Friday, July 31, 2015

Gorkamorka!!!

Da Swedish Chef!
For some reason, every time I say or think the word "gorkamorka", the Swedish Chef voice is in my head saying "GORK DE MORK A".

Yeah, I know.

Okay, let's try this again.

Datz betta

Right now at the local game club, we're in the final stages of playing toss away Gorkamorka games to get a good handle on the rules before starting an actual campaign.  So that means, of course, that everything is in a "work-in-progress" state at the moment.

There always needs to be a centerpiece, so allow me to introduce you to Cassandra:

Junk armor plating and ram?  Check.
Stylish interior with Ork driver?  Check.
Dem rokkit boostas!?  Check and check.
Dem passengers?  Yeah sure okay, check.


Now clearly she's a WIP, but she's just a Revell Snap-Tite 1:35 scale fire engine, some bits, some plasticard, and a bit of spray paint all-told.  I've not decided yet if I'm going to try to keep it red, or if I'll go with a completely different theme.  Being the crazy person I am, I've already got plans for 3 different groups to play with... Haha!

Now obviously the campaign won't start out with me having this many models, but this is all that I've gotten so far in general (minus a few grotz that didn't make it into the picture):




And the last piece I'll show off today is the WIP gunner chair for the trukk.  I've taken a seating bit I had from a different game, put an Ork on it, and have rigged it up with a magnet to fit on the top of the trukk.  My intention is to work up a mount on the front of it where I can change out weapons to equip the trukk differently, which is why the Ork doesn't actually have a weapon attached yet.




I'll be sure to post up more pics as I get them painted, so that's all for today!  Now to the spray primer, and then the brushes!



Thursday, July 30, 2015

Warhammer: Age of Sigmar ...let's talk about it!

I mean shit, why not talk about it right away?  Second blog post, let's piss some people off! 

Very first thing, I want to start with this image:

This artwork is incredible.  Hate all you want.
That image was the first thing I saw in relation to Age of Sigmar (AoS hereafter). 

That image is fucking phenomenal.  And frankly, I feel like it sets the tone for how I feel about AoS in general.

But let's back up a minute.  "Who's this yay-hoo [because you'd probably use that term] actually liking a GW release, and what point of reference does he have for doing so?" is just the sort of question you might be asking yourself.  Well, I'll tell you!

I'm somewhat of an anomaly in the field of "seasoned gamers" because I didn't actually start playing games with GW stuff.  Now we could go off on a tangent here about how gamers like to wave their metaphorical dicks around about how many years they've been gaming, typically doing so by stating what edition of Warhammer Fantasy/40K they started with, and then spouting at least one reason why that edition was better than anything GW has released since then.  But I won't.  ;)  I started in on the miniatures hobby somewhere around 1995 with the X-Men board game "Under Siege", which came with these little 2" tall plastic figures that I decided would be fun to paint. 

Quality was surprisingly decent.  I need to find this game again...

Alas, I never got anyone to play the game with me (so why did they buy it for me?  So weird...) but I DID enjoy painting the figures so much that I continued on that trend.  And I did that by purchasing this box from the local comic shop:

Dat halfling!

I wish I could find my painted barbarian (he was my favorite) just to have it as a point of reference, but oh well.  Fast-forward a bit to high school, where I picked up the 3rd edition starter box for 40k (the Black Templar vs. Dark Eldar one) and promptly proceeded to get nowhere with it.  I assembled a few things, painted a few others, but never played a game.  No one else I knew was interested!  Go figure.

Cut to 2004.  Working part time at Toys R Us while in college, my good friend Kevin brings a new game to my attention, and alters the course of history.

We're *almost* to the Age of Sigmar stuff, believe it or not.

We played this game every chance we could get.  Many waaaaaay late weekend nights were spent with a case of Natural Ice, bags of homemade crazy spicy beef jerky, and rolling dice while laughing maniacally at games of Warmachine.  This was where the obsession began, for me.

That said, we were an insular group.  We didn't branch out to find new players (other than the couple we adopted into the hobby from work) so we didn't experience the shift in playstyle and the typical type of gamers this particular game brought in.  We weren't competitive, so much, and we played the game to have a good time.  No models were allowed on the table without having been painted first, even.  But eventually, as time moved on and situations changed, our scope had to broaden in order to play.  And while Kevin managed okay in the more competitive environment at large (because he plays Cryx and seriously fuck those undead cheaters) I stopped having fun playing the game.

During the next couple of years, I picked up quite a few different games, all of which I'll detail at a later time.  Because seriously, this post is still about Age of Sigmar.  I'm getting there.  It's all about the build up.  Or something.

So, while I've played a multitude of skirmish games in the interim, and actually collected decent armies for both 40k and Fantasy (and actually even played TWO games of Fantasy!... though no 40k...), I'm a bit OCD about my consumption of information.  I've kept up on the fluff/narrative of GW's systems, I've read some of the books, I've played some of the video games.  While I'm not a person who played WHFB and only WHFB, which would make AoS a reeeeeally big deal to me, the impact of what's happened isn't lost on me.  This is some serious shit.  The line has been drawn in the sand, and there appears to be no turning back.

And now, we're back to this:

Look at it again.  It's so pretty.
The Age of Sigmar, for a nostalgic-yet-skirmish-system-gamer like me, is kind of the coolest thing GW has ever done.  They've taken a product that carried 30+ years of baggage, with a fucking library of tomes of rules, and they've condensed it down in this new game system that allows for people to play with all of their old toys, bases don't matter, use whatever you want, and designed in a way for you to create fun stories and scenarios and battles with your friends.  There's no system in the way with the intent to set up a "balanced" game, because the hordes of Khorne aren't going to set up a meeting with the Lord Celestant of the Sigmarites before the battle and make sure it's a fair contest!  Because heroes are to be born on the tabletop, rolling that 6 eight times in a row and cutting a swath through the enemy forces, blocking their path to the objective at hand!  Because dammit, play toys!

I'll digress for a moment, here, and step down from my soapbox of excitement to clarify some things.  Yes, I fully understand that with this "system" in place, it's possible for folks to horrifically abuse it.  The guy who has buckets of disposable income can show up with 10 greater daemons and just win win win, while the average Joe can't compete in the arms race to match it.  It makes random games tougher, to a degree, because you can't just find Random Gamer X at the store and say, "35 points?  Okay go." and play out a game.  HOWEVER!  I fully believe those are arguments of laziness.  I'm sorry, but I do.  Let's take the horrifically outmatched forces example: Did you, as a kid, ever play action figures with a friend?  Did that friend maybe have a favorite character, like Wolverine or something, that would just never die or lose?  This example isn't that far removed, but hopefully we've grown into adults who have learned to compromise.  When I played toys with friends like that as a child, usually I didn't play toys with that friend again if it was too annoying.  Things haven't changed.  If I show up to play and my opponent sets down an annoyingly unstoppable force (that isn't part of a story we're trying to play out on the tabletop, because overwhelming-odds-last-stand-style stories are fun sometimes) but remains unwilling to compromise so that we can both have fun... I'm not playing toys with that person.  Simple!  And as for the other example, of being able to meet and play Random Gamer X... it's still profoundly doable with AoS.  It's just more of a conversation.  It requires me to talk to that gamer, make legitimate friends with that gamer, decide on what story to tell on the table with that gamer.  I will remember that gamer's name, probably friend them on Facebook, and in all likelihood play more games with that gamer for the foreseeable future.  If Random Gamer X is a douche who is uncompromising and anti-social... well damn, we're not going to play! I don't want to be friends with that guy.

Back on point.   

Age of Sigmar is rad, yo.  It's brought in a borderline GW gamer like me, and it's gotten me really excited.  The game is designed around making awesome models and having fun with your friends... not a win/loss ratio.

I know people have been upset about the state of the world and the story for it, but quite honestly, this is some well-written shit.
Well.  Written.  Shit.
The story picks up close to 1000 years after "The End Times" and the destruction of the Old World.  When the destruction took place, multiple deity-level entities survived, hurtled through time-and-space to what appear to be lands existing in the realms of magic (where the winds of magic actually came from in the Old World).  It's unclear, as of yet, whether that means this is essentially a new planet that exists in eight different dimensions (where the Gates allow travel through the dimensions), or if it is eight literal realms side-by-side and blocked off from each other.  But anyway, once cast into these realms, the deities and the handful of survivors they were able to save rebuilt civilization, more or less.  It was small, but they did it.  Chaos, bored as all hell in its respective 9th realm, saw the people having a good time in the other 8 and invaded, with all of the Chaos gods united in the endeavor.  The realms fought bravely, but ultimately lost, with Sigmar himself retreating to the Realm of Heavens, aka Azyr, and sealing off the Gates to it.  He stole away the best surviving warriors from the other realms as he did so, and in Azyr he "re-forged" them into the superior beings that are the Sigmarites.  (Yes, you're right, they are totally Space Marines.  They look similar, they act similar, they're the same.  But you know what?  People love Space Marines.  They're fucking cool.)  Now, where the story starts again for us, Sigmar is sending his superior army of Sigmarites back into the 8 realms to take them back from Chaos.  The Chaos gods have grown complacent in their overall victory, once again bickering and battling for strength against one another, and Sigmar is taking the opportunity to strike against the disassembled foe.  With the Sigmarites leading the charge, the remaining holdouts of forces in opposition to Chaos that have been on the defensive for many years come out in full force to strike while the opportunity presents itself.

This first big book, as pictured above, details the first attack of the Sigmarites (which is what the starter box is, by the way) in narrative form, and then picks up the story in the Realm of Life (Ghyran) where the tree spirits (Treemen, Treekin, Dryads, etc.) are fighting with the forces of Nurgle.  The book has some wonderful story in it, and details several scenarios for playing out the current battles in the Realm of Life (because the starter box book has the scenarios for the first battles of the Sigmarites).  The book also provides some details on what the other races are up to in the other realms and/or their motivations, setting the stage for future stories and army releases.  Personally, I'm most looking forward to these guys:

The dwarfs return... and so do the chaos dwarfs!

 The Age of Sigmar has a living, progressive narrative.  The Old World was rich with stories and tales, which are just as worth reading now as they ever were before, but it's overall progression was halted.  That's not the case with AoS.

Overall, at least thus far, I'm very happy about the state of the game and its world and where they're taking it.  Obviously I'm not the most concerned individual about rules, and balance, and boring technicalities... because seriously, if you and your friends can't work those out and play with your toys, what are you even doing?

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

As with all things... a Beginning.

Should I welcome you?  Is that customary?

I'm a little new to this, is all.

You see, I'm a member of what is termed "The Generation of Nostalgia" (or at least that's what those of us who care about such things term ourselves), which is that particularly small group of people who were kids in the early 90's that are just barely old enough to clearly remember technologies that became obsolete during our adolescence;  we're the ones who spent our formative years watching the level of cultural technology hit the exponential curve like a baseball hitting the spinning wheel in a batting cage.  We had parents with late 70's and early 80's mentalities who were suddenly presented with things like the internet and car phones while we were busy rollerblading and getting hurt on all-metal playgrounds with our grade school friends, and by high school we were just starting to see the indestructible Nokia cell phones become widespread.  AOL chat rooms were my jam for more years than they probably should have been.  I spent my early childhood calling friends on the single-line household phone, and my early adulthood frustrated when a friend didn't answer his/her cell phone, listen to a voicemail, or call me back in a prompt fashion because I knew that shit was just in their pocket.  I first contacted the most important person in my life with a private message through MySpace while in college (because what else was I going to do, hit on her in person like the rest of the socially-retarded neanderthals?  For shame.) because our school hadn't been added to the burgeoning online yearbook called "Facebook" yet.  We take an awkward offense to the term "Millennials" because dammit, we are just past that line, and that is not us.  And so, in the weird way that everything-old-is-new-again, we've come full circle to blogging.

So you're likely experienced with this.  That subscription button on the right?  That took me a bit to figure out.  I'm 30 going on 57, apparently.  I abuse Facebook groups with my presence constantly.  Memes are probably my favorite method of expression to come out of the modern internet age, because after all, a picture is worth a thousand words... so a meme allows you to express a short 3-10 word thought with a picture backing it up inflecting tone.  (So rad!)  But all these feeds and links and responsibilities I'm unaccustomed to doing.  Where's Zuckerberg when you need him?

Anyway!

I play a lot of tabletop games.

Well, let me re-phrase that.

I own a lot of tabletop games?  Like, comparatively speaking?

I don't tend to have very much time to play all of them, considering the full-time-plus job, and the family, and my internal struggle with self identity where I want to be social and go to the game club night but I also want to go down into my basement and put in headphones to shut out the world while painting/assembling miniatures.  Does everyone do that?  Surely not?

This is the part where I would normally want to say something like, "So, expect to see lots of different things on this blog," or "I will make many posts about different games blah blah blah" or some other sound-good pseudo promise of commitment bullshit.  I really don't want to do that here.  I have an infatuation with this hobby in general, and flash-in-the-pan love affairs with the various games contained therein.  I get REALLY excited about new projects, new games, new painting methods, etc.

Because ice cream sandwiches are just like new tabletop games.  Seriously.  Think about it.

Very few games hold my attention for a long time (relatively speaking, anyway, based on your particular view of how quickly time passes) so that an army typically manages to no longer hold my attention once I've conquered it.  What I mean by that is that, for example, let's say I'm going to make a new army for Warmachine.  So I'm going to pick it out, create some kind of theme around it in my mind (because I don't do "studio scheme" anything, typically), and then the thrill of acquisition sets in.  That consists of what do I have that I can sell off, and what is the best deal I can trade/purchase what I need at this moment.  This part of the process thrills me to the point where I follow the hype waves in the market based on releases for army books, games, updated rules, etc., and will trade down on armies with low hype just to have them in my stable to trade away when the wave comes back up, doubling or tripling their value.  It's the whole start with a paperclip and trade up to a car principle.  This has left me with too many toys, which means I'm pretty quick to jump in on a new game or new army because it's just a few trade list posts and e-mail away from arriving on my doorstep.  Once I've acquired what I need, I'll build/convert it, and then get it painted.  I'll play a few games with it... and the thrill is gone.  The shiny has worn off.  The effort is spent.  And then it's on to a new project.

The exception to this rule is when a project/game/army has the ability to evolve over time, as with a campaign. If I have a timeline guiding me, with short burst goals during the course of it (rather than just "finish the project") then I get to stay excited playing with the same toys over and over because they're evolving in how they play or they're getting new friends added or whatever.  That's why I'm so excited over something like GorkaMorka and its campaign system, or participating in a local Infinity league, or playing a game like Dark Age or Wrath of Kings where the story and the rules for the game are constantly evolving from the design company down, changing things up consistently.

I'm not in this hobby to be competitive or make the strongest list.

I'm in it to play with toys.

So maybe 30 going on 57 is accurate... but I never really made it past 12.  Time is immaterial in the warp, after all.  ;)