Saturday, 16 November 2024

Release the Kraken!

Back on track with my plan to play some Umbrella Academy the board game with my wife, I’ve finished another character:


This was the character that my gut felt I’d most likely take, but I really need to get round to re-reading the comics to see if I’m not just being swayed by the tv series (which reminds me, we still haven’t watched the last season of that…)


Lots and lots of grey makes up the Kraken’s uniform, and I went with a more yellow hair colour because I felt it would pop a bit more on the board.

As well as taking the siblings, in the game there are Allies that can come to your aid. Im not entirely sure how that works, as the cards are still shrink wrapped, but figured I should paint some up too just in case, and what better choice than Mom, the Umbrella Academy’s robotic caregiver:


I went for an unnatural skin tone that I really drive home at a glance that this isn’t a human (and she looks a bit like an Auton), and gave her solid black eyes too (thanks, Gundam Marker!) 


The dress was a it of an experiment - I couldn’t find any reference images for this outfit with a quick google, so took inspiration from someone else’s paint job, but decided that I wanted it to look slightly odd, and so went with a grey tone for the shadows, in the hopes it would make it look like a really dull, not fancy material. Not sure if I quite captured that, but done is done, and into the box they go:


Finishing these two brings the Tally to:

60 vs 192 = -132


What’s next? There are more Allies in the box that could in theory make an appearance, so those should be next up on the painting tile, and I should probably get the rest of the surviving siblings painted, so that we have options for playing (plus, I suspect they might also turn up as Allies during the game, so it wouldn’t hurt to have them on hand…)

Monday, 11 November 2024

Super Mission Force: first thoughts

Having previously played superhero games with my kids using some basic rules of my own creation, we wanted something a bit more in-depth (as in my bare bones rule set essentially each hero was a set of similar stats with a single special ability), but still simple and quick enough that my five year old could play it with us. Having seen other people playing it online, I thought we’d give Super Mission Force a try. 

While there is an excellent set of character creation rules in the rule book, for speed I grabbed some pre-generated characters from the Files section in the Four Colour Studios Facebook group. I figured for our first game while we’re learning the rules we would take a single character each, and stick to basic abilities (ignoring manoeuvres). My son wanted to be Venom, obviously, so I figured I’d take Spider-Man, for thematic reasons. My daughter, on the other hand, wanted to be Boom Boom, because I described her as ‘blowing things up and being sassy’, which apparently appealed.

According to the profiles it would be an even match for Venom to take on both Spider-Man and Boom Boom, so we set up our map to represent Venom bumping into the pair of heroes on their way home from a mission. Despite rolling fewer dice, my son was able to win the initiative on the first turn and so Venom was able to web swing his way across the entire map immediately:


Fun fact - we ended up using pretty much just this sixth of the map for the entire game. 

Super Mission Force uses a goal system (actually, I think it officially uses the trademarked Goalsystem) wherein you roll a dice pool and count successes, and I realised that I could use the dice from my old Havok set:


I figured this would be handy for the kids, counting skulls as one and explosions as two, rather than having to parse the numbers on a pile of regular dice. Inevitably, we all rolled terribly and so the game lasted longer than was statistically likely.

Also, our home printer didn’t want to behave today, so I hand wrote stat cards onto index cards for this game:
 

Long story short, Spider-man and Boom Boom did their best, but just couldn’t do consistent enough damage to overcome Venom’s health regeneration (despite managing to drop him down to his last health at one point). At one point Spider-Man webbed Venom so successfully that he could only break free if he rolled 6 successes on 4 dice, but they couldn’t even take him down despite him being totally immobilised, and my sone rolls better than his father so Venom was able to burst his bonds and wreak vengeance on the heroes:


Final thoughts: I like it! It was slightly slow going while we got used to the basic rules, but even my five year old was able to grasp the general mechanics pretty quickly. The game got a bit samey towards the end (punch, punch, try to stun so can run away then jump in for a big punch), but I think that’s more to do with there being so few figures on the board that rounds were pretty quick - with more figures per side, there would be more variety in each round. Not that we didn’t enjoy it with just a single figure each, as the goal system makes for fairly dramatic turns, where sometimes you roll a ton of dice and get bupkiss, only for your five year old to roll a statistically unlikely result on four dice to then rip himself out of your webs and proceed to murder everyone, so I think we’ll be playing again…

Sunday, 10 November 2024

Everyone’s favourite quasi-dead guy

When asking my wife what character she thought she’d like to play if I was painting things for the Umbrella Academy board game, having seen the TV series she was quick to answer Klaus, so here he is:


Maybe I should go back and sort his eye out, but frankly he looks half decent as a board game piece so I’m happy with that.


The deathly skin tone didn’t come out quite how I’d planned, but honestly might look better than that, so happy little accidents, may they long continue.

Painting him brings the Tally to:

58 vs 192 = -134

And means the first tray in the box looks like this:

Saturday, 9 November 2024

I’m Venom, my body weight is 40% tongue…

In between painting pieces for the Umbrella Academy board game, since I already had some black paints out I also finished this monstrous guy:


Whenever I’ve played with superhero miniatures with my children, my youngest has always asked to be Venom, which I didn’t have a miniature of, but thanks to eBay I’ve managed to rectify that. I’m not sure where my son’s love of the character comes from - he’s desperate to watch the Tom Hardy movies, but given that he’s five that’s not really on the cards yet. 


The spider logo came out quite nicely, I think, due to judicious use of Gundam liner pens to get the bits that I’d have struggled to line with a brush, then carefully tidying up with a brand new brush that came with my Father’s Day present, and has rapidly become my current favourite brush.

You wouldn’t believe it, but the black on Venom is three different shades, which you’d struggle to see in my pictures. Believe it or not, this was the second set of pictures I took of Venom, using natural light, but here’s another posed picture from the original set of Venom menacing the Spider-Man that I painted years ago:


I’m hoping to play some a super Mission Force with the kids, so I need to work out the stats for the symbiote. When asking my son who else he thought he might like to be on the same team as Venom, his first answer was Spider-Man (which I initially tried to object to, but thought the better of it), followed by Green Goblin. I have a Hobgoblin mini that I could paint, but apparently only ‘Green Goblin, wearing purple and green’ will do.


As of now, the Tally stands at:

57 vs 192 = -135

Now, back to the Umbrella Academy board game, no distractions. Honest.

Sunday, 3 November 2024

Candy chomping assassins…

So, I’ve had the Umbrella Academy board game for about a year now, and figured I should probably try and play it a couple of times to justify the expense. Flicking through the rule book, I saw that to play with my wife for the first mission I’d only need to paint the characters we were using and Hazel and Cha Cha, so I set about getting on that:


I mean there’s also Allies and whatnot, but starting small makes me feel like I’m more likely to achieve my goal.

Being that the board game is based on the comics rather than the Netflix series, one benefit is that the colour schemes are fairly limited, so it’s pretty quick to get thing finished when I can actually stay awake long enough to get some painting done (working late at work the night before my week off when the clocks went back the day after absolutely wrecked my sleep schedule, resulting in my falling asleep after putting the kids to bed the first four or so nights of my week off, which is usually my painting time).


One down side to them being based on the comics is that it’s a comic written by Gerard Way, so black features heavily, which can be a pain to paint. The psychotic pair’s suits are really a very dark grey, and I’m starting to wonder if maybe I should invest in some sort of Contrast or Speedpaint Black for future miniatures…

Painting these two brings the Tally to:

56 vs 192 = -136

Now my board game looks like this:


Only about a million to go!

Sunday, 27 October 2024

Zomtober 2024 Week 4

 Another Sunday, another painted zombie:


The last of the TTCombat zombie halflings that I had prepped, this time wearing a fancy hat.


I did have plans for a big finish for the month, but unfortunately work and family got in the way somewhat and my extra stuff wasn’t ready by deadline day. Ah well, they’re half painted, maybe I’ll get them finished off next week…

That means that post-Zomtober, the Tally now stands at:

54 vs 192 = -138

And after a couple of years, the zombie unit looks like this:




That’s nearly a legal minimum size unit! 

Sunday, 20 October 2024

Zomtober 2024 Week 3

Another week, another zombie (he types for the second time, as apparently Blogger is having a day of it and rather than publishing this post just wiped the whole thing, so I’m starting from scratch):



I decided to quickly convert another zombie beastman this week to get back on the Zombieslayer theme - he’s a fairly simple conversion, being just a reposition of the original miniature rather than adding any specific zombie parts.

The arm hanging off by a thread (that I realise you can barely see in these pictures, annoyingly) was something of a happy accident - where I was cutting the shield arm off to reposition it to look like it is dangling uselessly rather than being brandished, when I went to pin it back into place, I realised that leaving the central pin showing would look like a bone of strand of gore!

If the gore looks wet, that’s because it is - it was applied about three minutes before this picture was taken, and then I had to go out in the rain to photograph it!

I also have this chap to offer, a backup that was painted just in case I wasn’t able to convert and paint his bestial brethren in time for the Sunday deadline:


Another TTCombat zombie halfling, this time looking like a tiny zombie publican.


As well as finishing these two miniatures, the Tally has taken some swings in other directions too:

@tmcllghn_paints sent me some heads for a conversion for the Alamo project (because apparently I’m of an age where I want to convert things based on something I’ve seen in a picture in an Osprey), but there’s a whole mini left there so it counts:


I also discovered that a friend’s partner had expressed an interest in trying out miniature painting, so after picking his brains in the car after coming back from a wildlife park last week I pulled together a gift of a sprue of Vikings and a handful of LOTR minis to have a bash at.

All in, the Tally now stands at: 

53 vs 192 = -139

What’s next? At least one more zombie, hopefully!

Sunday, 13 October 2024

Zomtober 2024 Week 2

 Another Sunday, another tiny dead thing - or two, this week, as they’re even tinier than the last one:


Two zombie halflings, rising from their tiny graves. The one on the left had some indeterminate facial features (I suspect what I mistook for jowls May in fact have been intended to be a moustache), but a generous dose of blood makes it all better. I know, I know, bloody zombies don’t really make sense when they’re rising from the grave (as opposed to being a fresh corpse reanimated) but as ever rule of cool wins out over science when we’re talking about our little dollies…


And the back! These are probably going to be making up the back ranks of the unit, but I put an equal amount of effort into every mini, front and back, regardless. 

Finishing these two brings the Tally to:

51 vs 205 = -154

Two weeks down, two more to go!

Sunday, 6 October 2024

Zomtober 2024 Week 1 - the tiny dead…

It’s the first Sunday in October, and that can only mean one thing: Zomtober!

My original plan was to convert some more zombie beastmen to supplement the Zombieslayer inspired unit from last year, but time has conspired against me and I haven’t made any headway on that yet. However, having broken the seal on using non GW models in my Warhammer armies (Super was right) I figured that I could quickly paint some of the TTCombat zombies from the mystery box a friend and I drafted to bulk up that unit until I can make some more themed ones, the first of which looks like this:


I was originally tempted to paint them up like a Night Goblin, but figured I’d stick to neutral browns both for speed and also so they’d blend more into the finished unit.


At first glance they look like some sort of monk or priest, but then you see the chains and it raises some questions, I guess they were a naughty halfling in life…

Painting them brings the Tally to:

49 vs 205 = -156

Th king about it, if I finish Zomtober, I’ll hit my yearly challenge of averaging at least one painted mini a week, nice!

What’s next? I’ve got enough TTCombat zombies prepped that I’ll be able to hit all four weeks of Zomtober, but I still live in hope that I’ll be able to convert and paint some more thematic zombies. Now to find a 25th hour in the day, and also one of the old metal Minotaurs with a double handed weapon for a conversion that I’ve had knocking round in my head for years…

Tuesday, 17 September 2024

Dem bones dem bones

 Dem ratty bones:


A kind chap called Andrew over on the Oldhammer Community Facebook Group offered some free nonhuman skeleton minis, as long as people promised to paint them, so here we are!


It might seem weird, but in its own way this is a big step for me - this is the first non GW mini in one of my Warhammer armies. When you think about it logically, I’m never going to play in an official tournament or even in a Warhammer store (doubly so now that I’m only really enthused about out of print editions of their games), so why shouldn’t I just use whatever miniatures I think are cool? It’s a conscious step that I’ve had to take though, as the official messaging has always been you can only use ‘proper’ Warhammer in your Warhammer, and I guess I had been conditioned by that thinking since the age of… nine, maybe?

Whatever, cast off the (mental) shackles of the capitalist overlords, here he is hanging out with some other bony boys:


In order to paint him, I also had to receive him, and the Tally shall be adjusted thusly.


I also treated myself to a copy of Wargames Illustrated, because it came with a sprue of greatcoat wearing French napoleonic types, which would be ideal conversion fodder for my Alamo project:

Yes, the Alamo project that I’ve only actually fully finished a single miniature of and here I am buying more miniatures for it, yes that one.


All things factored in, the Tally now stands at:

48 vs 205 = -157


What’s next? My painting tile has a broad variety of half painted minis currently, where my attention has wandered somewhat. Then again, it’s Zomtober soon, which usually helps to narrow that focus!

Sunday, 1 September 2024

Like dogs, only scaly, and bitier…

And so finally we come to the end of the Travelodge minis:


A pair of… drakes? I think one is an ambush drake, the other I’m not sure about. 

The family D&D game may well swing into Tyranny of Dragons once we finish the mash up of the various starter set adventures I’m running for them currently, so I figured a pair of tiny dragons would probably come in handy as they start smashing up the operations of the Cult of the Dragon:


As ever, they’re surprisingly nice sculpts for pre-paints. Not so nice that I’d pay the shipping costs on more of them though…


Finishing these brings the Tally to:

47 vs 198 = -151


As for what’s next, your guess is as good as mine! The orcs that I was previously painting have already been used half-painted a couple of times in D&D, plus I’ve been overcome with a sudden urge to paint some superheroes of the mutant persuasion…

Friday, 30 August 2024

The adventures of Time the Necromancer: Ishtar’s Weapon Shop

It’s my birthday today, so while my wife was baking me an Eton mess cake and slow cooking brisket, I decided to play Frostgrave with my children. No full report as usual, as I figured it was a recipe for disaster with regards to my children’s patience if I stopped to take notes every time anything happened, so here is a handful of pictures and some key happenings:

My daughter (9) took charge of rolling for the monsters, and my son (5) took charge of rolling for the ‘heroes’ and providing tactical advice. This largely led to multiple castings of the Grenade spell, regardless of what the optimum choice would otherwise have been. So, not much different from when I play solo I guess…


(If you look carefully, you can see the cabinet that I built specially for this game, and also my son’s one - his is the one in much brighter colours!)

The thing with my daughter is, she tends to roll more 20s than I do. Like, a lot. Tim’s group took their usual approach of having a strong force race up the centre planning to smash a path to the cabinet with two faster flanking forces sneaking up the sides to hit the magic locks, only for a pair of goblins to smash my strongest fighters down to 2 Health each in the very first combat of the game.

On the other hand, my son had some amazing rolls too - there was a single combat where my daughter rolled a 20, and so the only way to win was if he could also roll a 20 - which he did! That was pretty cool, as we all absolutely lost it, even dragging my wife in to clap appreciatively…

This next picture is my daughter showing that she’s enjoying the game, just before the Captain used one of their irreplaceable magic arrows with an explosive tip to wipe out half of those goblins, and seriously injure the other two, with some amazing rolls on my son’s part!


It largely went downhill from there though - my daughter continued her hot streak of rolls, taking warriors out left right and centre, and only my tactical nous (and careful hiding, mostly) carried me through.


Both thieves were able to sneak through and unlock the cabinet, but unfortunately one of them got shanked by a goblin, leaving Tim to have to pick up one of their treasure tokens himself with his own hands.


In an incredible display of sense Tim even chose not to cast a spell one turn to be able to put more energy into beating feet back to the exit door, helped along the way by his Apprentice (who had largely been skulking behind various ruined walls by the exit door desperately trying to avoid being spotted by goblins)  poking his head round a corned to cast Leap on Tim, launching him away from a pursuing goblin and closer to safety. 

By the time the game ended, only the spellcasters and the thief with the Treasure Token escaped, leaving a lone zombie doing their best distraction routine (arms waving and ‘kick me’ sign, presumably) surrounded by goblins, and everyone else in various states of unconsciousness.


Post-game, Tim gained enough XP that he could have gained 4 levels, but having no Grimoires to learn new spells from only gained 2, gaining another point of Health (as both spellcasters took a bunch of damage, entirely from failed spell rolls and cutting to empower spells), and improving the Brew Potion spell (because it sure would be handy to have a bunch of healing potions!). I realised that I’d accidentally cheated in the previous game, as you can only improve one spell per game (when I was planning to also improve Strength and Grenade, as the spells which get cast the most), but I’m not going to go back and undo it at this point, I’ll just have to make sure I remember for next time!

The Captain also gained a level (due to making 9 kills this game, which I’m fairly sure is more than they’ve made in the rest of the campaign so far), gaining another point of Health.

For treasure, in this scenario you have the choice of taking a special magic weapon per token, or rolling on the usual treasure tables. While unique weapons are cool, I left the magic vampiric crossbow in favour of rolling for treasure, hoping to get a pile of money and maybe a Grimoire so that Tim could learn a new spell. Unfortunately, I rolled 20gc and a scroll of Banish, which is better than nothing, I guess. The Sword of Wounding & Healing goes to the recently recovered Knight - I would have preferred to give it to the Captain, as it’s basically their magic sword with a fringe additional benefit (and her pockets are full, so it’s not like she could carry a healing potion anyway), but she wouldn’t have given back her existing sword, so I figured it was better to improve the overall combat abilities of the group! Speaking of the Captain, making money (from this treasure, and also finding a handful of coins at their base) meant that she took her cut as usual - 13%, now that she’s levelled up.

Of all of my wounded warriors, everyone was fine apart from the Man at Arms who died, but Tim was able to afford an almost identical replacement. I was tempted to try a different soldier type, but that’s the toughest frontline fighter of the basic soldier types, so we’re sticking with it for now.

Next, Tim thinks he needs to learn some new spells, so is going to follow up on rumours of a hidden underground library that has recently been unearthed…


It being my birthday, the Tally also took a little hit, as my pile of presents included the latest Warhammer part work, after I asked my wife if she could grab me one during the week when she had to nip into town, and she was then secretive when I asked her if she’d been able to:


At this point in life, I’m not super fussed about 40k, but I can’t resist a bargain - and anyway, I’d still be tempted by something narrative like Acolyte or Kill Team…


The Tally now stands at:

45 vs 198 = -153


Sunday, 25 August 2024

The adventures of Tim the Necromancer: Writhing Fumes

As alluded to previously, I was ready to play the next scenario in the continuing adventures of Tim the Necromancer, and so the Friday night before my wedding anniversary set up for Writhing Fumes, a solo scenario from the Perilous Dark expansion.


This scenario is fabled for being… challenging, shall we say. Even the author himself says that he might have misjudged the game balance for this one, and suggests using fewer enemies that the scenario as written. I figured I’d play it straight though, but remain mindful of the internet’s advice of ‘don’t forget that it’s not a straight up fight, remember the objective and get out of the door’.

I’d also bough the Mortal Enemies expansion since the last time I’d played, so dutifully rolled to see if the Mortal Enemy would gate rash this scenario, figuring that it was pretty unlikely as they’d only appear on an 18 or more, fully expecting that it just meant that they were more likely to appear in a future scenario. And obviously, rolled an 18.


Well, we’ll see how a maniac and their gang of merry misfits appearing at some point during the scenario affect the difficulty of an already famously hard game…

Tim, about to assault the alchemical supplies store that he’d heard so much about from his recently hired Captain, suddenly realised that he couldn’t remember how to cast the Strength Spell, which was his usual go-to for super-powering one of his beaters to clear a path ahead of him. That’s weird, he thinks, before shrugging and carrying on. He raised a zombie, his other go to spell, before he and his apprentice both failed to brew a potion. With that, the gang barrels into the alchemical supplies store, spying the door across the way that would lead them to a magic weapon shop, or so the story goes…


As the group split into three prongs (because, you know, tactics) the central group bumrush the closest slime, hoping to rapidly despatch it and clear a path to the exit, with nothing else worth doing Tim casts a Control Construct on a distant Ballista - and succeeds! 

This, we have a stompy robot wearing kitty ears to denote that it’s part of the warband:


The bum rush unfortunately fails, with the ooze rolling a 20 in combat, smashing the Barbarian down to only one health remaining. It then destroys the summoned zombie, but thankfully Tim’s Bullywug Thug is able to best it in combat, although unable to damage it, and so pushes it back to give his allies a chance to regroup.


The left flank team heading towards a treasure token split up - the Captain and Man at Arms continue to sprint toward the treasure, while the much slower Knight moves to reinforce the centre, whose thrust up the middle has been mostly blunted. 

The Apprentice, in what will become a recurring pattern throughout the majority of this game, fails to cast the Push spell, and hurts themself in the process.

Unfortunately for Tim’s new pet robot, monsters act before warband members, and a slime slams into it dealing massive damage, before it is finished off by the other Ballista’s cannon arm! RIP Stompy Robot, you dies before you really got to do anything.

Team right flank (a Thief, a Tracker, and the Hound, so a fast moving strike force) sneak up towards the other treasure token, while the apothecary moves up and heals the Barbarian. I wish I had some more health potions, at this point. Especially when another large Ooze masquerading as a Vapour Snake spawns right in the faces of Team Centre:


In an unusual turn of luck though, the Barbarian and Knight are able to hack it apart in short order, putting them back to square one, one ooze to defeat to clear the path. 

Tim, starting to see that they need to not get bogged down and get a bit of a hop on, casts Leap on the Man at Arms, sending him hurtling over to the treasure token. Behind him, his Apprentice again falls to cast Push.

Operation Right Flank spread out - the Thief goes for the treasure, the Hound moves towards the centre of the board to lure away the slime, and the Tracker fans out to get into a position to shoot - which he does, but unfortunately the maximum damage that a slime can receive from shoring is 1, so 11 more of those to go before it’s dead! 


Die to a slight positioning mistake on my part, the Apprentice finds himself getting jumped by an ooze, and so the Captain races back to save him.


The Captain expends the use of one of their special skills, but unfortunately rolls awfully, so while they do win the combat, they are able to do little more than push the ooze back. Which is enough to get the Apprentice out of immediate danger!

In the centre, the gang manage to batter an ooze down to having only 4HP left, but aren’t able to finish it off, and there’s a second one closing on them fast:


At this moment, the Apprentice suddenly realises that he should have raised a zombie to replace the one hat got taken out earlier rather than trying to cast Push - raising zombies is also significantly easier! 

Over on the right, things take a turn for the worse as my keen tactical positioning is completely undone by the sudden appearance of two small slimes between the Thief and the treasure token:


Tim attempts to cast Control Construct again on the remaining Ballista, but fails, so cuts to make it a success, as he quite likes the idea of having his very own stinky robot to clear a path to the door. (Writing this post-game, Tim has a scroll of Control Construct, so could have just burned that to make the spell a success rather than sacrificing health, but that’s just the way it goes sometimes).

The Apprentice meanwhile summons a zombie between himself and the ooze that was previously trying to digest him, allowing him to then leg it after Tim towards the exit door.

The central group manage to dispatch the wounded ooze just as another leaps at the Apothecary, who manages to successfully fend it off. The recently summoned zombie takes a beating, but isn’t destroyed, so hangs in there tying up that ooze for another turn.

Things go worse for the Thief, who is taken out of action by one of the small oozes in one swing! The second then slimes its way over to the Tracker, but doesn’t have an action left to attack him this turn.

The Controlled Construct is able to lumber over and smash the exit door open first try though, which is nice. 


The Knight bundles in to combat to rescue the Apothecary, but unfortunately rolls a 1 while the ooze rolls a 20:


Which takes him down to 2 Health. The Barbarian then tries to get involved, but only manages to get themselves smacked back down to 1HP. The Thug takes their turn whaling on the ooze, but also gets smacked in the face. At this Pont the ooze is now completely surrounded, but also seems to quite clearly be winning.


The Hound and the Tracker (all that remains of operation right flank) don’t fare much better either, and then to make matters worse, Tim’s Mortal Enemy suddenly appears on the left flank:


With a howling of wolves and gnashing of teeth, a group of lupine themed marauders stalk in. Behind them is a figure in a diaphanous gown, seeming to almost float behind them. Two human figures in the group carry wolf head shields that are identical to the one carried by Tim’s Man at Arms - coincidence, or evidence of betrayal? Further clues seem to be that they seem to be targeting that selfsame Man at Arms, who is currently trying to escape with some treasure under his arm…

Seemingly oblivious to this, Tim Pushes an ooze away from his dog as he calmly walks towards the exit door. The Apprentice, noticing the commotion behind them, tries to cast Leap on Tim to send him closer to the exit, but fails.

A couple of fights go the way of the gang, including the Barbarian finally being able to take out the surrounded ooze.

The Mortal Enemy gang all scramble after Tim and the Man at Arms, while the Lich casts Beauty on herself, calling out ‘do you not recognise me now, lover?’

(Cue a timely Evil Dead reference):


 The Tracker over on the right flank manages to push back one of the two oozes on him, just as the Hound bounds over to try and take out the second one (in the hopes that the Tracker might then sneak over and snaffle the Treasure Token) but is immediately consumed by the living blob.

The Knight meanwhile chops down the ooze that had been haranguing the Apothecary, leaving the Barbarian and Thug free to then start moving up to catch up with the rest of the gang!


The Thug runs up to try to rescue the Tracker, and manages to push back the second slime, but for how long?

Seeing a horde of new foes now hot on his heels, Tim casts Slow on a pursuing werewolf, before turning tail and hot footing it towards the exit door.

Due to my tactical prowess, the Lith doesn’t have line of sight to anyone, so wastes a turn stomping around on foot.


Seeing the number of foes mounting up immediately behind them, Tim summons a fresh zombie to hold them up while the gang make their escape. It would have been better for the Apprentice to summon the zombie and have Tim cast something cooler, but frankly he didn’t trust that his student would be able to actually cast even that simple spell based on his performance so far, and couldn’t risk leaving their backs unprotected.

Speaking of the Apprentice, he fails to cast Push (again!) on the pursuing creatures - we really need to get better at that spell! Or, I guess, remember that he’s wearing a pair of magic gloves that can give a one-off boost to being able to cast a spell (not that that would help with my rolls, to be fair). 

While all this is going on, the poor summoned zombie is doing his best Hodor impression in the doorway against an increasing number of enemies:


The Lich (who I really need to think of a name for, as unlike most of Tim’s nameless henchmen she’s likely to actually stick around for a bit) finally gets line of sight on her fleeing foes, and casts Bones of the Earth on the fleeing Man at Arms carrying the treasure token, causing a skeletal hand to burst from the ground and grab his ankle, stopping him in his tracks. ‘ Not so fast - You took something of mine, so I will take a treasure of yours in return!’, she cries. 

Ahead of Tim, the Captain obliterates the last ooze between them and the door, leaving the Ballista free to step aside to blast the pursuing enemies - it manages to hit a werewolf square on, sending it flying backwards into the Lich, to her displeasure!

Tim is torn between making his escape, and having one last chance to do something cool. Obviously he chooses the less sensible latter option, pausing at the doorway to lob a Grenade spell (which I’ve always envisioned as him flinging an explosive skull) at a pair of enemy Men at Arms (being happy to have an enemy that he can actually do more than one damage to with his ranged spells) but unfortunately flubs the casting in his haste.

The Apprentice, finally remembering that he is wearing Gloves of Casting, finally successfully manages to cast the Push spell on one of those Men at Arms. Unfortunately I then whiffed the roll to see how far they were pushed, resulting in it only being a single inch…

It was around this point that my 5 year old woke up in the middle of the night, and took over rolling for the monsters, resulting in the Zombie (who at this point was in combat with about four enemies in the doorway) getting taken out at the start of the Monster phase, leaving everyone else that was previously held up by him free to bundle after Tim and his companions. Tim’s Man at Arms breaks free of the grasping skeletal hand, only for the Lich to immediately cast it on him again - she seems fairly determined not to let him escape with that treasure!

While all this has been going on, the poor attacker over on the right flank has been valiantly trying to break free, is surrounded by two oozes and two wolves, and finally succumbs to superior numbers (both of enemies, and on die rolls).

Back by the door, the Captain slashes the skeletal hand at the Man at Arms ankle, before leaping through the door herself, closely followed by the few remaining survivors - Tim, the Apprentice, and the Man at Arms still desperately clinging onto the Treasure Token, with Tim summoning another zombie to block the doorway as he escapes. The Apprentice tries to cast Bone Dart as he steps across the threshold of the exit, but fails to do so, making for a slightly anticlimactic ending…


Post-game, the Hound and Knight are both Badly Wounded, and must miss a game, but everyone else survives. It would have been better for me if it had been the Thug and Thief that had been injured, as they are free to replace, but the dice tend not to care for what is the best option for the player…

Tim gains 3 levels, and so lacking any Grimoires to learn new spells improves his Health stat (mostly to give him more blood to spend on turning failed casting rolls into successful ones), and then improves Push (for which the Apprentice is thankful!) and Control Construct (because Tim quite liked having a pet golem, and thinks he might like to do so again in the future). In hindsight, writing this post I think maybe I should improve Brew Potion, because they seem to always fail to cast this, and it would be good to have a supply of free healing potions beyond the one the Apothecary brings every game, but that’s a problem for a future game I guess. 

And what was the treasure that everyone risked life and limb for? 40 gold, and two scrolls (for Curse and Suggestion). I always forget that Tim has a pile of scrolls, so that’s less useful than some of the other results - might have to raid a library at some point to see if we can find some Grimoires…

Hmm, spending 400 gold before this game to buy a kennel might not have been the most financially responsible thing to do, as Tim is almost flat broke. He searches around the Treasury that is their base for loose change, finding another 13 gold, taking them up to 200 - before the Captain comes up to him to collect her share of the profits. Ah well, silver lining, at least the Captain’s share of the take isn’t too much, thinks Tim.

He also rounds on his Man-at-Arms:

Tim: ‘why is it that those henchmen pursuing us have the same shield as you? Is there something you need to tell me?’

MAA [confused, eating a chicken leg]: ‘what?’

Tim: ‘are you a spy?’

MAA:’do you really not remember?’

Tim [taken aback]: ‘…what?’

MAA: ‘when you hired me?’

Tim: ‘…’

MAA: ‘Remember? I was standing guard outside the mistress’ bedroom, you walked out, and hired me on the spot when I saw you tucking-‘

Tim: ‘-okay that’s probably enough’

MAA” into your pocket, and you told me never-‘

Tim: ‘enough, enough, never speak of this again’


Meanwhile, in a crypt somewhere else in the city, Tim’s Mortal Enemy leaves up - she gains immunity to poison, presumably from having slurped up an ooze or two after the last encounter! It’s a little terrifying how a mortal Enemies level up- as well as gaining that ability, she also gains two magic items (a magic staff that makes her better at fighting and avoiding ranged attacks, and a magic lucky star), as well as upgrading one of her henchmen into an Archer!


Next - Ishtar’s Weapon Shop, the goal of this journey into the Frozen City, presumably with an additional Thief subbing in for the Knight who is going to spend a game taking a nap with the Hound while they recover from their wounds.

For the next scenario, I need a miniature closet - while I could have subbed in a crate stood on it’s side, I figured that was a quick and easy project, so quickly ate a box of raisins, both to give me the energy for crafting, but also to form the body of my closet:


Masking tape holds it all square, then I just glued wooden planks (from coffee stirrers and match sticks) directly on to make the boards.


I also dug out a small piece of wood veneer (that I believe was originally for sticking onto a phone to make it look like it was made of wood?) to make the doors, scribing a line down the middle of it to give the illusion of a pair of doors.

My youngest was also crafting alongside me making one of his own:


Although ‘making one of his own’ was mostly ‘stealing every bit of wood Daddy has carefully cut to length for his own model before he has a chance to use it’, but that’s just how these things go.

Once it was finished, it looked like this:


I might go back and add a base to make it a little more stable (as I think some of my side planks are a little too long, which is making it a bit wobbly, then it’s time for painting, which should be a fairly quick job.

Here’s the back, too, as is traditional:


The panel at the bottom could be purely decorative, or is it an access hatch to a secret compartment? 

And here’s Brodie’s:


Looks pretty good, don’t you think?