Thursday, 26 February 2015

Only the foolish visit the Land of the Cannibals

After a rather lengthy Summer school holidays spent wrangling the young'uns, followed by about a month of being under the weather with some nasty bug ~ which I must say has still got the remnants of it's claws in me; I have managed to get a few more items created for my Robinson Crusoe: AotCI set.

Four Cannibal Villages and the Cannibal City have sprung up; all ready to house a plethora of esurient  natives with a penchant for tasty castaway morsels.

Almost looks like a tropical resort ....almost.

Every cannibal dwelling needs a water feature.

Ahh... the soothing sound of falling water.

Fresh herbs growing out the back ...for that bouquet garni.

Hmmm ...what's for breakfast?

Sooo tranquil...

Have you tried the salt'n'pepper back rub?

Bleached bones ...tourists LOVE bleached bones.

A couple of quick sketches before the main sculpt.

:)

Monday, 1 December 2014

Christmas Castaways

A small selection of pieces from my latest commission. This one off to a chap in Spain ~ His fingers are crossed (and so are mine) it arrives in time for some Christmas Crusoe capers ;)

El campamento (con fuego), Turn marcador ... y Fur Shelter.

I'm also forever meaning to put size comparisons in with my pics; so here are a few sculpts from my own set and a few from the above commission ~ with an AA battery lurking amongst them...

Hmmm... I wonder what other game has been sucking
away my spare (and not-so-spare) time of late ;p

Oh, and apologies to those who have expressed interest in me putting up a polymer clay tutorial ... My bad, I still haven't got my A into G ~ but I promise ...soon. -_o

As usual ...feel free to check out more of my work for Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island here.

:)

Tuesday, 11 November 2014

Good morning, Sir. Welcome to the National Cheese Emporium!

Taking a break from Robinson Crusoe pieces, I had the chance to do a few sculpts for good ol' Mice & Mystics.

The 'Hook and Thread', I decided to do this time, on a base-plate. My Canadian friend thought pine boards would look the part. I think he was right ;)
The piece is a lot more sturdy than the original one I did for my set - which I've always found a little flexible. The new one also has the same footprint as the tile from the board game.

Hook, line ...and Emmental.

Watch your thumb.

I tried to go for cheeses similar to my set ...but thought I'd make the blue with a touch more blue in there ~ just to make it stand out from the crowd.
Makes me peckish just looking at 'em all ...mmmmm.

I'm going to get out the crackers.

The Essentials ;)

I got to make myself a new Hook and Thread too... 

I'm hooked, there's no denying it.

All tournament legal ;p

I think this was all a good omen... A few day's back I also received a mysterious email from Plaid Hat Games ~ something about a Priority Mail International package coming my way.
Do I smell more mice on the horizon? Could a pre-ordered Downwood Tales be in my near future?

I'll tell you this ...I'm going to be watching my postbox like a hawk!

:)

Monday, 3 November 2014

Sick of Losing ...Must, Find, Cure.

Of course that's a lie... losing doesn't (99% of the time) bother me at all.

Generally it means you're playing against an opponent who's better, in which case you can learn something from them (if you're paying attention) ... or maybe you're new to the game playing others who know it, easily remedied through repeat plays ~ practice makes perfect ... or in the case of co op/ solitaire games, a loss can mean the game itself is actually presenting you with a challenge! And a good challenge is what I like.

Just a few days back I received a copy of...
Pandemic: The Cure ... Z-Man games were giving it away as a prize on the BoardGameGeek and I was lucky to be one of the handful of winners. Thank you Z-Man games ;)

Since my first game I have been hooked.
This is a co op in which a team of two to five individuals do their best to prevent four rapidly spreading insidious diseases from decimating the population of our planet.

A multitude of cube-like pathogens encroach across the globe.

Each of the diseases is represented by a different coloured die: red, blue. yellow and black. A certain number (depending on the infection rate) of these dice appear randomly around the globe following each players turn. When a particular continent houses too many of one of the four colours of dice, there is an outbreak and the disease spreads further across the globe.

To win you must find a cure for the diseases - to do this you must first treat the inflicted, take samples ...and then attempt to discover the cure, using the samples acquired. You roll a die for each sample you have in your possession, of one colour ...if you manage to score 13 or more - success! A cure found does not prevent the disease from rearing it ugly head up again ...but it does make it easier to treat.
When all four diseases have had a cure found for them the game is won.

The game though can be lost through three means. One; the bag containing the disease dice emptying, or two and three; the syringe marker reaching the end of the Infection or Outbreak tracks.

Our brave heroes ...faces obscured by stacks of action dice ~ my bad.

There are several different characters that are up for the task of saving mankind, each having their own special abilities. The Scientist gets a bonus when rolling to find a cure, the Dispatcher is great at providing transport to move himself and others around the globe, the Medic can treat masses of people at a time and the Generalist gets bonus action dice, for example. I select three random characters to use each time I play - the different combinations of skills make each game rather unique.

Speaking of action dice; each character has their own personal pool of dice - displaying icons specific to that character. Some of the icons are common to all of the different characters' dice, the Bio-hazard and Take Sample icons are two if them. Each turn you roll all of your available action dice (sample bottles containing diseases are locked). Any bio-hazard icons rolled advance the marker on the Infection Rate track ~ which may cause an epidemic, adding more disease dice to the continents, which may cause outbreaks, which may if you're unlucky cause further outbreaks, which may... You get the picture.

Events - our heroes need all the help they can get!

Any other dice rolled can either be spent on the actions displayed ...or re-rolled any number of times until either an action is revealed you'd like to perform, or a bio-hazard is rolled - which occurs, as above, and locks that die for the turn.

There are also Event cards that can be purchased for one-off effects ~ such as re-rolling dice, moving players around the globe and treating the sick. When you roll the disease dice to see where they appear on the globe, there is a chance you will come up with a cross icon, if this happens you place the die/dice on the CDC. These can be used to purchase event cards when the need arises.

Sitting out for the round while their associates fight for the fate of mankind.

I really like the challenge of this game. It appears to have a great balance between the randomness of where the diseases will appear and the results you'll get with your action dice rolls ...and the decisions on when and if you re-roll your action dice to try for the results you desire, and what you decide your actual plan is each round to contain the threats abound. I also like the fact you can play at varying difficulty levels ~ intro, normal and heroic. I played my first game on intro; each game since has been on normal - which is by no means easy - I think I've only beaten it twice in about ten games. I look forward to hitting heroic once I have a few more games under my belt.

Three down, one to go ...but an outbreak is imminent!

I play this predominantly solitaire and it is so good. It's a quick game too ...it says thirty mins on the box, but I find playing alone I can finish in fifteen to twenty. One game was about ten minutes, but I don't recall that one going in my favour. The great thing about it being so quick is that you are very much (well I am) inclined to set it up for another round!

...and when I lose it just makes me want to try again. This time!!! This time I can beat it!!!! I CAN save humanity!!!! :)

:)

Sunday, 26 October 2014

There's Shelter in them thar Hills

I don't know why I hadn't thought of making one of these for Robinson Crusoe before ... but after seeing a sweet piece by the fabulous Mr Petru of Hobold's Grotte I just had to try my hand at a Shelter (Natural).

Hmmmm... looks safe to me.

Hey, take a peek inside.

...are those paw prints?

GRAAAAAAAW!!!!

...just kidding. Wink*


:)

Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Spreading the love (of Mr Crusoe)

Another Robinson Crusoe set has arrived in the hands of a keen gamer ...this time a resident of South Korea.

For this order I was asked to create versions of my small leaf and larger fur shelters.
Previous clients hadn't asked me to sculpt these particular pieces so I was excited to give them another shot.

I had definitely forgotten just how tricky that large shelter was to build ... phew. Rather happy with the results though.

A bundle of goodies.

After seeing the fire I had sculpted for my Denmark order, he had to have one too ...I still haven't made one for myself ;(

Mysterious furs from curious critters.

Whenever I buy packs of these little plastic resealable baggies
the store-owner always gives me a dubious look -_-



:)

Saturday, 18 October 2014

Ashore at last!

Awoken far too early I found myself having a parcel thrust into my hands.

"I thought I could hear strange noises coming from downstairs", she said "...as I was taking my shower. Afterwards I went down, opened the door and found this package. It says it's from Print Mighty. What have you ordered now!?"
"Nothing" I said, but I had a pretty good idea what was within.

Stunning cover art from Mr Dimitrievski.

I tore open, ok, carefully cut open the package and sure enough, to my delight, found a shiny new copy of Shipwrights of the North Sea. Generously donated to my collection by the games author, Shem Phillips of Garphill Games, for a touch of play-testing and editing I had done for this very title.

Time to build us some ships!

The quality is fabulous. A very sturdy linen laminate box; within are beautifully printed player boards and cards, also with linen laminate; wooden resource tokens, ships and workers ...all created specifically for the game ~ no common meeples here. A stand-up first player marker, point tokens, as well as a mini art-book showcasing the great art of Shipwright's artist Mihajlo Dimitrievski.
Great stuff ...I have a feeling Vikings will certainly be invading my games table this weekend.

Northmen, ships... and all you need to build 'em.

Little did  I know that later this day I would receive another surprise.
Checking my emails in the eve I found I had one from Z-Man games...

"Hello, Congratulations on winning our Pandemic: The Cure contest on BGG!".

It felt a bit strange that I would soon be having, fingers crossed, fun, playing a game revolving around an outbreak of a contagious diseases set to wipe out humanity with what's going on in the world at the moment. Hmm.

An offshoot of Matt Leacock's board-game Pandemic ~ a game I have never played but have always found looked intriguing. A dice based version. Disease busting Yahtzee ...looking forward!

Fast acting and fun!

Well, I can say I probably won't be sniffing the fresh gamy aroma from within the box when I spring the lid, just in case it contains a bit of extra 'theme'.

Thank you Z-Man games!!!

Between the two occurrences above I had been continuing with my Pathfinder Adventure Cardgame - Rise of the Runelords. Well, more of restarting it from scratch. Several months back I had acquired the base set, character add-on and first adventure pack. I played and found it very enjoyable.
If you love the die rolling part of role playing games like D&D and Pathfinder then this is a game (or could well be) for you. It's a bona fide 'roll' (the dice) playing game.

It's a full co-op that can be played with a handful of players ...or solitaire (which is how I tend to roll with this one).

There's an overarching story there (supposedly based upon a campaign from the Pathfinder role playing game) and each scenario contained within has an intro tale... but once the game has started it's all dice action. It's all about ability and skill checks ...gathering treasures, throwing spells, hacking monsters, visiting dangerous locations and tracking down and quelling major villains!

Missing livestock ...scorched earth ...sounds like something scaly afoot!

As you progress through the scenarios you gain better items, grow in power and abilities ...and gain larger pools of dice with which to adventure where no hero has adventured before ...unless you are re-playing a scenario you've tried before ...but failed (it does happen thank goodness - if there was no challenge where would be the fun) ;p

The fighter ...always a handy chap to have about.

The reason though that I've just restarted the whole thing is because I've gone ahead and grabbed the remaining adventure packs (a total of 6) as I saw that they were, well almost all of them, on sale at the Book Depository. On sale plus free shipping - it had to be done.
So with the full Rise of the Runelords set. I thought I'd scratch my old characters and start afresh.... Onward ho!

Another package at the door?....

What? ...more polyhedral dice? Huzzah!.

:)