What's worse?

What could be worse than a Space Marine Legion that fell to the Chaos powers and rebelled against everything they once respected? We don't know, but it was probably pretty bad.



Showing posts with label Product Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Product Review. Show all posts

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Scenery Review: Temple of Skulls, Arcane Ruins, and Urban Barricades

Boy, it sure has been a while since I've posted here. Lot's of medical issues, plus a couple of secret projects that I'm not ready to make public yet. Big thanks to MJ for keeping the home fires burning!

For some reason I got it in my mind recently to spend some money on the scenery that GW has been putting out recently. I'm a HUGE fan of the Moonscape and a firm believer that every single 40k player should own at least one set. (I have two!) The Planetscape-specific version fell a little flat due to the weird decision to use vac-forming instead of injection molding like the Moonscape, but the original is still available and awesome.

So, thanks to a gift certificate to The War Store, I got my hands on The Temple of Skulls. It is really, really cool.

It is marketed as a Fantasy Battle terrain piece, which doesn't make much sense to me. Yes, it has more skulls and less guns, but it is pretty impractical in a game of Fantasy Battle. Only skirmishers, monsters, and individual characters have any chance of making it onto the thing without falling over. The slope on the side is very steep.


It comes in a large box around the size of a starter army set. The base is one single piece and it comes with a great "skull and column" sprue for the three upright skulls and the two columns. I've painted mine in a rough limestone style that I can't keep myself from using. (I think I'll be painting the opposite side of my three 2'x4' table toppers in a similar fashion so they all match.)

The most impressive thing about the Temple is how sturdy it is. Years ago this would have been so flimsy that you wouldn't have been able to put a dragon or Land Raider on the top of it without risking permanent damage. Now, you could safely stand on it. See the following picture of the underside.


It obviously was made as a proof of concept for the design process which made the Realm of Battle boards a possibility. I'm fairly certain if the RoB had kept its rumored $200 price point that a great many more would have sold. If I could have received the internet's normal discount I'm pretty sure that I would have one by now. Having two would have made my in-house Apocalypse game setup much easier, but there's no way I'm dropping that much on it.

I was so pleased with the Temple of Skulls that I picked up the Arcane Ruins set as well. This is another set that will be very difficult to use in a game of Fantasy Battle, in which case it will probably just be impassible to any ranked unit. See below for the 'assembled' version.

Of course, it is a ruin by name and looks even better knocked over.

I've been planning to make a skull-themed table for a while, inspired by the recent battlefields featured in a few recent White Dwarf reports. The Isle of Blood was particularly nasty looking. One of the great and unmentioned things about the Arcane Ruins is that it comes with way more skulls than you could ever use on the piece itself. Below is what I had left over, perfect to be used on my project to tie everything together. That's a lot of skulls!

Even more delighted, I decided to spring for the Urban Barricades set. As you can see below, you get six barricades in the set. I have the unfortunately-discontinued Sandbags set which came pre-painted (looks like a single coat and drybrush) and flocked. I think it is some sort of light resin. This set is also resin, but unpainted. It has a much higher level of detail, though, including a crashed Space Marine bike. Unlike pretty much everything else mentioned in this review, these really need painted before use, especially the one with the bike. There are a wide variety of textures and they don't look very good in the default grey resin.

I painted the bike in a non-descript color, added some metallics and rust here and there, and now they look great.

So, to cut to the rankings: (With a Moonscape at a 10/10.)

  • Temple of Skulls: 8. Less useful as a Fantasy Battle terrain piece, but very, very sturdy and nicely detailed.
  • Arcane Ruins: 7. Not as nicely detailed as the Temple, but the abundance of extra skull bits helps a lot.
  • Urban Barricades: 7. Nice off-the-shelf, impressive if painted.

For the money, the Moonscape is still the best bet. Every player needs a set, and the price is low enough that everyone should have one. If you are thinking about a second Bastion, I'd recommend the Temple of Skulls instead. It might make a good, albeit small Landing Platform (if protected by chaos magics, that is).

Next time, notes about joining in the Biggest Apocalypse Game in the World!

Monday, April 12, 2010

PRODUCT REVIEW: Dragon Forge Resin Bases



Today I want to tell you about resin bases I recently purchased from Dragon Forge. I am fairly new to the whole world of resin. My first encounter with resin products was in the form of a bunch of bike bases produced by our very own DFIR poster MikeT. I've also dabbled in the realm of Forgeworld products, having utilized their Rhino Spaced Extra Armor, Deathguard Plague Marines Upgrade Pack, and Deathguard Terminators Upgrade Pack.


But as I began to formulate my latest SECRET project, I was trolling around the internet to add some unique flavor that really fit the theme of the force. That's when I happened across the Dragon Forge site, and their Parched Earth series of bases. My SECRET project does not involve a parched earth theme, but one of those light bulbs lit-up above my head as I looked at these, and I realized that I could make them match my new army's theme by painting them a certain way.

Looking at some other resin base vendors for a price comparison, it seemed like Dragon Forge's products were very reasonably priced in line with other similar products, and even lower than several of the sites I looked at.

So I was sold. I ordered up what I needed - some 40mm (seen above) and 60 mm bases (shown here), as well as some "Hero Bases" (seen at top of this post). Dragon Forge has a deal that you receive $5 of free product for every $30 you spend. Turns out the 60mm ones are exactly $5, so perfect, FREE 60mm base for me!

I received the products extremely fast. I believe I ordered the bases on a Wednesday or Thursday evening, and they were in my mailbox a few days later on Monday. Sweet!

Unfortunately, mistakes happen, and it turns out I received 25mm bases instead of the 40mm ones I had ordered. So I emailed Dragon Forge about this, and if I thought the shipping was fast, the email response was almost instantaneous! Jeff sincerely apologized for the mix up and said he'd get the right sized ones out immediately, and he gave me the option of returning the wrong-sized ones or not. I'm too nice of a guy (I hope), so wasn't going to stick somebody w/ a loss like that - resin is not cheap (according to MikeT and MattP here at DFIR). So I asked Jeff if I could keep 5 of the 25mm bases to use as themed objective markers and return the rest. Jeff's response was "Keep a whole set [of 10]! Its the least I can do." Awesome. That's customer service. Mistakes happen - what sets good vendors apart from bad ones is their customer care.

Within another couple of days (by week's end), I had the correct size bases.

Now, with product in hand, it was time to break those bad boys out and wash them up and use them. I inspected the bases, and was impressed by several things. First, the resin used was very sturdy, yet very lightweight, surprisingly lightweight. Second, the detail on the top surface was excellent. All five of the 40mm bases in a set are different, giving a good range of variety yet all tied-together with the themed uniformity. Third, the only air bubbles (voids) I could see were on the bottom of the bases, and only a couple of the bases had a handful (or less) of voids. These bases are very well crafted.

All in all, I have to give Dragon Forge an A++ for their bases. Selection (ie., variety) was great. Ordering was easy (online shopping cart with PayPal payment). Shipping was fast. Communication was very quick. Customer Service was OUTSTANDING. And the products themselves are excellent, both in quality and in craftsmanship.

The next time my project calls for some great resin bases, I will not have to troll all over the interwebs to find what I need, I'll just go to Dragon Forge directly and know that I'll be satisfied once again.

Thanks for the excellent bases, Jeff.