Showing posts with label VSF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VSF. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 October 2017

Infinity Engine's V(ictoria) 2 Secret Weapon

Infinity Engine were back at SELWG.


Their display always looks great with unusual brightly painted Wellsian and Fantasy miniatures.

I was taken with their new Steampunk missile launcher and bought the first one they have ever sold!

And here it is sitting in the low sun of a Martian summer - other wise known as my lounge carpet.

Production is decent with just a few rough bits to sand and air holes to fill. I strongly recommend cleaning thoroughly before painting. I didn't which gave me issues at the primer stage.

I modelled it with the rocket loose as if it's at the point of being fired with the arms swinging away - that way I can get the missile off during a game.

You can buy one here.




Saturday, 16 July 2016

IHMN, West Wind's Professor Erazmas

Professor Erasmus of the Occult Research Section of the British Museum confronts a London Fremlins beer cart suspected of smuggling dangerous narcotics into the East End.

Erasmus is a West Wind Model from their amazing Empire of the Dead range.

The base is a resin steampunk base that I have had for a while.

Fremlins was a brewary in Maidstone in Kent. The site is now a shopping arcade that has reatined the famous Fremlins Arch .



Sunday, 10 July 2016

IHMN - Ironclad Miniatures Sanwar Review

I bought a couple of packs of Sanwar from Ironclad Miniatures at the Crystal Palace show but one and have just got around to painting them.

From their VSF range, the models are vaguely Star wars sand people but equally do very well for In Her Majesty's Name steampunk cults as well as VSF. they are armed with blunderbusses and jezails, long-barrelled muskets. I also bought a great three-barrelled cannon and crew.

I chose to paint them as cultists with suitably blood red robes.

Great models: recommended.

Monday, 4 May 2015

Sudan Nuggar


The small 20 ton cargo boats of the Nile are known as nuggars. They feature heavily in the Sudan Campaign being used as ferries and to transport troops and supplies up stream on the north wind. Sometimes they were towed behind steamers in a train. I made the sail a bit small for practical reasons.



The boat is made from the Sarissa German Sturmboot model, This kit is a real dog with an oversized base, a gaping hole in the bow, and a water drive too long and fragile for a wargame model.

It is however cheap at £5 and gives one a launch shape suitable for conversion.

Friday, 1 May 2015

Her Majesty's Aerocutter 47

An aerocutter is a small  flying boat usually armed with a five barrel Nordenfelt mechanised organ gun capable of firing 500 rounds per minute. It relies on galvanic cells powering cavorite panels for lift and a Clayton & Shuttleworth steam engine for motive power through a pusher-propeller and to recharge the cells.


It is used on Mars as a mobile desert patrol vessel capable of carrying a squad of infantry or as a supply vessel for isolated outposts located away from a convenient canal. It is armoured and can set down on a flat surface as well as water.


In short it is a jack of all trades, the Royal Navy's colonial workhorse.



Sunday, 26 April 2015

IHMN: Sanders of the River

I bought a few little toys at Salute, cough - yes I know.

One of them was a Sarissa laser-cut steam launch suitable for VSF, steampunk or just colonial skirmish games.

This is a great kit and great value for money for ten of Her Majesty's Guineas.

I painted up the sides, sunshade and boilder and gave it a good coat of Army Painter tone varnish.

Pip, pip, old fruit.



Friday, 24 April 2015

Sarissa Hansom Cab

The hansom cab is an iconic symbol of Victorian London and no game set in this place an era should be without one.

Sarissa now offer an inexpensive laser-cut model for £5.

I simply sprayed the model black and added a few brass highlights.

The result is pretty damn good. Of course there's no horse and driver but still excellent value for the money.


Friday, 17 April 2015

IHMN, Royal Artillery on Mars

"Six-legged chappies, three rounds of cannister, fire..."

The model is Warlord's 7pdr from the Zulu Wars. Just right to support my Martian Rifles.

Thursday, 16 April 2015

IHMN, Naval Brigade

A naval shore party to back up the Pongos in red coats.

These chaps can be relied upon to bring a bit of professionalism to a bloody encounter.
We've got some sailors and officer with a Nordenfelt mounted on a gun carriage and another officer leading a squad of Royal Marines under command of a sgt.

Pip, pip.



Tuesday, 14 April 2015

Her Majesty's Martian Rifles

The staunch defender's of Her Majesty's Dominions on Mars, the Martian Rifles.

Models from Warlord Games.



Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Crystal Palace Dinosaurs

Visitors to Crystal Palace probably remember the early reconstructions of dinosaurs now on display in the grounds.

Well now you can buy models for your VSF games from Antediluvian Miniatures for the princely sum of £25.

Oddly enough many dinosaur models are way out of date. It is impossible to get a 28mm mini of a modern reconstruction, such as the one below.




Thursday, 5 March 2015

IHMN, Life On Mars - The Great Wurm





One of the more fearsome terrors for intrepid explorers crossing the Martian deserts are the Great Wurms that live in the soil.

This photographic plate was found still undeveloped in a calotypescope abandoned on the sand. It has been linked with the mysterious disappearance of the Fern-Whittington expedition.

And this is a Reaper Bones model. Reaper Bones is a range of polymer models based on Reaper's metal models. They are astonishing value for money and paint up well.



Tuesday, 20 January 2015

IHMN Warhammer Venus Swamp Beast with Sun-God Cannon

Another Warhammer skink model for my Venusian native newt army.

This one is another semi-domesticated beast  with a giant god crystal capable of firing beams of stored sunlight that can fry a steam tank.

It's pretty good at close combat as well.




Friday, 17 October 2014

IHMN, VBCW, Royal Artillery Armoured Tractor

Based on a steam tractor the Royal Artillery armoured tractor is designed to tow field guns through enemy fire. It is equipped with a turret mounting a light howitzer to protect the artillery crew while unlimbering.

The chassis is reversed to put the vulnerable boiler at the back and the front wheels have been moved further apart for stability given the heavy armour around the cab.

The tractor is shown here in desert camouflage - Martian desert camouflage - although the paintwork has proved surprisingly effective in the Sudan.


The tractor has been issued to batteries of The Honourable Artillery Company who have promptly been nicknamed 'The Raspberry Tarts' by the rest of the Royal Horse Artillery.

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

In Her Majesty's Name: A Review







IHMN is the Osprey published Steampunk rules by Cartmell & Murton.

I bought the e-version which is not well structured. Fortunately the designers have a website with downloadable reference sheets,

You never know what you are going to get with Osprey. They seem to have no quality control. Their rules sets include the full range from the superb Bolt Action to the awful Tomorrow's War.

IHMN reads very well when you go through it. Like Bolt Action you grasp immediately what the writers are getting at and can visualise how a game is played. There is a very Warlord-like lightness of touch. These rules are for people who have steampunk models and want to have a reasonable game with them. There are no innovatory systems, exciting new concepts blah, blah, just a well chosen set of mechanisms that do the biz with the minimum of fuss.

Movement is alternate, one figure at a time and shooting much the same. This presents interesting tactical choices. Preprogrammed armies are available from North Star with stats listed in the rules but there are comprehensive tables to allow a player to design his own team. Quite a wide range of 'talents' are available and some Victorian steampunk geekiness.

I and my long suffering regular opponent, Shaun, designed a couple of simple armies and got to it. We just used the core rules but had no difficulty playing immediately using the reference sheets with only an occasional check against the main rules.


The Scenario






Professor Fuzzlewit and his assistant have discovered a fascinating article on a Tibetan archaeological site. Being gibbering academics, they immediately announce their find in the Oxford Historical Review, attracting the attention of the Divine Sons of Heaven. That's them in a skirmish line just beyond the tents.





But feareth not, Captain Flashheart and a crack team of British Army regulars race to the rescue, having got wind of the devious foreign plot.





Battle was joined amongst the tents and temple and, as you will observe, our plucky British lads started to take a hammering from the wily orientals. Actually we both dashed around hitting nothing until we worked out how to exploit the shooting rules, well until Shaun worked out how to exploit the shooting rules.





Our brave lad's got a few blows back in return but alas, as so often happens in tactical skirmish games, a dodgy situation soon became a disastrous situation and Flashheart was forced to make a tactical withdrawal with the few British survivors.

But never fear, he shall return!

IHMN is what I fondly like to call a Ronseal game. It does what it says on the box, no more but no less. I enjoyed the game immensely and went out and bought the dead tree version. Something I should have done from day one. Note to Osprey: erules are not the same as an ebook. More navigation aids are needed.

Recommended!

Thursday, 25 July 2013

In Her Majesty's Service


My IHMS British Extraordinary force is finished - Hoorah!

It consists of a hero, Flashhear, a Guards heavy infantry squad, a squad of Hussars (rocket section), a Royal Engineer with a flamethrower, and a Naval Detachment with a Nordenfelt gun.

When I say finish, I mean finished except for a tow for the gun: possibly something from Ironclad and....the twitch..... the twitch is coming back....gibber.

Saturday, 20 July 2013

More Steampunk British






More from Spartan Games' Dystopian Legion British Starter Pack.

On the left, we have the sergeant, backbone of the British Army. On the right a Royal Engineer with a flamethrower and heavy armour.

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

In Her Majesty's Name: Flashheart's BEF



BEF, as any fule kno, stands for British Extraordinary Force. I have finished my new army for a game of In Her Majesty's Name.

Flashy of the NID has assembled a crack British Army team to investigate strange archeological investigations by Imperial Japan at The Temple of Strange Things in Tibet.

The team consists of: Lieutenant Fairbody, armed with an ARC pistol and sword; three 'heavies' from the Guards with breastplates and Lee-Mitford rifles; and four Hussars with air pistols and a Moriarty air rifle.

And of course Flashy himself with his trusty Luger Carbine.

Monday, 15 July 2013

Captain Flashheart






That intrepid agent of Her Majesty, Captain Flashheart of the Royal Navy, Naval Intelligence Department.

Stealer of hearts and Prussian secrets.


Sunday, 14 July 2013

Private 'Jocko' McGraw Takes Aim.






A private soldier from the Spartan Dystopian Legions British range.

My Steampunk elite British colonial force is now six strong.

Woohoo. Next up, Captain Flashheart.