All,
So, here I am, keeping the ball rolling, with a ton more posts to make cataloging my 28mm miniatures collection, all on the road to, you know, actually playing a game.
Last time I showed you my British force for Italy and Sicily, so I figured this would be a good time to throw in my Brits force North Africa (or Western Desert, if you prefer). These are all from Warlord’s “Bolt Action” range of figures, minus a pair of 3D printed figures, and are largely the plastic multi-pose guys, with a few metals for the crew-served weapons. I’ve also got a bunch of vehicles (from various sources), but I’ll wait and throw them into their own, separate post.
Overall I’m a big fan of the Warlord plastics; they’re fun to put together, offer a decent amount of variation, and I know some folks aren’t fans of their ‘heroic’ proportions, but I find them clean, relatively dynamic, and of no concern on the tabletop. I’m generally not a fan of the Warlord metals, which are mostly significantly smaller than their plastic counterparts and sometimes have some VERY odd poses or proportions. And to circle back on the plastics; I really fell in love with them and had a great time building and painting them, BUT… at this point I can’t take it anymore! I have built sooooo many of them, and then I’ve built a bunch from Rubicon (all Vietnam stuff), Wargames Atlantic (WWII), and Black Powder Red Earth (Ultramodern), and while those figures are all fantastic, they can be a real #%$& to build! At this point I’ve pretty much resolved to only purchase metal figures that don’t require any assembly, I just can’t take anymore.
As always with my 28mm troops, I used Contrast Paints, and I can’t tell you how much I love them. They’re quick, easy, and have actually made painting fun and relaxing for me. Which is part of why I can’t seem to stop for long enough to get a game in…
Let’s get to it!
The whole mess, a bunch of infantry with a couple ATRs, a 2-pdr anti-tank gun, a Vickers machine gun, and a 3” mortar. Plenty of goodies to get at the Germans and Italians in Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia.A look at the opposite side (of a different gunner, this one’s got a netted helmet).
A pair of 2” mortars which, like the ATRs, are organic to the rifle platoons. I don’t mind the prone pose, but I kind of prefer a kneeling pose with the 2” mortars but you just can’t pull it off with the parts provided.
A closeup.
Another group of riflemen, this time cycling the bolt to eject a spent casing and insert a fresh round into the chamber.
And I forgot all about this guy! He, too, has long sleeves, and that’s because I wanted a PIAT for Italy (before deciding to go with Artizan figures for a separate force for Italy), and so I scrounged some parts from one of the old British NWE plastic sets (before they molded weapons in their hands) and slapp e them on an 8th Army torso.
A bunch of Corporals with M-1928 Thompson SMGs.
Very nicely sculpted. I even stole some of these Tommy Guns and gave them to my early war US Marines ;)