Showing posts with label Old Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Old Stuff. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 September 2021

Space Marine

One of the groups I play with have been getting all nostalgic for Space Marine the 6mm game produced by GW back in 1989. A little digging around the garage turned up my copy bought on the day of release.

Original Box

Rule Books for Adeptus Titanicus (1988), Space Marine and supplement Codex Titanicus

Selection of Space Marines and Imperial Guard

Eldar Titan

Lots of Orks on Sprues

Original polystyrene Titanicus buildings and card ones from Space Marine

Warlord Titan

Of course now I'm looking at the proxies available and thinking of a proper Heresy sized showdown!

Sunday, 24 November 2019

Nostalgia - SPI's Jena Auerstadt

This was the first wargame I bought - well to be honest my Dad bought it for me - in 1980. I can remember vividly selecting from what looked like a wonderous selection of similar games in John Menzies on Princes Street, Edinburgh. Expensive game - £4.95!

Box in not too bad a condition

It turned up again when I was looking through random boxes in my parents' cavernous loft; must be thirty years since I saw it last and perhaps another five since it was played.
The major difference between SPI and Avalon Hill - SPI boards were paper and this one hasn't fared so well
I don't recall much about it other than it was incredibly difficult for the Prussians to get any better than a losing draw. Guess that would be about right!
It was one of a quartet of games known as Napoleon at War which shared base mechanics

Relatively small number of counters. That die used to be white by the way. 

Sunday, 20 May 2018

Nostalgia - Avalon Hill's Napoleon's Battles

My parents' cavernous loft* is often the source of half forgotten wonders of yesteryear and recently I rediscovered a battered copy of Avalon Hill's Napoleon's Battles from way back in 1989.



This was the second set of Napoleonic rules that I purchased, the first being To The Sound of the Guns (which I'm sure is concealed under a box or a bag somewhere).

Unusually it tried to be a complete game and even came with a scenario book which included design notes and a guide to collecting and painting miniatures which I have discovered contains a wealth of detail including army strengths and limber colours.

The game booklets
There was even stats for less fashionable players such as Sweden and the Ottoman Empire.

Stat card and game summary
Die cut counters which could represent armies and some 2D terrain was also supplied.

Selection of counters, terrain and templates
I recall I only played two games of the rules and don't remember much of them. The first was a scenario from the book which used the counters to portray a fictitious battle in 1794 between a French and Prussian force. The second was a battle I made up on the hoof based around my collection of 1/72nd scale Esci Napoleonics. The British won but that might have been more down to me favouring the home side and a burgeoning relationship with all things Sharpe.

Looking at the books now, what strikes me most is the typeset of the rule set; it's very close making it difficult to read and reference (to be fair this was the norm for Avalon Hill - I own several other games - and that period).

The contents and first page

This was not a cheap product at the time but when compared to something modern like the excellent War of Three Kings (BLB 3) it is easy to see how far the quality and production of wargames rules has improved in the thirty or so years since Napoleon's Battles was made**. I could probably produce something better than Napoleon's Battles with it's grainy pictures and numbered paragraphs on my laptop with very little effort (and it's five years old!).

Close up of the type
Will I play it again? Perhaps, but I would need to read that rule set and although it is only 34 pages that's probably 94 in modern terms! The temptation is high though, it's not called nostalgia for nothing and I now have the armies to do it justice.



*a misleading term it has windows and central heating as well as being of a size where you can comfortably practice your pitching if golf is your thing, Would I like to get a wargames table up there

**sorry did I just type THIRTY years - what have I been doing for that time. Think I need a lie down somewhere shady, maybe with something cool and comforting to get over that.

Sunday, 21 December 2014

Nostalgia


In the recent house move I came across an old Citadel box from the mid 80s.

 
Originally the box contained these not so fine fellows:

 
I’m sure the figures are now residing in my parent’s loft (the term loft hardly does that room justice, it has windows, radiators, carpet etc. My Dad practises his 9 iron up there – I’m not joking)

But they had been superseded by my infamous Blood Bowl team the WCC (Wee Caledonian Crushers nothing to do with cricket or cream teas, sun lit lawns or fair play).


The figures themselves are from the Blood Bowl expansion pack Dungeon Bowl which also came with an Elf team (which my friend Richard kept), pit traps, exploding chests, spiked balls (catch that) and all sorts of hysterical nastiness. Have fond memories of these chaps and still have the team roster, not to mention a whole background story scribbled somewhere. They played in several competitions and even got a run out at Games Day in 1989 which led to me getting a summer job in GW in Glasgow.

Nice to see the little fellas! Wonder if my parents’ cavernous loft is hiding some Astro-granite?