Monday, March 27, 2017

1/72 scale fantasy campaign ideas, Part 1


As I've mentioned recently, Norman and I have had the opportunity to put our 1/72 scale Hordes of the Things armies on the tale three times in the past two months.  After the first game, I started painting some 1/72 scale fantasy figures, which I hadn't done in a while.  This has also left me thinking about a campaign...

Two Caesar 1/72 elves with a Reaper "Sir Forscale"
As is often the case with miniatures, several different influences were a factor in this latest visit from the muse.

One of the advantages of raising two sons in the hobby is that, until recently, I always had opponents available.  My sons, as it turns out, were raised with Hordes of the Things (and Charge!, but that's a different story).  In their earlier years, the figures we most often used were my 6mm collection, eminently portable, but perhaps not the most visually appealing figures possible.

6mm elves move through the woods

We also did various games with 1/72 scale plastic figures, which were easy on the boys' allowances.  

About the time Norman graduated from college, these two influences converged, and he started assembling some Hordes armies with the various leftover plastics.  Both he and William could paint the 1/72s to a high standard, higher than I could...at least until the Optivisor evened the playing field a little.  I took an old project I had and repurposed it, and then added a few stands of figures from the then-recently-released Caesar Miniatures 1/72 scale fantasy range.

With one thing and another, that project stalled, and I didn't get back to things until 2014.  With our first visit to Gencon coming up, I decided to assemble a Portable Fantasy Game, and used the Caesar figure already on hand as the basis of a 1/72 scale skirmish game using Song of Blades and Heroes rules, which packs into a 12-liter Really Useful Box.  A check of airline web sites suggested that the 12-liter was the largest which could reliable be placed under the seat for a flight.

Portable Fantasy Game box, top layer

This included a ground cloth, several foam filled hills, sewn for me by one of my son William's college classmates ...

Portable fantasy game box, second layer

various pieces of quilting fabric as roads, rivers, and forest bases, ...

Portable Fantasy Game box, lower layer
some trees, plastic rock formations, Dave Graffam card model buildings, old Gallia resin walls, and two boxes of singly-based 1/72 scale figures.  When it was all set up, the whole thing looked something like this:

PFG contents arrayed 
Or like this, from our family pick-up game at Gencon in 2014:

PFG in action, Gencon 2014
Because the ground cloth is 3 feet by 3 feet, it's also what we usually use for our Hordes of the Things games.  Last year, before William left for graduate school, Norman had organized a simple campaign, based on an idea from the Frank's Toy Soldiers blog.  It took several sessions for us to arrange to play the battles from a basic single-elimination bracket, but, with the possibility of gaining subject forces by a solid victory built into the campaign rules, it was a tense and interesting series of battles.  So, having the forces out on the cloth reminded me of the campaign, and left me wondering whether it was time to do something again.

William and Norman face off in a campaign battle
My basic idea is this:  the Portable Fantasy Game box has the scenery necessary for a variety of battles, and a bunch of individuals.  A 6-liter box (of which I have three used for auxiliary transport to conventions), should hold at least 30 of the 60x40 bases we use for most of the 1/72 scale figures, and the typical Hordes army is about 10 bases.  So, three armies should fit per box, or, allowing for some flexibility in units, five armies in two boxes. That would make for a reasonable campaign set-up, and I also realized that most Hordes armies would flex to become a  Dragon Rampant warband, so I would have figures on hand for three different levels of combat.

Next session: thinking about maps, rules, and how the levels of action might fit together.

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