Campaign Game IV – Pandaemonium in Londinium

INTRO | I | II | III | IV | V

From the diary of Phineas Storch (prodigal genius) – 1st day of Brauzeit

I have been observing these savage people for several days now as they have been about their harvest festival that they label “Felltaine”. They cavort around their erect momunents with no regard for modesty. I of course would never participate in such indecent conduct, even if invited.

It seems the dance involves two teams of youths, who have a shrine at each end of the town that they must capture while defending their own. This has devolved quickly into brutality as each tries to prove his manhood by savaging the other suitors. A death slows them not a bit, but excites them to a faster frenzy.

2nd day of Brauzeit
The vile pagan shrines have a strange shimmer about them now, and shadowy outlines flit across their face, as though someone inside wishes to join the dance.

3rd day of Brauzeit
All hell has broken loose.

To mark the passing of May Day, we organised a 3-player game in a 1v1v1 matchup – Phineas’ sinister research expedition caught between two rival armies of Daemons. I will have to add that disclaimer that the following presentation is only inspired by real events, as I forgot to save my notes.

Phineas Storch has grown in power and become a Master Necromancer, bringing along his most powerful creation yet: a Terrorgheist he stitched together from specimens collected in Albion.

++ Standard (Vampire Counts) [1,225pts] ++

+ Lords +

Phineas Storch - Master Necromancer [270pts]: General, Hand Weapon, Master of the Dead
. Magic Items: Forbidden Rod, The Cursed Book
. Wizard Level 4
. . Lore of Necromancy VC 4: 0. Invocation of Nehek, 1. Vanhel's Danse Macabre, 2. Hellish Vigour, 4. Raise Dead, 5. Curse of Years, The Curse of Undeath

+ Heroes +

Wight King [150pts]: Hand Weapon, Heavy Armour, Shield
. Army Battle Standard
. . Magic Standard: Cursed Pennant of Mousillon

+ Core +

Bat Swarms [120pts]: 4x Bat Swarm, Expendable

Skeleton Warriors [165pts]: Skeleton Champion, Standard Bearer
. 29x Skeleton Warrior: 29x Hand Weapon, 29x Light Armour, 29x Shield

Skeleton Warriors [136pts]: Skeleton Champion, Standard Bearer
. 29x Skeleton Warrior: 29x Hand Weapon, 29x Shield

Zombies [69pts]: 23x Zombie

+ Special +

Failed Experiments - Corpse Cart [90pts]: Corpsemaster, The Restless Dead

+ Rare +

Re-Animation Experiment 14 - Terrorgheist [225pts]


The table was split into four deployment zones and a roll determined preference for starting position.

A statue in the centre represented an objective to hold, with 200VP to the occupant.

Caught in the middle of the fray but eager for battle, Khorne’s cloven-hoofed creatures charged ahead to meet the enemy head on – Juggernauts getting confounded for a round by the swarms of agile bats but bursting the partially manifested (assembled) Plaguebearers with a snake-eyes instability test.

Khorne’s wrath was felt immediately with a boulder hurtling from the aether to strike the Terrorgheist for half of its wounds.

Ignoring his miniature kin, Experiment 14 flew past the front line to shriek its displeasure at the god that smote it, although the damage to its health prevented it from destroying one of the Flesh Hounds.

Unable to sneak a series of spells past the protective Collars of Khorne, Phineas scraped through a rite of resurrection, spawning a unit of Skeletons to protect his flank.

Nurgle’s menagerie of things that lay eggs in stagnant pools hopped into action.

Unaware in its frenzy that its friends were vanquished, the Flesh Hound tried to fetch the bones of the Wight King BSB, only to vanish to the weight of the Skeleton horde pressing forward.

The droning and croaking of Nurgle’s cavalry drew nearer and grew into a cacophony. Using the reserve power of the Forbidden Rod, another unit of Skeletons was summoned forth to hold them back. Deep behind the lines, Nurgle’s Herald turned to face the iron clad cavalry.

Furious that their rot could not infect the blood god’s finest by magical means, the Plague Cavalry tried to dent their brass armour instead. A recourse to the rules reminded all that neither Daemons nor Undead were susceptible to poison, and the brass axes gave the amphibians a new set of gills.

It is Mayday my dudes

Their initial momentum starting to falter, the Juggernauts were halted by the Herald’s aura.

Phineas felt a strange surge of power from somewhere , channeling the maximum Winds of Magic but feeling a tug in a direction he didn’t know existed. Nagash’s Gaze burned a hole through a Juggernaut and The Curse of Ages was cast on the Bloodletters in the centre of the board but could only send two daemons back to their realm. Experiment 14, healed by the flow of necromantic magic, came in to clean up the rest of the Juggernauts with a powerful screech at just the right resonant frequency.

Finishing off the other unit of Juggernauts, the pestilent herald made towards the objective in the centre.

Confidence bolstered by his forces’ strong position, Phineas tried on the Winds of Magic for his lucky number eleven again. Ironic fate betrayed him though as he also rolled an eleven for his Leadership test as demanded by the Reign of Chaos table…subjecting him to Daemonic Possesion. A three-fingered hand, swollen with rheumatism and seeping from whitlows, dragged Phineas into the Realm of Nurgle and switched his place with a bewildered Herald. The undead forces begin to falter…

From this point on, the new Herald tied up the remaining Skeletons long enough to crumble them while the Plaguebearers held the centre to the end, securing victory for Grandfather.

For their efforts, the Plague Cavalry were rewarded with a magic Banner of 50pts.

Khorne’s influence in the mortal realm damaged by the defeat, the Herald is unable to manifest in their next game.

Unable to keep up with the demand for fresh corpses, the Zombies will be limited to half-strength in their next appearance.

Phineas reappeared from a sphinctral portal – appearing outwardly unscathed but feeling a bit worse for wear. He will be -1 Strength for the remainder of the campaign.

From the diary of Phineas Storch (prodigal genius) – 5th day of Brauzeit

My work is hindered somewhat by the shaking of my hand, which has been progressing since my sojourn to that infernal garden. The skin is drawn and pale, the veins beneath almost appear to be writhing of their own accord. No matter, a small price to pay for obtaining the serum, with which I have had remarkable success…re-animating the freshly dead with no need for an incantation!

Perhaps an injection to my hand might have a restorative effect.

INTRO | I | II | III | IV | V

Realm of Imagination – Walach Harkon

Walach Harkon first appeared on the cover of Warhammer Armies: Vampire Counts (5th Edition)

Walach
Warhammer Armies: Vampire Counts (5th Edition) – Image from Lexicanum

Tricking his way into Blood Keep and slaughtering the Knights of the Blood Dragon Order, he bequeathed the Dark Gift on the worthy among them and became the Grand Master of their now undead Order.

In his first (and only official appearance), he fulfilled multiple roles on the battlefield: General, Army Standard, Level 3 Necromancer, and devastating combat capabilities superior even to other Vampire Lords.

Despite the memorable artwork and profile, Walach was never rewarded with a model – it was left up to players to devise their own. Now that Walach is back in Warhammer Armies Project – Vampire Counts 9th Edition, it felt like time to add him to my collection.

Walach himself was cobbled together from the Blood Dragon who rides the plastic Zombie Dragon kit. I had recieved some sprues from this in a job lot, and although some important parts were absent (such as upper arms), there was enough potential for a cohesive looking character. The bald head from this kit had Green Stuff hair added to give it a bit of character. Upper arms were also sculpted in as sleeves.

In the artwork, Walach is holding a magic item called the Blood Chalice, which he can sip from each turn to restore his Wounds, or he can coat his blade with to increase its lethality. The plastic rider however, already has a goblet on his belt, and the unit entry does not include a shield – this left me freedom to add something exciting to this hand.

An unfortunate witch hunter was the chosen victim, who I based on Helhunten’s Redeemers from the Empire Uniforms and Heraldry book. Clad in black and tan, this Regiment of Renown from Stirland specialises in hunting vampires – in this case he’s gone in for a staking and missed his mark.

The body is from a spare plastic artilleryman and the stake whittled from his botefeux; the hammer taken from a Mordheim accessory sprue. The ribcage was cut from an ancient white-plastic Skeleton Horde warrior, and is attached via paperclip pins running all the way through.

Walach’s steed needs to stand out a bit from the standard offering, most WHFB vampires coming on a mass-produced plastic horse with a metal custom head. The Grand Master of a Knightly Order would have only the best. This piece was released for the Specialist Game GORKAMORKA and was a mutant alien horse ridden by the human mutant faction. Here I think it looks like a demonic blood beast powered by dark energy. The missing tail was replaced with a skull bit from a Juggernaut and some extra gubbins were stuck on around the place. I chose a paint job to give the impression its skin had been flayed off to reveal bare muscle fibre.

The book on Walach’s belt bears a rune of Shyish – the Wind of Death. His sword is called the Crimson Blade in his profile, and rolls on a custom table for which extremity it chops off. Making something stand out as ‘crimson’ when the rest of the model is already red is a bit of a puzzle. I used the heavily pigmented contrast paint Doomfire Magenta to draw it towards the purple/pink end of red, standing out against fiery red armour, blood red gems and fleshy red horse.

My Vampire Counts collection is based in an autumnul Halloween style so some fall leaves are sprinkled about the battlefield among the fallen combatants.

Walach bears the banner of the Blood Dragons. The banner piece is taken from the Marauder Horsemen box. For this I created custom heraldry based on an old piece of artwork I found of a red dragon. When searching for a freehand reference piece, it is always a challenge to find something simple enough for the average hobbyist to transpose onto a tiny, uneven surface. I often add tags such as “tattoo”, “graphic”, “heraldic” and “cartoon” to my image searches. Anything with too much fine line work is going to be tough going.

The knightly helmet is a standard heraldic design but normally is surrounded by ornate mantlets, the floaty spiky ribbons that are all over coats de arms. This is the dumbest, hardest shape to try and paint well and I recommended avoiding it whenever possible. I went for red dragon wings here, which are only slightly less difficult a shape but don’t take as long. The banderole reads ORDO DRACONIS. The background of a complex banner like this should, in my opinion, be a fairly neutral and flat colour, so as not to distract from the design. This one is mostly black with a hint of plum, like a new leather sofa.

At the time of writing, I am partaking in a narrative campaign with my Vampire Counts army. When the points value reaches the threshold where I can field Walach (~4k pts), I intend to report back with a road test…if you’ve read the rules in Warhammer Armies Project: Vampire Counts, you’ll be as excited as I am.

Until next time.

The End of the Road

Part 6

This army was assembled for a painting challenge which has now concluded. The final result is arrayed before you – 2,500pts of Ostlanders painted in 3 months.

I wanted to let a battle report determine the ending to the narrative component which you can read below, but first it’s time to take a final curtain call before we learn the fate of the Wolfenburg survivors:

Town Militia of Wolfenburg w/ Goodmother Fulda the Wise Woman

The Count’s Gamekeepers

The Wolfenburg Witch Wardens led by notorious soldier of fortune Helbrandt Grimm

The Hunters of Sigmar and Grand Master Jerik Wildorn

Warrior Monks of the Eternal Flame

State Troops

Der Alte Kessel

Border Patrols

Imperial Ogres (not just filler)

Salvaged Artillery

Dramatis Personae

And now the play

Two nights had passed since the food ran out. A grim-faced engineer shovelled the last few coals into the steam boiler and warmed his hands as Morrslieb rose above the silhouetted treeline.

A stirring in the branches. Whispers carried on the wind, but the words were nonsense, backwards.
Stench, metallic and foul, followed. Finally footfalls. A strangled cry from the first watch. The creatures of the forest were at last upon them…

Army Lists

OSTLAND


++ Standard (Empire) [2,497pts] ++ + Lords + Grand Master [175pts] . Jerik Wildorn (The Hunters of Sigmar): General . . Magic Items: Helm of the Skavenslayer, The Silver Horn Wizard Lord [300pts] . Magic Items: Grey Wand, Shroud of Magnus . Wizard Level 4 . . Lore of Fire 4: 1. Cascading Fire-Cloak, 2. Flaming Sword of Rhuin, 5. Fulminating Flame Cage, 6. Flame Storm + Heroes + Battle Wizard [95pts] . Magic Items: Rod of Power . Wizard Level 1 . . Lore of Death 1: 2. The Caress of Laniph Captain of the Empire [116pts]: Full Plate Armour, Hand Weapon . Magic Items: Hammer of Judgement, Holy Relic Warrior Priest [107pts]: Hand Weapon, Medium Armour, Shield . Magic Items: Van Horstmanns Speculum Witch Hunter [80pts]: Hand Weapon, Pistol . Magic Items: Cold Iron Blade, Dazh's Flint, Sigil of Sigmar + Core + Halberdiers [60pts] . 10x Halberdier: 10x Light Armour, 10x Polearm/Halberd Knights [225pts] . The Hunters of Sigmar . . 9x Knight: 9x Great Weapon, 9x Heavy Armour, 9x Lance (Mounted), 9x Shield, 9x Warhorse . . Musician . . Preceptor . . Standard Bearer . . . Magic Standard: Banner of Courage Knights [127pts] . Templars of Sigmar: Preceptor . . 9x Knight: 9x Brace of Pistols, 9x Light Armour Pistoliers [115pts] . Outrider: Repeater Handgun . 5x Pistolier: 5x Brace of Pistols, 5x Hand Weapon, 5x Medium Armour, 5x Warhorse Spearmen [162pts]: Musician, Sergeant, Standard Bearer . 22x Spearman: 22x Light Armour, 22x Spear (On Foot) & Shield + Special + Great Cannon [100pts] . 3x Crew: 3x Hand Weapon Greatswords [233pts] . Count's Champion . 17x Greatsword: 17x Great Weapon, 17x Medium Armour . Musician . Standard Bearer . . Magic Standard: Banner of Sigismund Huntsmen [150pts] . 15x Huntsman: 15x Bow, 15x Hand Weapon Imperial Ogres [102pts] . 3x Imperial Ogre: 3x Great Weapon, 3x Light Armour Mortar [100pts] . 3x Crew: 3x Hand Weapon + Rare + Steam Tank [250pts] . Conqueror . . Engineer Commander: Repeater Pistol Created with BattleScribe (https://battlescribe.net)

BEASTMEN

++ Standard (Beastmen) [2,496pts] ++

+ Lords +

Doombull [345pts]: General, Hand Weapon, Mark of Khorne, Medium Armour
. Gifts of Chaos & Magic Items: Axes of Khorgor, Gnarled Hide, Ramhorn Helm

+ Heroes +

Bray-Shaman [225pts]
. Bray-Shaman
. . Gifts of Chaos & Magic Items: Hunting Spear
. . Tuskgor Chariot
. . Wizard Level 2
. . . Lore of Beasts 2: 1. The Flock of Doom, 3. The Amber Spear

Special Characters [200pts]
. Moonclaw, Son of Moorslieb
. . Wizard Level 1
. . . Lore of the Wild 1: 2. Devolve

+ Core +

Gors [222pts]: Foe-Render, Musician, Standard Bearer
. 24x Gor: 24x Two/Additional Hand Weapons

Minotaurs (Taurox, Doombull or Gorebull as general) [390pts]: Bloodkine, Musician, Standard Bearer
. 8x Minotaur: 8x Mark of Khorne, 8x Two/Additional Hand Weapons

Tuskgor Chariot [80pts]

Ungor Raiders [60pts]
. 10x Ungor Raider: 10x Hand Weapon, 10x Short Bow

+ Special +

Bestigors [300pts]: Gouge-horn, Musician, Standard Bearer
. 18x Bestigor: 18x Great Weapon, 18x Mark of Khorne, 18x Medium Armour

Centigors [124pts]: Gorehoof
. 6x Centigor: 6x Spear (Mounted) & Shield, 6x Throwing Axes

Preyton [100pts]: Forest Stalker, Insane Bloodlust

+ Rare +

Ghorgon [225pts]

Ramhorn [225pts]
. 4x Bestigor Crew: 4x Great Weapon

Created with BattleScribe (https://battlescribe.net)

The Steam Tank rushed ahead with boiler at maximum only to fall short of the monsters that loomed over it. Cannons failed, their boreholes suspiciously plugged in the darkness.

Bart fired off some fireballs into the gloom, torching only a solitary Gor.

Bogged in the mud, the Steam Tank was charged by both the Ghorgon and the Ramhorn however despite having 50% arms made of can-openers, the creature could not penetrate the hull.

Centigors charged drunkenly at the Hunters of Sigmar, only to be cut down in combat by the great axes of the ranger knights. The Minotaurs, alas, were not far behind.

The Pistoliers fired wildly as a Preyton leapt from the thicket and had their throats torn out by its weird buck-toothed fangs.

Their Doombull having chopped Jerik Wildorn into jerky, the Minotaurs gorged themselves on the flesh of troop after troop of loyal Ostlanders – racking up the maximum Frenzy bonus for Bloodgreed.

Helbrandt and the Witchhunters fled here and there in the confusion of battle although stopping to fire a volley, they blew away half of the Khorngor.

Leaking steam and boiler sputtering out, the Steam Tank finally fell in turn five.

The scouting Archers and Ungors fired ineffectively at one another in the darkness.

Whittled down to only a few remaining, the Khorngors charged into the Spearmen nonetheless, their frenzied axe blows sufficient to liberate many men of their skulls. Braying for blood, they chased them down.

The meandering Ogres were run down by the steam-maddened Ghorgon.

The Minotaurs caught up with the Wardens/Templars at last and swallowed the last of the survivors. Only Helbrandt Grimm was left alive.

Moonclaw was useless and did nothing, but you already knew that.


Hellbrandt Grimm heard the cawing of crows signaling he had survived to day break. From the high branches of the tree he took refuge in, he could see the red remnants of his comrades fading to black. The only survivor of the massacre…why did this keep happening to him?! Perhaps fate would one day let him find out. By the look of the creatures sniffing around the base of the tree, it may be soon. THE END

<- Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 ->

Bearers of the Torch

Part 5

Sparks sputter from the altar as a red-cowled monk makes obeisance before it. From outside the priory comes howls and gibbers and the scrape of claws on oak portals.

A brother of the order enters the threshold of the chamber where the surviving monks are huddled in prayer, and calls out to the congregation from the shadowed transept.

“Father Abbot, we cannot hide in here any longer! The creatures are attracted to the Eternal Flame of the Comet’s Tail, we must extinguish it before their dark tendrils corrupt its light!”

“Come forth into the light my son so you may be blessed.”

There is no sound of footfalls. The abbot turns from his prayer to inspect the speaker. With a speed surprising for his years, he snatches a handful of blessed ashes from the brazier and hurls them at the intruder. An alien scream pierces its lips as the fire burns away its disguise and the abbot’s sword pierces the cowl up to its twin-tailed crossguard.

As the figure slumps to the floor, the abbot beckons to the gathered brothers.

“They have got in. Hitch the altar. We’re taking the flame with us.”

This is possibly my favourite ogre sculpt. One of the last made before the Ogre Kingdoms book debuted, it embodies the Brothers Grimm, Jim Henson Creature Shop look of the classic ogres. While Ostland is known for its collaboration with Imperial Ogres, they are also a poor province so the lack of extravagant uniform helps this guy fit in with the rest of the party.

Pleased with how the skin tone turned out. Want to get a shinier gold paint for his gold tooth.

I included the model on the left as a Witchhunter; I thought he was part of their Warband. Suspicious of his meat accessories, I discovered that this was in fact a town butcher from the Frenzied Mob. Oh well, still works. A starving band of survivors needs someone to provide the bratwurst, just don’t ask where the meat comes from…

Compared to the Bright Wizard, I tried to capture a softer glow of yellow torchlight on the arm with a bit of starker overall lighting and some reflections in the glasses to give a sense of light.

The Roadwarden needed a little extra something to make him stand out so I gave him a checkered flag in the Ostland colours – makes sense for flagging down stagecoaches on the high road. Normally I would prefer to freehand the scrolls but this is a timed challenge and the sculpted text was a welcome shortcut.

Three more adventurers from the Ostland warband done. I felt the first few got a bit too much saturation in the red+yellow tones (what is this a Talabecland army?), so I kept these to mostly B/W + metal and put a bit more work into the faces to make them pop.

The Hunters of Sigmar are complete!

Following with the lore for the Knightly Order, each member has poorly maintained, improvised BYO equipment. Some have old provincial colours that have chipped and faded, others rusted away to bare steel.

I think I was successful in capturing variations of colour while keeping within a constrained palette. Looking forward to doing more specialty Orders.

Had to squeeze in some plebs in between showcase pieces so we have some shabby looking spearmen:

Keeping up the variations in clothing on the militia even though it is time consuming, but you wouldn’t expect to see two peasants with identical overcoats like they both shop at the same department store.

Couple of cannons with classic crew. Can’t complain. Might come back and elaborate on the bases a bit more than just “mud puddle”.

No it’s not Kojak, it’s the Deacon from the local chapel. After losing his brother in a cart-crash, he abandoned his faith and turned to the bottle. Surviving the burning of Wolfenburg proved a second calling, now the fire of Sigmar once again fills his veins (along with the cinnamon schnapps).

Speaking of the clergy, the Altar of the Eternal Flame rolls into battle.

This model was not designed with anything to go into the altar so I placed a torch flame (with a magnet in case I ever want to swap it out) and lit the inside with the light from the fire – a bit of a shame as there is some lovely patterned upholstery sculpted on the inside.

I kept the outside a simple lacquer and gold scheme, with marble statues, however you could certainly make a bright, garish nativity scene out of this piece. I may come back and add some freehand banners to the pole…it will be difficult to attach due to the sculpted ribbons coming out around the crossbar.

The chap pushing it had a Glade Guard head puttied on to tie him in with the monks.

The warrior monks have a ton of detail to make up for their skinny legs and funny faces. Red hoods mark them out as an elite unit. Fun models, I suspect the crosses are what kept them out of production.

So that concludes this update – the deadline is starting to loom and we may see some batch painting for the remaining infantry. They can be the back ranks.

If everything goes to plan though I have a few late arrivals which might come in as reinforcements and rescuers.

Hope you all enjoy and continue to follow my projects.

<- Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 ->

Chase Away the Night

Part 4

Smoke and dust fills the air, suffocating whatever rays of sun make it through the clouds. The dust and char turns to mud as freezing fog bites the skin and burns the lungs. Parties sent out to gather firewood have returned to the convoy empty-handed, unable to find anything dry. A miner’s orphan grabs the soldiers’ attention, telling them of an old mobile furnace the coal-miners used to pull their carts at a nearby pit.

Several scavenging goblins scatter in the shadows as the torchlight flickers down the mineshaft. An ogre mercenary, serving the Empire in exchange for his supper, wrangles the rusted hinges open and loads the coals; Bart the Bright Wizard blows life into the burner. Eyes widen as light floods the tunnel. Hinges screaming from rust and caked with coal dust, but still very much alive, the steel behemoth lumbers forward out of its slumber.

Having painted one of the gigantic 6th edition steam tanks, this antique from 4th edition was a breeze in comparison – and about 250g lighter. The colours could have been a bit dull on their own so I went hard on the mud and pigment with an elaborate base. Hard to see from a photo but the tank is rolling down a muddy bank to cross a rocky shallows accross a stream. The mud is soilworks SAP-007 Autumn Ground and the water is Secret Weapon Scenics – Realistic Water (this is getting hard to find so get it while you can). Doing water in several layers instead of one big pour allows you to but bits and leaves and flotsam in the water at varying depths. The orphan is from a spare Questing Knight banner. Painting freckles is an interesting process – too big+dark and they look mud-spattered, too light and you can’t see them. Painful but essential to sell the character as a genuine redhead.

Painting a lot of black and white makes you think a lot about relative value for colours – that is to say something white doesn’t have to be pure white, just the brightest point on the model. A histogram of your model should be a bell curve, where only the deepest shadows are pure black and almost nothing should be pure white unless it’s sunlight reflecting on silver.

Freehanding the bull of Ostland makes me wish the Chicago Bulls sold transfer sheets on their merch store.

The Freelancer is from an era of adding complexity to sculpts by tacking on bags, belts, bits and bobs – in this case though it makes sense, we have a nomadic sword for hire with all of his possessions inserted about his person somewhere. Don’t leave home without your lucky lance rat. I glued his arm on before I painted the lance so the stripes are a bit wonky (I have never got this effect quite right on Bretonnians either) but I think it lends a sort of organic and hand-crafted feel to it. Overall I think if a newly vindicated Johnny Depp was cast in Tim Burton’s Don Quixote, he’d look a bit like this.

My old man is a fisherman so I had a real-life reference for the shield-trout. Should be able to eat at the start of any turn to regain 1 Wound.

Bruno the mercenary captain gets to be less covered-in-shite than everyone else. Not crazy about the shield, might replace it later.

This Hunter of Sigmar prefers chopping heads over spearing spines. He’s here to kill Gors and drink schnapps, and as you can see he’s almost out of schnapps. The axe comes from a Mordheim weapon sprue.

Someone brayed their last bray. Sword is from militia.

Quite happy with how Brutogg turned out – he would not have as much uniform/insignia as the others (standard sizes don’t come in ogre and Ostland can’t afford a tailor). Put a lot of attention toward differentiating the different leathers, ropes and furs texturally so that it doesn’t all just become a mass of brown against his brown skin.

A quick note on basing:
On top of sand I am using some dark brown static grass in patches. The I add little dots of PVA glue and sprinkle some leaf scatter so that it catches on the dots (rather than clumping on top of the glue as a layer). Using Green Stuff World Micro Leaves Brown and Micro Leaves Orange in a 2:1 ratio as the orange ones are very bright.

The Autumn Ground mud effect comes out very shiny so adding some brown pigment powder (also from SWS) can matte this out as desired.

<- Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 ->

The night is dark and full of Chaos Spawns

Part 3

Outside the boundary of the firelight, the night seems darker than ever. Survivors tremble and cower as the men who still have their strength patrol the periphery, trying to hide their fear as howls echo in the surrounding forest. A snap of branches and a horned figure staggers into the light, bleating through multi-rowed teeth. ‘Hooknose’ Neumann scrambles for his halberd but the beast is upon him already. As it lunges for him and tears at his face, an axe lands in its spine, splitting the beast open. The wielder helps Neumann to his feet and examines the wound.

“A mercy, there is only the stench of death here. Come follow, for you cannot tarry here and it is dangerous on these roads. There is much for us to hunt.”

My militia has no nose.
How does he smell?
Awful!

So not sure if this is a worn/damaged piece or the previous owner disfigured this guy, but he doesn’t appear to have a nose so now he is ‘No-nose’ Neumann. No matter, I figure he’s a veteran and lost it in a battle as per above vignette. His friend is missing an eye. Made good use of reddish shading on the white cloth to keep them looking thematic and not too clean, while keeping the high pass with pure white for contrast. I want the Free Company to be plain-clothes as much as possible.

W.I.P. old gray mare she ain’t what she used to be

The first of my Hunters of Sigmar order is represented by the Freelance Knight – not only does he have the janky, ad-hoc equipment typical of the Hunters, but he also comes sculpted with an Ostland shield (although there’s something fishy about it…). The horse armour is designed to look like it was once painted a bright colour but has been stained and rusted by the elements. Transitioning through ochre tones and tying it all together with a sepia wash has gotten me the closest to J.B. artwork so far. I’m also trying out small brushtrokes for the horse’s coat to give it a greying, grizzled look for a rickety old nag.

One thing I’ve found while working in this palette is that adding orange paint colours doesn’t seem to gel with the rest of the spectrum – I’m going from earthy red to earthy yellow to dirty white and when I try to include orange it either looks fluorescent and over saturated, or it has the wrong…temperature? Not as hot or cold. So Bestial Brown is acting as a mix-in to ease red into yellow.

The Spearmen from the old starter set are lacking a bit of variety in their sculpts and poses so I went for some different patterns on the shields to add some interest. You can’t get better contrast than black and white, so can get away with some more intricate patterns and still have them readable at small scale (as opposed to blue on purple for example).

If all the glue joins on this steam tank failed, the old paint would still hold it together. Really doesn’t matter though since once I finish the detailing, I’m offroading this ride with an assortment of mud, soot and pigment effects. Considering options for a toot of steam. While it’s always tempting to do a lush freehand triptych on the flat panels, Ostland is about restraint.

To cap off the weekend, I threw together this mess: a Mordheim Witch I will use as a Wizard of Death/Shadows. A good model for a messy paint job. The Forest of Shadows has many wise women, herbalists and healers…it also has horrible hags, häxen, whores of Satan etc. Which one is this? Who’s to say…

<- Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 ->

A light in the darkness

Part 2

LORE

Wolfenburg is in ashes, set ablaze during the onslaught by gouts of coruscating flame spewing forth from lesions in the night sky. Sinister conjurations were followed by a throng of beasts from the id, their changeling forms silhouetted against the flames as they crossed the threshold from nightmares to reality.

Ritter, Tod und Teufel – Dürer
A.K.A. Where Ian Miller got his aesthetic from

The cruel hordes of the Kurgan had already laid waste to much of the city a year past, crossing the frozen river boundary and turning the fresh snowfall crimson. Surtha Lenk turned his forces toward Kislev however as the final confrontation drew near, and the denizens of Wolfenburg set about collecting the dead. They had only begun to bury their dead in the spring thaw when, in 2522IC, the walls fell to the mutant abominations from the Forest of Shadows.

Now the Storm is over and the first bonfire is lit. Bruno Hauptleiter, mercenary captain of the Star of Victory company, was sent by Count Valmir (paid by promissory note) to relieve Wolfenburg – although arriving too late to save the town, his men evacuated the remaining defenders and as morning broke, drove the remaining monstrosities back into the shadows.

The survivors crowd into makeshift encampments, seeking shelter from the encircling darkness…but too frightened to venture back into the ruins of the town, where screams human and non-human still echo in the night. With few left of sound body and mind, Hauptleiter has assumed responsibility for these refugees. Unwilling to stay in one place too long, but unable to cross the threshold of the forest, they are seeking a place of refuge where a fire can be kept burning until help comes. If it comes.

PAINTING

WORK IN PROGRESS – Who goes there, friend or foe? Probably foe.

Day 1 of the Waaaaaagh painting challenge – I have blocked out the colour scheme and done a ton of metals at once so I can change the paint water. The model above is one of the Mordheim warband which I will probably field as templars. Trying to distribute the three main colours (B, W, R) evenly over the model while keeping him dimly lit by the lantern.

WORK IN PROGRESS – Mercenary Captain Bruno Hauptleiter

Bruno is represented by the Griffin-riding Elector Count model. A wealthy entrepreneur in the military imperial complex, he is more ornate than the Ostlanders. Hauptleiter translates to something like Figurehead Leader – I didn’t come up with this, he’s from WHFRP. His coat of arms was chosen to reflect his regiment’s name: Stars of Victory. A stylised star painted with the wings of Nike. This will be going on a shield later.

WORK IN PROGRESS – Free Company – town militia

These halberd guys are the remnants of townsfolk who have taken up arms to defend their homes, surviving being cornered by a swarm of leechlike mutant creatures (think bloedzuigers from The Witcher) that were driven off by a wave of flame from Bright wizard Bart Zweispitzig – but not before many were drained of their precious bodily fluids. To keep these models distinct without resorting to adding colours, I am focusing on materials techniques i.e. rust, frayed cloth, faded dye, wrinkled and scuffed leather. Time to re-watch some Vince Vinturella. Thankfully, all human hair colours are available to use in this colour space, and individual facial features or expressions can make each model unique.

The wizard is lighting the fires. This posed an interesting challenge as Bright wizards usually stand out from an army due to being coloured Red/Orange/Yellow and lit by flame…but everyone in this army will be coloured that way, so I focussed on contrast of value. The OSL from the firelight is meant to be evocative rather than photorealistic (this is a cope, I am just bad at it).

The first flame is lit, will it burn out or fade away?

<- Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 ->

Realm of Imagination #1 – Converting Beastmen Characters

The 6th edition of WHFB dropped most factions down to two, perhaps three special characters, at the same time rebooting most of the model range – sometimes just ’cause (Teclis?). This trend started to reverse in 7th with many fresh faces joining the rogues gallery however many who made it into the rules were left behind on the sculpting-room floor due to time constraints or market viability. Here we shall explore how you can bring these characters to life on the tabletop with a few nips and tucks.

The Beastmen added stacks of new characters in their 7th edition book with the possible intention of releasing the missing models with their next refresh…which sadly never came. As they are mostly uncompetitive on the battlefield there was little interest in them from tacticians, but the concepts are cool enough to demand representation on the battlefield.

Moonclaw

“Moonclaw, son of Morrslieb” is the man in the moon. Shot out of the chaos moon in an egg/chrysalis, he radiates a warm warpstone glow and talks in backmasked satanic messages. His abilities sound bonkers but in practice he is bogus. The artwork for Moonclaw is so vague and scribbly that it could have been drawn by Mr. Squiggle (also from the moon), so it is hard to tell exactly what he should look like.

Moonclaw - Beastmen 7th Edition Army Book
Moonclaw – Beastmen 7th Edition Army Book

Little monster man on a big monster dog? The general idea is he should be twisted and crazy enough that everyone nearby suffers Stupidity. I personally interpreted the character’s mutant mount Umbralok using the very feral and beastmen-like ‘Thing in the Woods’ from Mordheim:

The rider is made of various chaotic bitz draped with putty tendrils to emulate the fur(?) in the art. Pick some Ungor legs with a wide stance and they should be able to fit on a mount.

The landscape around him changes and twists with flames in a colour out of space as it is pulled into his upside-down dimension.

A conundrum with this guy is that the rules imply he’s cavalry-sized, but nothing much suits this scale for mounts – Beastmen don’t really do mounts. I have seen a conversion that used a plastic wolf as the basis and another with a Chaos Warhound. I think a Dark Eldar Warp Beast has suitably bizarre looks for this purpose (I’m talkin’ about the googly eyed metal ones of course). The newer (Khymera?) version is sized better if you run him on 50x50mm as above.

Going back to the artwork, the heads all have a slightly beaked appearance – the Tzaangor kit is perfect if you want to emulate this.

Ungrol

Ungrol Four-Horn is a two-headed changeling consumed with horn-envy. His artwork is a little clearer:

Ungrol – Beastmen 7th Edition Army Book

It is a near-effortless conversion (Gor heads on an Ungor body 4horns1gor) but I’ve never got around to making him because I know that I could any time I want. Ideally use the more lengthy and impressive horns from the Bestigor kit.

Molokh

Molokh Slugtongue is a festering beastie who makes the enemy army fungry. This aura (D3 wounds no saves on T test) has the potential to be very valuable against some lineups so he’s a surprisingly rounded choice for a wizard.

Slugtongue – Beastmen 7th edition Army Book

Another easy conversion, you can take the skull from various Orc or Ogre banners and jam it on any necromancer, Chaos Sorceror etc. you have spare. There are one or two examples of this online. To complete the picture, the staff he holds in the artwork looks very much like Morghur’s:

I was going for ‘glowing ember’ and got ‘baked potato’

I could also see Ethrac Glott making a good base for this guy, with a bit of fur added here and there:

Ethrac Glott currently employed as a Fimir

Taurox

Taurox enjoyed the most popularity of these characters since all it took was a pot of Brazen Brass to get a 1+ save for your Doombull. He was finally rewarded with the Daemonic Gift of an official design when released as a legendary lord in Total War: Warhammer II after years as only a headshot:

Taurox – Beastmen 7th Edition Army Book

But the TWW design is nowhere near as fun as what we can do with our imagination.

The plastic minotaurs with their smooth Blender3d muscles already look like cast bronze statues, so all they need is a coat of metallic paint. If the traditional bare-arsed bovines are more your bag, armour plates can be fashioned from Chaos kits such as Skullcrushers and applied on top of an old sculpt for a metallic aesthetic.

The Doombull (F-L) and Bloodbowl Mino (F-R) are begging to be brassed up

Replacing the cow head with the head from the Juggernaut of Khorne (particularly the lord mount) is a good touch. My own plan for a Taurox conversion is clipping the wings off a classic Bloodthirster:

Replace the wings with a double sports exhaust

This conversion will also allow me to run him as Ograx the Beastfiend, a lore-only character from the Archaon novel. Ograx is an Australian beastman who achieves the favour of a Bloodthirster and is gifted with a brass body.

From out of the lore-forest come some other characters who could spice up your herd:

* Ragush of the Bloody Horn is a XXXL Doombull who likes his steaks rare.
* Kha’rak Stoneheart is a Bray-Shaman’s ghost possessing a minotaur’s body. (Buy the Wizard Hat on a Doombull, you know you want to)
* The Harbinger, a wizened shaman who sells out to Nurgle in the end times.

If you have converted one of these characters for your own army, I’d love to put together a compilation of inspiration – leave a comment or email me below: