Not the hero we deserved but the hero we needed.
At some point in the past couple months I have started feeling bad about writing up yet another battle report with unpainted figures. Yes, I know it's not a big deal, but I'm just envisioning reading my blog with all these black-and-white pics and how that'd only point out the other flaws in my work, like how I have become real shoddy about taking good notes about how games go.
But! This will past. I am painting up new Pulp City, and am one breakthrough away from getting a good color scheme down for my Wrath of Kings Hadross. Wrath of Kings has been the game of the spring so far (in fact the gents from my group are about to head to Origins to the big dance there.) While I will sing the praises of the assembly side of the Wrath of Kings figs, I confess they're a bit intimidating for a mediocre painter like myself to get done swiftly. But anyways.
(Somewhere on the backburner there's a post brewing about learning Hadross tactics. They're rock hard, but surprisingly tricky to get rolling.)
Enough about my shortcomings. I've also been busy this spring getting lots and lots of Kickstarter pledges arriving. It's beautiful. Many Zombicide figs waiting in the queue, many Wolsung figs getting assembled, and just this week, my pledge for urban terrain from Impudent Mortal arrived on the doorstep.
One of the pieces I picked up to enhance Pulp City and Batman games are the dumpsters. And being a gamer for... a long while now, I have picked up many odds and ends over the years for uses both theoretical and practical. It's only in the past couple years that I took stock of the various terrain bits I had picked up hither and yon, and formulating plans for actual terrain layouts (we typically play at the local store, or someone else's house. I don't have a dedicated gaming room here.)
So I realized I had a bunch of these things from various manufacturers over the years, and decided to toss up a couple comparison shots for scale, so people know what they're looking for.
(The models were chosen because they were [mostly] painted, and representative of their lines. I had other painted Batman figs, but I figured most players would own the Arkham henchmen, due to their usefulness.)
Checkmate Agent (Crossover), Heroclix Dumpster, Arkham escapee (Knight Models)
A blast from the past, the tried and true Heroclix had a lot of useful pieces over the years, and my only regret with the ancient terrain packs was that I did not pick up more. It's the smallest of my lot, but also the only one that came fully painted. Looks to me like something outside a restaurant, more of a trashcan with dreams of grandeur.
Reaper Bones zombie, large Armorcast bin, Supreme Zed (Pulp City)
Mr. Hyde (Heroclix Hulk), smaller Armorcast bin, Reaper Bones zombie
These two are, I believe, out-of-production Armorcast bins. Searching online tells me they might be out-of-production Ainsty, but there's some confusion. Regardless. They are solid chunks of resin, and look great. perfect for near the construction site.
Checkmate Agent, Reaper Bones Dumpster, Supreme Zed
Checkmate Agent, small Impudent Mortal dumpster, Zombicide zombie
The small dumpster above even has a couple details I didn't put on yet, like the door for the side hatch.
Arkham escapee, Impudent Mortal bin rear view
A little less in scale for the Knight Models figs, but really, not a big deal.
Supreme Zed, large Impudent Mortal dumpster, Checkmate Agent
And the ridiculous group shot. The Checkmate Agent just barely doesn't fit inside the small Impudent Mortal bin, whereas the larger one fits even 30mm bases comfortably. The Bones product is rather roomy as well.
So, hope that was useful-ish. Any tips for later comparison shot entries?
Drax, not Drax, Drax
* Full credit to Maurice for coming up with the 'dumpster diving' title, which I really should have thought of first.
Nice review of dumpsters. A lot of good choice even if some are oop. I do like mdf its well priced and looks reasonably well once painted up.
ReplyDeleteI've picked up a bunch of MDF to fill out the table,s but now it's a matter of actually, you know, sitting down, assembling it, and painting it.
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