Here are some images of Dave Lycett's wonderful 90mm Macedonians and Persians from our game at the recent Partizan show. All of the miniatures are from Expeditionary Force and painted by David. I wrote a scenario called "Gaugamesque" because of its similarity to Gaugamela, and we fought it out on a very austere table with no terrain. I posted some pics on Facebook on Sunday, but there are more here.
Tuesday, 12 October 2021
T'other Partizan 2021
Scythed chariot, above and Persian foot, below- hand painted shields! All of the minis are of this quality.
Above, Dave converted some Schleich camels by adding a howdah and crew- Queen Semiramis would have loved these! Below, Darius' command chariot.
Above the Macedonian army (lovely Prodromoi in the foreground), and below the Persians.
Above, mid battle. We used To the Strongest!, of course. The Persians crushed the Macedonian left, and the Macedonians, the Persian left.
Below Phil Garton, David and Matthew Hotston who helped us to play the game and as the Persians, eventually crushed Alexander (but not before we gave them a few scary moments!).
The obligatory picture of wargamer, pointing. ;-)
Myself, above and Dave, below!
These figures really are terrific. There's a surprising amount of variety in the poses, more than some 28mm ranges!
The elephants are also converted from Schleich models, they are huge and quite stunning.
A huge thank you to Dave for bringing all his wonderful toys! Alas time was so short that I took no photos of any of the other games, and there certainly were some splendid ones at the show! It was a great show, kudos to the Newark Irregulars for scoffing in the face of Covid. It was great to see so many chums, after such a long interval, and oh so many miniatures!
Friday, 1 October 2021
Cheesy Indians at the London GT!
Last Sunday I took my Classical Indians to the London GT tournament. This is a massive event, mostly attended by Warhammer players, but also the largest tournament gathering of historical players. Above at the Warhammer players. The historical players were amongst those in the mezzanine (below), our players are in the second photo.
We had an odd number of players so I stood down for the first round which meant I had time to take a few mediocre photos, which I present in no particular order. I took other photos later in the event.
Above Gary Stark, and below his Seleucids. The latter were an interesting blend of Foundry and Aventine- these worked together very well- something I shall have to try! A superb looking army.
Below, there are a lot of elephants in my army, eight units for a total of sixteen models. Half of them are shown here. In one game I lost ten elephant models.
Above Steve Dover popped over for a chat. In the game I shot the Seleucids up with my Indians, killing their great leader (Antiochus Megas?) and generally gaining the upper hand (whilst losing a few elephants), although not winning outright. Below, the view from behind my lines.
Above, weedy Indian archers desperately try to pincushion the Seleucid pike before they get skewered in melee. Below Gary vs Dene Green (Lusitanians)
Above John Lavender (Principate Romans) vs. Colin Bright.
Above Steve Dover (I'm Spartacus!) vs. Andy Lyon (Gallic). Steve's army was composed of hordes of terrible-quality troops, but was very effective in his capable hands- he did some clever things with his generals.
Below Martin Sharp (Classical Indian) vs. Simon Purchon (Principate Roman).
Above Derek Pearson (Batavian Revolt Germans)- at the end of my final game. This was the only game of the six that I've played with the army where my plan (an arrow storm followed up by a big attack up the middle) actually payed off- in large part due to playing some fantastic lucky cards. An elephant trotted into the Batavian camp with minutes to spare.
Tim vs. Simon Purchon. Tim had a very interesting Galatian army, including lots of naked fanatics. Simon was using Principate Romans.
Above Martin Sharp (the other Classical Indian army) vs. Colin Bright (Middle Imperial Roman).
Above Andy Lyons (Gallic) and Dean Green (Lusitanian), and below Derek Pearson's Batavian Revolt vs. Gary Stark.
Tim has taken some photos which you can see on the forum Tim's photos
Here are the final scores.
1 Tim Thompson 528 Galatian 2 Steve Dover 525 Third Servile War 3 Simon Miller 465 Classical Indian 4 Martin Sharp 450 Classical Indian 5 Andy Lyon 445 Gallic 6 Simon Purchon 438 Principate Roman 7 Gary Stark 297 Selucid Imperial 8 Derek Pearson 279 Batavian Revolt German 9 Colin Bright 259 Middle Imperial Roman 10 Dene Green 255 Lusitanian 11 John Lavender 249 Principate Roman
Congratulations to Tim Thompson and Steve for runner up! A huge thank you to the organisers of the event and Dave Ruddock from the BHGS, and to Tim who did the scoring. Above all, thanks to everyone who scoffed in the face of Covid, the fuel crisis and the Insulate Britain fanatics in order to participate!
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