Tuesday, April 19, 2016

All New War - Khador Thoughts


With all of the talk of the new edition announcement and what some of the major changes may mean out of the way, I can finally get to the most important topic: how does all of this relate to meeeeeeeeee?

Seriously though, as much as I'd like to go through each faction and hit the highs, lows, and what might/should change, that would take more time than I may have ever had (and is certainly well above what I could pull off now). So I'm just going to focus on the one faction that is weighing heaviest on my mind: those chilly, nationalistic Khards that everyone loves to explode by the dozen.

What follows will be my thoughts and hopes for how the faction will improve in the next edition of Warmachine. I'll refrain from any armchair design as best I can, but I might go nuts and do an entry-by-entry quick review. We'll see how it goes!

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

New Warmachine/Hordes Edition - General Rule Spoiler Thoughts

Heads are still spinning from Privateer Press' announcement of a rules revision for Warmachine and Hordes, mine included. After having some time to digest the deluge of information we've received so far (most of it from Primecast #30), I wanted to collect my thoughts about some of the bigger changes and what they may mean for WM/H.

Thoughts after the break.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

All New War - A New Edition for Warmachine and Hordes

After months of relatively little news and almost no new product announcements, Privateer Press finally dropped the bomb that people have been speculating about for awhile: Warmachine and Hordes will be getting a new edition this year (announcement site).

Full day one info dump after the break (and damn is it a lot more information than I thought we'd have!)


Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Grolar Thoughts and Theory

Now that the Grolar is, despite the best efforts of Skynet, an actual goddamn model you can buy the list idea gears are stating to spin again. Turns out that the best way to spark a desire to play a game is to release new content for it periodically. Who'd have thought?

Every time I look at this picture I expect the model to slowly
fade out of existence like in Back to The Future
I played some proxy games with the Grolar when the rules first came out (back when I had to use a dinosaur egg as a proxy), but I didn't want to get into an in depth discussion about it until it was actually in hand.

With that long fabled day having finally arrived, lets take a closer look at Khador's "newest" addition to it's warjack stable. Discussion starts after the break.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Size Comparison (Grolar Follow Up)

From Left to Right: Ruin, plastic Juggernaut, Grolar, and old metal Kodiak
Out of curiosity I lined up several of Khador's warjacks for a side-by-side comparison of how the warjacks have evolved across the years.

The plastic Prime warjack kit was a big change when it came out. Literally - for whatever reason (most likely due to the cheaper medium, or possibly the need to size up to maintain detail fidelity) the Prime plastic models were much larger than their metal precedents. You can still see the size difference with the metal Kodiak which was basically a reworked Juggernaut of the era.

Ruin is another step up the sizing chart (I didn't organize this picture quite right in hindsight). I was impressed at the size of the model when it came out, it being a very noticeable improvement over the original Kodiak in size and overall design (looking at them side by side nearly gives me whiplash). I figured it was a good indicator of what to expect from the eventual Grolar/Kodiak kit.

I was mostly right. The Grolar/Kodiak kit shares the same overall design and form factor introduced with Ruin's model, but once again (probably, again, due to being in plastic) the Grolar/Kodiak kit is another step up the size chart. It makes the Grolar/Kodiak kit easily the largest non-Behemoth, non-colossal warjack in Khador's model line.

I didn't think about it at the time, but now I'm interested in seeing how the Grolar/Kodiak kit matches up against the Behemoth in terms of relative size. Makes me more interested in seeing the eventual Behemoth resculpt, assuming that all of the Apotheosis character heavies are getting redone (which seems like a safe bet now that the Thunderhead and the Avatar of Menoth are on the release list).

The funniest/saddest comparison is matching up the Grolar/Kodiak with the old metal Kodiak. You could *almost* fit the Kodiak inside of the Grolar's model (almost). It is a remarkable improvement for a model that is supposed to be a big, burly, bear-inspired brawler. Shame about the Kodiak's rules, but hopefully they eventually embiggen those too.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Plastic Berserker/Mad Dog/Rager Kit Teaser

From of Bell of Lost Souls:

http://www.belloflostsouls.net/2016/03/exclusive-privateer-mystery-warmachine-miniature.html


With the added quote of "They say trouble comes in threes..."


It looks like I get to immediately eat my words about waiting until 2017 for the Rager. It might make it out in 2016 after all!

Grolar Unboxing


After almost two years of waiting for it (first announced in Warmachine: Vengeance, released on March 19, 2014) the Grolar is finally out and available for purchase. It has been so long that I have forgotten about this model multiple times, only to be reminded by some random post/comment/army list.

I won't quite say it is worth the wait - 23 months is a ridiculous amount of time to wait for any single model to come out, let alone a non-character heavy warjack - but it is very nice to finally have the Grolar in hand. It has great rules and a fantastic model to go along with it.

Anyone with any interest in the model has no doubt bought one (or two, or three out of disbelief and a fear that they will poof out of existence) for themselves, so if you're a Khador player, you know what's in the box.

That said, I do think it is worth checking out the Grolar's box set to highlight some of the things that probably held up its release for so damn long, the things that make it a particularly remarkable kit for Privateer Press to have produced, and finally to pay tribute to a once great and now largely overshadowed warjack: the noble Kodiak (who shares the box with the Grolar and is very tellingly not featured on the cover despite being the originator of this chassis type).

Breakdown starts after the link.