Darn expensive hobbies

I’m seriously thinking about picking up wargaming again. I use miniatures to represent combat in D&D anyway, so there’s quite a bit of overlap.

Too bad that Warhammer (or Warhamster, as I call it) is so expensive. Games Workshop has lots of nifty miniatures in both their 40,000 range and Fantasy Battles range. 40k is probably the most popular, but if I get started I’m thinking about Fantasy Battles. I get the impression that FB players are more mature, while 40k draws all the low-end teenagers with its big guns, tanks and heavy armor. Not that FB doesn’t have big guns and heavy armor too, though…

For the latest edition of FB, the Undead have been split in two different (and often opposing) armies: Vampire Counts and Tomb Kings. In previous editions, the Undead used to have all sorts of ghosts, skeletons, zombies, vampires and mummies. Now the Vampire Counts have all the typically gothic undead, and the Tomb Kings have been refitted with a pseudo-Egyptian style with mummies and skeletons.

What I really like about the Tomb Kings is that it isn’t just a shambling horde of bones and mummy wrappings with rusty weapons; it’s a resurrected, well-organized army lead by an undead Pharaoh. Just the way I like my undead.

There’s one scene in The Mummy (you know, the pulp movie with Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz) that sums up the Tomb Kings perfectly. Near the end of the movie, three undead tomb guards march up in phalanx formation with their shields and kopesh swords held ready.

Ye gods, I’m in rant mode. Sorry about that. I just like Egyptian mythology. And undead. Especially in combination.

Skeletons and mummies are easy to paint, too. Black primer (I never use a white primer, even for skeletons), base coat of bleached bone, a brown ink wash, and then drypaint and highlight with skull white. Or skip the skull white to get a weathered and ancient look. These guys are supposed to have been buried in the desert for a thousand years.

Well, there’s more to paint than just bone, since the Tomb Kings are organized and well equipped. But still pretty easy, with open areas on shields and weapons.

…but as I said, it’s darn expensive to have a GW game as a hobby. The Tomb King battalion box costs 1800 SEK, but gives you a full army. A bone giant costs 300 SEK…

Not planning to start playing WFB at the moment, though. I have better things to waste my money on. And I would like to have a look at Mechwarrior: Dark Ages too.


One Comment to “Darn expensive hobbies”  

  1. 1 Brian Hearnden

    Thanks for the painting tip on Mummies. I remember seeing an Old White Dwarf magazine that suggested priming the mummies white, painting them snake bit leather, ink washing with dark brown ink and then dry-brushing. Unfortunately I can not remember if it was a dry brush with bubonic brown (a mustard colour) and then bleached bone or just bleached bone. Would you happen to have this magazine and know the answer?
    Thanks,
    Brian

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