A recent Twitter post bought this book to mind.
I brought a copy of this new from a bookshop in Slough, so it must have been quite late in my gaming life. In 1986 I was 15/16 and definitely not as much into this stuff as I had been for for the previous handful of years. I have no clue where I heard about this book but I have a definite memory of really wanting it. (And I remember showing it off to my friend Robbie, who was less impressed than I - perhaps gaming hadn’t gripped him as strongly as it had me, or perhaps he just wasn’t an idiot!!
So what is it? I guess you could say it was a kind of coffee table book showing nicely painted ( Citadel) miniatures. There is an intro from Ian Livingstone/ Steve Jackson that doesn’t say a lot and a large serving of John Blanche/ early Warhammer. It starts with an introduction to RPGs (dull) and then goes to fantasy battles. A bit about figure making then a section on painting - nothing new in today’s world but this must have been quite cool then.
The section on Master Painters is quite cool, who didn’t love THAT John Blanche minatour?
One note about the book that bears sharing is that many of the photos are on a black background so are actually often not that clear, a minor quibble, and my eyes were probably better then.
All of this interspersed with what can only be described as iconic GE art from the mid eighties as well as some crap line drawings of new mini ranges (why?).
To sum up, I loved it 34 years ago and I still love it now, though I’m not really sure why. All in all it should be on every gamer of a certain ages shelf - good fun.
Showing posts with label Games Workshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Games Workshop. Show all posts
Tuesday, 21 April 2020
Thursday, 16 August 2018
White Dwarf 40 - A classic of our time?
White Dwarf 40 was the first issue I brought back in the
day. It was released in April 1983 so I would have been 13. (I honestly thought
it was earlier than this, I must have been in secondary school when I got this,
much to my surprise.)
I have recently decided to rebuy my collection of White
Dwarfs (Dwarves?) and make a dedicated effort to read through them all and
understand what I saw in them back in the day. So what follows is a review of a
35 year old magazine based on my 2018 eyes.
First things first, the cover. I’m not an art guy so
pictures pretty much pass me buy, so whilst this cover is very familiar to me,
I have never really looked at it. So it’s pretty dull really; 2 long headed
alien type figures, looks like one male and one female. Fairly basic stuff, an
inauspicious start.
Inside we’ll look at the layout. At this time all of the
articles were sandwiched between pages of ads at the back and front. So we have
a full page ad for the Judge Dredd boardgame – dull but having something of a
renaissance at the moment. Then we have a page of ads featuring Games Workshop
Mail order and Fighting Fantasy Gamebooks. The FF books are only up to number 3
and the GW ad has special prices on a couple of items – Scorpion Hall for £4.95 and Tomb of the Lizard King for
£3.95. (This will not be the last time I wish I had a time machine!).
Next up, ads for a couple of game stores (One of which was
my LGS, Not Just Stamps – see a previous blog post) – both long gone I’m
afraid.
Followed by a full page Car Wars advert – includes both
Sunday Drivers and Truck Stop. Next 2 pages are more ads – for the new magazine
from TSR called Imagine as well as Otherworld Artefacts and for a Mail Order
Site, Poison Dwarf Games. For completeness I should say that I had all of the CW
stuff and played a little, I bought Imagine up to about number 10 back in the
day (I have subsequently had 2 full sets and sold them on – I’m thinking that
after my WD phase I might have to go back to Imagine again!). Poison Dwarf
games was actually a company I used a bit – their prices were very competitive
indeed. Don’t know if Otherworld is still going but there are, oddly, a few of their sets on ebay as we speak
Then a full page advert for a Citadel Miniatures Catalogue –
no glossy photos back then.
Then to the real content. Ian Livingstone does the brief
editorial, a brief comment over Fantasy or Science Fiction as inspiration for
books and games. ( I prefer fantasy games and Sci-Fi movies fwiw).
Dave Morris writes a 2 page Runequest article Zen and the
Art of adventure Gaming. Not very interesting to me but lots of nuts and bolts
stuff mainly about weapons and combat. Doesn’t really add a lot to the game but
I think this was when Ninjas etc were getting more frequent in popular culture.
3 page article on The Dungeon Master General – Mass combat
in D&D – sort of a rules system but frankly you would be better going
freeform on it – food for thought but not much else.
Critical Mass by Dave Langford – typical book review column
which I always really liked. Langford has a very dry writing style and gave me
a few pointers over the years for reading matter. (DL is still going strong – https://ansible.uk/
– well worth following). Foremost review is for White Gold Wielder the 6th
Thomas Covenant book from Stephen Donaldson (Could never read them.) I did read
the Myth series from Robert Asprin following this column though, yes I agree
the Pervect joke was overused but good fun
nonetheless.
Next up, Open Box, a 2 Page reviews column – good stuff here. Scorpion Hall – awesome,
bought it!
C1/C2/S2/I1 – a review of 4 classic AD&D modules – had
them all too. Scores of 8 all round except for I1 Dwellers of the Forbidden
City which got a 5 – Jim Bambra does give reason for this low score – I would
personally have given it a 7 but maybe that’s a lot of nostalgia coming to
bear.
Illuminati from Steve Jackson – no idea about a lot of these
pocket games but they always seemed to sell well.
Last, but by no means least, with an overall score of 9 we
have Starstone by Paul Vernon, enough said – if you can get hold of one do so,
I simply cannot recommend it highly enough – though why the map was oversized
to the book was always a mystery to me!
Letters page – Quite dull today – sorry not much in the way
of meat here. (Over the years some of the ongoing debates in these pages was
quite caustic – possibly some thoughtful editing coming in to play but
interesting al the same).
6 Page scenario from
Marcus Rowland – Eagle Hunt. This is a classic – I really don’t know how so
much information is squeezed into such a short space. MR wrote any number of
solid adventures but this really is good stuff – the Detective aspect of it is
a little forced but a great scenario.
Runerites – all about trading – nothing new here but a very
workable system – It could get abused by an Issaries guy though just out to
make Lunar if this was the way your campaign was going.
Assignment:Survey has a new ship for Traveller by Andy Slack
– a nice thing this – a bit of a step up from the usual Type S Scout – well
laid out and very usable. (There is a
scenario in issue 41 featuring this ship
- Off topic but the Snow Bird Mystery is another top drawer scenario for
a magazine – frankly better than most of the Traveller LBB range.)
Inhuman Gods part 2 – Dull – all you need to know about the
gods of Firenewts, Flinds, Flymen and Frog Folk – as pointless as you might
imagine it to be.
Wowser – 2 pages of a computer program in BASIC to enable
you to generate Runequest characters – how times have changed! I really don’t
think many of us would sit at a keyboard and input this now. At least it’s for
an Apple though – lord knows it could have been for a ZX81.
Magic Items – Standard fare – I can’t think of anything
pithy to say here – I feel though, that back then I should have sent in magic
item suggestions – I couldn’t write adventures but I think I could have got my
name in print for an enchanted item – sadly a missed opportunity.
News page – Some Chronicle Hobgoblins – like these sculpts
along with a set of treasure items from Torchlight.
Also is the news that Citadel Miniatures will be releasing a
product that “marks a completely new direction for the company” – Warhammer!!!
(Nuff said).
The news page - Truckstop is coming as is Scorpion Hall,
Battlecars and yet more Fighting Fantasy books – the humanity, where will it
end?
Small ads – I would buy all of the second hand stuff and
would also be up for the fanzines; Quasits & Quasars, Journal of the
Senseless Carnage Society, Wyrms Claw anybody? I tried the number of the guy
selling WD 1-20 but it doesn’t seem to work!!
That’s the real content over with, the rest of the mag is
filled up with more adverts – anybody
know anything about the PBM Vorcon Wars?
Ads for Salute at the Kensington Town Hall, Starstone as
well as a game shop in Wales and the PBM Crasimoff’s World(Think this was one
of the longest running PBMs).
There are full page ads for Star Fleet Battles, RQ and
Traveller and miniature companys Chronicle and Denizen.
Game shops – 1/8 page crap ad for the Gameskeeper Oxford –
still going and Esdevium, now trading as Asmodee as a game distributor.
Oh and Games Workshop only had 5 branches!!
So that’s it, in all its ancient glory. I really enjoyed
re-reading this and it brought back some fine memories. I brought this months
WD recently – side by side the 2 don’t really compare, though I have enjoyed
both, for very different reasons – Warhammer really did catch on didn’t it?
Back soon
Carl
Monday, 30 July 2018
The same light reading - an update
Just a very quick update concerning Dice Men - the coffee table book that any gamer of a certain age should be buying.
https://unbound.com/books/games-workshop/

I have previously stated that I am in on this and it looks like we might be on the home stretch - 92% funded and still going strong. I actually think that I like this method of funding better than Kickstarter and its cohorts, it sort of feels a bit more serious and professional.
https://unbound.com/books/games-workshop/

I have previously stated that I am in on this and it looks like we might be on the home stretch - 92% funded and still going strong. I actually think that I like this method of funding better than Kickstarter and its cohorts, it sort of feels a bit more serious and professional.
I have also boosted my own purchase to include the facsimile copy of Owl and Weasel number 1, which brings me to this fine fellow:--

Now even though this little item is SIX HUNDRED QUID a part of me thinks that it wouldn't be a bad investment. Clearly the price of many gaming items, particualry vintage ones has been rising steadily for a couple of years and this chap will surely one day be one of the most sought after items - and the releasing of the Dice Men book will only widen the group of people who will want this.
If I had the disposable income and a (very) understanding spouse I would be inclined to buy this and squirrel it away for a few years and double my money.
(As a little aside, the seller is an absolute legend so there is no risk whatsoever if you decide to buy this)
TTFN - review of WD40, and a bit of discussion about my collecting habits to follow soonish.
Carl
Sunday, 13 May 2018
Artistic License - Other peoples talent
Since my very earliest days in gaming I have always loved miniatures of all kinds - there's nothing better than seeing a well painted mini. My earliest figures were, of course, Citadel - pre-slotta because there was no such thing as a slotta base in those dim and distant days.
My favourites were FTD/FTG and FA, Dwarves, Gnolls (Goblins by any other name) and adventurers for the uninitiated. The Citadel catalogues were great - they never did show the complete range but just gave you a snapshot of what was available. Some of the ranges in those slim booklets were awesome, if not a little....odd. Creatures that go bump in the night, an assortment of dungeon dressings, as well as a reasonably wide selection of female victims of various torture devices - racks et al (along with the dungeon mistress to go with them). I would never have been brave enough to ask the lady at Not Just Stamps for these, and in any case my budget was never big enough for such frivolity.
Over the years I have vaguely dipped in and out of figure painting. My sons did a (very) small amount of Warhammer when they were younger - definitely encouraged by me so I could live vicariously but to be honest their hearts were never really in it. Just recently my younger son (who is 19) has just purchased himself a little lot of 40K minis and has begun painting them - which means I'm probably going to have a little go myself. I feel that my skills might be greater now then they ever have been - if only because of the number of you tube idiots guides out there - but mainly because I have seen that it is a good idea to wash and then highlight your figures - something that would never have occurred to me in the past! (Photos may follow if they come out ok!)
I have a selection of books on the subject - I like a "coffee-table" style tome - such things as GW Fantasy Miniatures books as well as assorted Dallimore books. It's interesting to see how style and standards have changed over the years - we don't see as much of the early 80's block colours that Citadel loved so much, a shame because it's pretty timeless.
Anyway, as previously stated, my talents are rather limited but the internet is full of examples of painted figures by people who have got some talent - Some of the entries to GW's Golden Demon and the Crystal Brush in America frankly beggar belief - I simply cannot comprehend the level of details that go into these things - would that I had a tenth of the talent.
So last up are a couple of my favourite examples, both Crystal Brush winners as it happens, but Google searching of such things is a time sink of links and pictures - well worth it if you want to feel vaguely inadequate!
(Anyone know good sites to go to for this nonsense, drop me a line. (Or idiot proof tips to improve my painting without making any effort whatsoever!)
My favourites were FTD/FTG and FA, Dwarves, Gnolls (Goblins by any other name) and adventurers for the uninitiated. The Citadel catalogues were great - they never did show the complete range but just gave you a snapshot of what was available. Some of the ranges in those slim booklets were awesome, if not a little....odd. Creatures that go bump in the night, an assortment of dungeon dressings, as well as a reasonably wide selection of female victims of various torture devices - racks et al (along with the dungeon mistress to go with them). I would never have been brave enough to ask the lady at Not Just Stamps for these, and in any case my budget was never big enough for such frivolity.
Over the years I have vaguely dipped in and out of figure painting. My sons did a (very) small amount of Warhammer when they were younger - definitely encouraged by me so I could live vicariously but to be honest their hearts were never really in it. Just recently my younger son (who is 19) has just purchased himself a little lot of 40K minis and has begun painting them - which means I'm probably going to have a little go myself. I feel that my skills might be greater now then they ever have been - if only because of the number of you tube idiots guides out there - but mainly because I have seen that it is a good idea to wash and then highlight your figures - something that would never have occurred to me in the past! (Photos may follow if they come out ok!)
I have a selection of books on the subject - I like a "coffee-table" style tome - such things as GW Fantasy Miniatures books as well as assorted Dallimore books. It's interesting to see how style and standards have changed over the years - we don't see as much of the early 80's block colours that Citadel loved so much, a shame because it's pretty timeless.
Anyway, as previously stated, my talents are rather limited but the internet is full of examples of painted figures by people who have got some talent - Some of the entries to GW's Golden Demon and the Crystal Brush in America frankly beggar belief - I simply cannot comprehend the level of details that go into these things - would that I had a tenth of the talent.
So last up are a couple of my favourite examples, both Crystal Brush winners as it happens, but Google searching of such things is a time sink of links and pictures - well worth it if you want to feel vaguely inadequate!
(Anyone know good sites to go to for this nonsense, drop me a line. (Or idiot proof tips to improve my painting without making any effort whatsoever!)
2016 Winner by Kirill Kanaev - just ridiculous!![]() |
Sergio Calvo 2018 Silver - not good enough for gold wtf!?
Friday, 16 March 2018
A Little More Reading
Folowing my last post I need to mention another book that may well pique your interest.
Dice Men: Games Workshop 1975 to 1985 is a coffee table book that we should all own - any boy of a certain age should own this and I would recommend that you order one immediately. (Particularly as this means I will get my copy quicker!)
I don't suppose that there is anything new here but it looks absolutely wonderful. The add ons are a bit of a mixture, I really want the Owl & Weasel but the Warlock of Firetop Mountain leaves me a bit cold. (And lunch witt the authors might be a little outside my paygrade.)
Do yourself, and your 12 year old self a favour and get one now

https://unbound.com/books/games-workshop/
Dice Men: Games Workshop 1975 to 1985 is a coffee table book that we should all own - any boy of a certain age should own this and I would recommend that you order one immediately. (Particularly as this means I will get my copy quicker!)
I don't suppose that there is anything new here but it looks absolutely wonderful. The add ons are a bit of a mixture, I really want the Owl & Weasel but the Warlock of Firetop Mountain leaves me a bit cold. (And lunch witt the authors might be a little outside my paygrade.)
Do yourself, and your 12 year old self a favour and get one now

https://unbound.com/books/games-workshop/
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