A couple of weeks back I went along to the Other Partizan show, with eldest daughter and youngest son. Jolly busy it was too! I have heard that the attendance was a record, and I can definitely believe that given the usual car park area was pretty much full!
Anyway, we had a good mooch around and I think I managed to get a look at pretty much everything...
First up, the Forest Outlaws doing (10mm?) Romans versus Ancient Britons, on Hexon terrain. A pleasing mixture of pretty and functional:
Next, up a WW1 in the Desert game - Turkish forces trying to retreat on Aleppo. Very pretty set-up, some interesting toys on the table too. (From The Bunker?).
A big 'Back of Beyond' game from The League of Extraordinary Gamers. A little more 'stylized' in look than the previous game, but very pretty in a slightly different way:
Obviously I managed to get a shot of the display board for this one! |
Next we have WW2 Naval, GHQ models I think for a US-Japanese clash in the Pacific.
Next up, the guys selling Rubicon Models had a Vietnam game featuring that range. More lovely water modelling!
A crocodile! |
More Zulus - this time the old classic, the death of Prince Louis Napoleon (might have been The Gentlemen Pensioners). Again, really good looking game, good ground colours!
Some Sci-Fi stuff next, a Xenos Rampant game (put on by the Lincoln club):
The Perry Twins were putting on a Franco-Prussian war game, I think:
Then there was a big Medieval game, set in Brittany IIRC in the War of the Breton Succession (the game is a stylized version of Hennebont ; lots of lovely things here, including pretty medieval ships and a castle (from The Bodkins)
As ever at Partizans, The Very British Civil War people put on a game:
wargame glitterati in the background?? |
WW2 action next - a kind of alternate St-Mere Eglise 6th June scenario, with a bit more German armour facing off against the US Paratroopers. By the Forest Outlaws too?
The Shrewsbury Club next? Think this was a War of the Three Kingdoms action:
There seemed to be lots of lovely castles, ships, and water features this year! |
Next up, more WW1 Action (from the Grimsby club?):
A game I had seen before next: an operational-level game of the British and Canadian beaches at D-Day. Definitely worth the second look!
The Bramley Barn put on some Pike and Shot stuff (think it was Anglo-Irish fighting in Ireland, but could be wrong here)
Then, a stylized Boxer Rebellion game (by John Kersey?)
Next, a big Crimean War game on the Danube front (with more nice ships!); from the Gothenburg Gamers.
A really big Cold War Gone Hot game, with 1/72 Soviets being ambushed by BAOR troops. Looked great, with lots of lovely toys but...I would have done it in 6mm 😀
The Boondock Sayntes always put on the most amazing-looking games and this show was no exception. It looks amazing but how to say it...it doesn't make you just want to look, it makes you want to play in some primeval way.
Next was a Game of Thrones-themed fantasy game, with an appropriately wintry look. The lady very kindly talked us through all the materials to produce it (from Iron Brigade?)
WW2 action next (from Derby?); I think I recognized the scenario, it was the Berezina crossing from a WSS issue not so long ago.
Not going to lie, can't remember exactly the setting for this (very pretty) game (from League of Anti-Alchemists ??). Something Spanish-y and Horse-&-Muskety but the details escape me - Carlist Wars maybe? Lovely buildings for this one.
More War of the Three Kingdoms next (from Newark Irregulars?)
I obviously see the point of labels to help 'tell the story' but I do think they somehow looked quite intrusive on an otherwise great scene. |
Really loved the water and the banks |
Chesterfield? doing early Desert Ward: plenty of British and Italians...
More early WW2 action, but Calais 1940 this time:
I liked the painted Stukas on the backdrop! Nice touch. |
couldn't quite tell if this group of British armour was cut-off or relieving... |
Worley Books (I think!) putting on a Napoleonic Kriegspiel:
The Clone Wars: my 7-year old knew what was going on instantly (to the 'which legion is that' level)
More Medieval ship loveliness, this time 'Nevermind the Boathooks' from the Billhook brothers...
Not sure - think this one was a cowboys game - maybe from The Scourers? I slightly lost track at this point.
I have seen several paper figures' games at Partizan, but this was the first WW2 game. From Peter Dennis (I am guessing!). Looked pretty good really.
More cowboys I think, from the Peterborough club.
A Doctor Who/Daleks game. Very much a guess here, but probably Crooked Dice:
strongly-themed games are always good. Not so much like an SF world, more like a 70s set design version of an SF world: this is a compliment! |
Another Desert War game, this time with the LRDG raiding an Italian outpost (I think). Not sure who did this, had really lost track by this point...anyway, it looked really good.
Sheffield & Rotheram Club put on an Air War Over Suez (1956) game which looked fun, but was actually a bit busy when I passed by to get a nice photo! anyway, FWIW...
Another SF participation game. Lots of big space ship things!
mission successful (more or less); incredibly, they only had a single 15mm Tiger I and had to proxy the others? Call themselves WW2 wargamers?!?!? |
real stuff on display |
Wargames Developments put on a typically intriguing game, this time commanding a Western Front WW1 British Division over 3 campaigns (1916, 1917, 1918). My daughter had a go, seemed to really enjoy it! It shows the development of different tactical approaches over the 3 years in brief format - really good.
Sails of Glory always looks great gun:
As does Wings of War!
That bomber is one big beast... |
Apologies, missed who did this one - looked like a Cold War participation game...
Had definitely lost track by this point, unfortunately. Looked great though!
This is the Battle of Britain of game from the Undaunted(?) series.
Charles Rowntree put on his Scarif/Rogue One game - just as awesome as when I first saw it!
Does the thing absolutely no justice, but the overall vision is just outstanding. |
One thing that I think is worth bringing out is the consistency of mechanics that these games use, whether it is big-battle Star Wars, man-to-man WW2 or regimental/divisional level WW2 - the basic dice mechanics are the same. It might seem a bit weird, but by comparison lots of RPGs get mileage out of having the same basic mechanic for characters to interact with the world - this is a similar approach, but using units rather than individuals.
A Napoleonics game (I think) on Hexon terrain - can't remember the details of this one at all... |
The RAF Wargamers doing Apocalypse Now-ish...very effective. I wish the little one had agreed to have a go at this one!
I think this was more SF, perhaps another Xenos Rampant game? Not sure.
The League of Augsburg doing some kind of Age of Sail participation game. Looked really good...
A Gangs of Rome game - looked ace! I think the look of this type of game is one of the best bits..
This one was a bit of an eye-opener: large-scale Risk set on Great Britain?!?! Interesting...
A really huge game put on by the Like a Stonewall crew - very nice buildings and terrain...
Another lovely-looking castle... |
Busy with my two companions, there was less time for shopping and browsing than usual. The little one got some 1/72 WW2 US Marines and Japanese, whilst the elder one got some of the Bad Squiddo WW2 Soviet infantry in winter gear. I got a few bits and pieces from Baccus: some of the new IS-2 tanks, some WW2 Soviet and US artillery, and some Byzantines. I have actually managed to paint a chunk of them already somehow! Some pics later perhaps. There were definitely more things I wanted but perhaps going light at this show gives me a gap to make a bigger dent in the painting pile, which has grown quite a bit this year (not so much from additional buying as reduced painting, at least of my stuff)...
Thank you for a fantastic feast of super photos.
ReplyDeleteWillz.
You are very welcome. Still think there is work to do with these show reports, both visually (less but better photos), and also would like to have a bit more time to speak in slightly more depth with more of the presenting clubs and play more of the demo games. Maybe when my companions are a little older.
DeleteThanks for all of your time in presenting what I think is probably the most comprehensive post that I have seen in a show. I was there and it felt like being there again!
ReplyDeleteA fine selection of shots, that I think just show why so many people left tis show with such a positive impression.
Thanks Norm for the kind words, I appreciate it. And very much agreed, there really was quite a lot to take away from it, no matter what you were interested in.
DeleteWow, what a visual feast you have given us, with many games that I have not seen on other Blogs about the show, so thankyou! Let's hope you get time and motivation to paint and dent the lead pile too.
ReplyDeleteThanks Steve, glad you liked it. And yes, really looking forward to making a couple more dents in the leadpile. I always think 'next month I will have more time' - and one day, that will be true!
DeleteSuper show report!
ReplyDeleteThanks very much Jonathan, appreciated.
DeleteThank you very much for all the photos and the effort put in to post them. Being in Australia it is unlikely I will ever make these shows so these reports are most appreciated.
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome, no worries.
DeleteLooks great, nice to see pictures from games I missed being on our own table, the Bramley Barn (Thats us) game was Elizabethan Ireland.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much for the kind words, and for confirming the location and period. Will say one thing - think that your method for capturing numbers on the dice on the table as markers is perhaps the best I have seen - it kind of tricks the eye into thinking it is battlefield detritus until you actually consciously focus on them! Very nice game, and very nice technique.
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