowed to the lords, and made sure Uncle Niven's 17 cloaks were properly pressed.
Uncle Niven pulled him closer, "I don't think my brother, the King, mentioned this to you, but it's our mother's birthday. Can you get a jubilee gala together for tomorrow night... and make it a surprise! She's turning 150!"OSM (Old School Miniatures) taunts me in a moment of financial weakness with a great collection of new figures sculpted by Tim Prow: Starship Skirmishers.
Mantic has done a great job with their Terrain Crate series. They've expanded into sci-fi with their Terrain Crate 3 Kickstarter.
I'm a little concerned that I don't see the triangle portal (whose paint jobs were the first thing that attracted me to the early online ads). I'm assuming they'll be on the stretch goals for the forest? The ruins/barrels are that perfect handy size to block line of sight or compound troop movement without a need for a larger ruin to clog everything up.Thirty years after Episode #64....
The camera pans from the void of space into a planetary system. It zooms to the planet Orocco, with a spaceport orbiting it. Further still it focuses on a clear dome which is hosting what is clearly a carnival, complete with all the sights, sounds, and smells that one would expect. Small children are clumsily walking down the midway, trying to control the custom balloon they have in one hand while balancing a bag of popcorn and a dripping ice cream cone in the other. Both popcorn and ice cream end up on the ground as a giant shadow envelopes the boy, shocking him, but them proceeding to block the illumination of the planet to the spaceport, a large pleasure cruiser come precariously close to the doom, less than 100 meters from it....I thought we were officially in that lull for AAU, as local rec and school ball take over for the winter, but still they drag me back in.
Millie's team of a million point guards and undersized out-of-position centers did well this fall, well enough, in fact, to garner them an extra tournament at a showcase event this past week. Only girls, only grades 5-8, but with teams stretching from New England to North Carolina.
I had mentioned in previous installments that that mechanism for challenging a player's eligibility was significantly compromised or removed from these fall tournaments. While athletic events will bring out those well beyond the 100% for their age, I still feel like some of these 12-under teams had girls drive to the site after a full shift at their jobs. Millie (and Millie's team) is woefully undersized against urban programs pulling from much larger populations, but I still question whether or not some of the girls were held back two or three years to stay in 6th grade.
Further complicating this late tournament was the opening week of games for the local rec league I'm still a part of, and even worse, it was Maja's school tryouts for 7th/8th grade basketball.
As has been the pattern this fall, my wife took Millie down to the tournament, and I ubered Maja to Friday night and Saturday morning, and to make sure the games went off without a hitch.
To get the home front stuff taken care of, Maja's 8th grade team has one girl with a long-term injury, and one new player to fill in that slot. The 7th graders brought a deluge of 16 players to tryouts, including four that played with Millie long ago.
As I checked up on rec league games while Maja was at her Saturday tryouts, the text messages started coming in. Millie's first opponent was a top level team who completely switched programs in Upper Manhattan. Their same girls grew since the spring, ours did not, so it was a legit 42-30 loss. Their second opponent was even tougher, the Drexel Hill Comets "National" team (the usual competitive travel team also played and played well.) Not only did they beat Millie's team 47-34, but beat the NYC team.
It was that sort of weekend for #4 |
Things from the Basement have launched a Kickstarter for a range of 28mm German village half-timbered buildings.
My local convention is Mepacon, a small, well-organized affair that's resided in Northeastern Pennsylvania for a number of years. I've always done my best to attend them, but with kids and life I've managed about half, most recently being a Sunday last year.
Its short run at the Mountain Laurel Resort was terminated by the closing of the facility for a third round of renovations in the past five years. A quick available alternative site returned Mepacon 43 near its roots, with the Sure Stay Plus (by Best Western) in Bethlehem, PA.
The con's name is derived from the fact that the early iterations were the Mid-Eastern Pennsylvania Convention, a name that never evolved as they moved north for over 15 years. The Lehigh Valley is about as Mepa as one can get.
I had not gotten much details, but as I perused the game registrations, I saw names of folks I hadn't seen in decades, so I decided to take the girls down for a trip on Saturday.
By dinner time Friday, reports of the place already jumping confirmed everyone's desires for a real convention in the area, with number of folks still driving down from Scranton.
Okay, it's a picture I took of the main board game room on Saturday, but it was reportedly this busy on Friday. |
This apparently, is an ancient artifact, the source of our big problem, and the source of everyone else's intermittent issues. |
Multiple sessions of Battletech, some 40k, and a Gaslands game diversified the RPG/Board game dominance. |
The LARP seemed pretty frenetic. |
That's a lot of fancy dice! |
The start of my "gaming year" hasn't gotten to a solid start, with intermittent Star Wars games an interrupted Fall-In!, and a disastrous home life. One thing that ranks as a big neutral, is the return of the blog bots hitting the site. This batch is a simple program, hitting five or six old pages heavy, then moving onto something else by the end of this weekend (hopefully).
One random post was from October, 2009, two months after I started the blog. It's no surprise, it's a gaming plan, with me trying to break out what I would do quarterly, with a newborn in the house. I had not accumulated as much stuff as I do now, and role-playing.
The post title is a mis-"gnomer," I actually got a good deal accomplished, with a few failures that deserve a spot in my Gaming Projects even know.
For 2010:
The holiday season always brings out a host of material for Christmas, Hanukah, Krampus, etc. Most never seem to be deliverable prior to the the holiday, and suffer some variant theme that players and GMs would expect.
Assault on Santa's Workshop, now on Kickstarter, just hits the right spot for me
I believe they had me at, "Can your party wrestle control of Santa's Workshop from scheming Drow, entranced elves, and murderous Christmas constructs?"When there's not two kids playing basketball at rwo different locations, there's a lot less drama.
But not all the drama.
With Fall-In! on the same weekend as the end of Millie's season, I took a day or two to recover, than scanned social media and the tournament apps to better recollect the last three tournaments of the fall.
Except that I could only find two...
It seems like everyone wiped the Fall Mayhem Classic at Spooky Nook from their collective memories.
Part of it was that it was an ill-run tournament, with poor time management, and lackluster communication. Part of it was horrendous officiating at all age levels. I was at Maja's volleyball game, trying to get video, and repeating texts from my wife about how uttlerly clueless the refs were, and the veritable pile of technical fouls being handed out, not only to our team, but the other coach, who had been far less animated! With that knowledge it wasn't a surprise that Millie's team was down at halftime... but not by 19! They ended up rallying in the 2nd half, coming up short by one, 45-44.
Maja and I missed the second game while driving down to Spooky Nook, and we arrived to chaos. The team had been soundly beaten a second time that morning. Accusations and murmurs abounded. Coaching was questioned, playing time debated, and the most common excuse, 7th and sometimes 8th graders playing in the 6th grade division. Millie's team does not handle true adversity well, but the only folks who handle it worse are the parents.
Given the fact that she was playing against veritable giants, I wasn't surprised that Millie saw limited action, but others felt it a slight against her. Needless to say more unnecessary drama was made and the evening was otherwise a mess.
Sunday pool play evolved into play-in games, and a rematch against the second team they lost to. This time, the team beared down and ground out a 7-point win, resulting in a championship game rematch against the first loss. Having not seen any play Saturday, I realized the championship game was against a team they hadn't played in a year. Their girls had grown A LOT, and recruited some new friends and proved to be more worthy adversary than rule-breakers. Millie's team kept with four until the final minutes, losing 39-32.
The next tournament was a shorter drive out to the Mecca of basketball in Central Pennsylvania: The Lewisburg YMCA. With player conflicts, they filled one of the tournaments with a special request from some of the 5th grade AAU players. It seems at least three of the 5th graders drive over an hour (full interstate) to make practice twice a week, because the local programs cut them, and with the help of only four of the sixth graders, they were going to prove their prowess.
Against the 5th/6th grade teams from Danville and Lewisburg on Saturday, there was little challenge, 44-4 wins and 34-13 wins with the 5th graders taking most of the playing time. I'm sure a little revenge was sweet, plus they don't get to practice with the 6th graders, and they took both games to get up to the base speed level of the older kids.
After a quick commute Sunday, they faced a Nittany Valley team that was bigger and stronger, but could not keep up with the girls, another 50-19 blowout.
Instead of a rematch in the championship game, the tournament organizers distributed medals and organized a fourth game against the 7th/8th championship, plus a few other girls to fill in for the girls who couldn't stay. These girls were at least a proper travel team, and the age and size difference could not be overcome. Compared to the prior tournament, no one whined and complained about a 30-point loss to the older girls, especially when they still put up 29, (59-29).
The final scheduled tournament of the year was the post-Halloween, Zero Gravity Spookfest at the Nook. Of course, this interfered with our trip to Fall-In!, and, as I mentioned in my Fall-In AAR, filled my Saturday with great basketball against a lackluster (26-9), and a rough team (41-9). The two games on Sunday sealed the championship (41-17, 52-28).
Of course on Wednesday I discovered that the girls had been invited to two special tournaments, a showcase tournament in March (which conflicts with the big local tournament for Millie's school team), and another next week in Spooky Nook.
The travel never stops. Can't wait for the 6th grade local league at Kingston Rec to start in a month.
Millie versus a "Normal" tall girl. |
A quick little Kickstarter for us anthropomorphic amphibian fans, Frog Knights by Tom Mason.
Three types of figures, all cast in metal, starting at six Tadpolemen for $25.Pulp Alley, collaborating with Pulp Figures, is producing a Pulp Alley: Character Cards Collection on Kickstarter.
One of the multiple decks. |
There were four Gnome Wars games at Fall-In! 2022, run under the HMGS Next Gen banner. Using the convention theme of Vehicles of War: Trains, Tracks and Trucks, we based most of the games around the Siege of Tsingtao, and the what-if scenario regarding a bier run breakthrough involving trucks. Not historically accurate, and the trucks are a bit anachronistic for the era, but so are garden gnome Swiss.
I was not around for the 3pm Friday or 10am Saturday games, but here are the pictures from the other two.
GAME ONE: Pirates surprise the Irish, who were commandeering the riverboat for their own bier-related nefarious purposes. |
Germans use the cows as cover. The cows randomly moved each round (spinner and d12 in inches). |
Bier trucks getting loaded. |
Safe driving, bier on board. |
The Swiss Bier Nurse and Herr Bier Doktor duke it out under the bridge. |
GAME TWO: The pirates disembark a horde of skeleton warriors??? |
Captain Alvarado took out King Jim and his henchmen without any help. |
The great Swiss exodus. |
Leprechaun and Clerichaun alike rainbowed into the pirates ship. |
A German plane, low on fuel, barely misses a War Elephant and excited Germans, while landing. |