Friday, 27 September 2024

Halo Jones

The Ballad of Halo Jones was a 2000AD comic strip from 1984 to 1986 by Alan Moore, with art by Ian Gibson. Described as a "groundbreaking feminist heroine" by The Guardian, Halo is a futuristic everywoman who decides to leave her life behind to find herself in the galaxy. The epic ballad covers her trials and tribulations over decades of her life as she travels, fights, loves, and ultimately becomes a galactic hero and transcends time and space- or would have if Alan Moore hadn't characteristically had a falling out with his publishers.

The girl who got out.




Halo Jones has no characteristic uniform or look beyond her short blonde hair. I made this figure from the wonderful North Star ranges.

Friday, 20 September 2024

40K Lamenters: Sternguard Veterans

These are veteran First Company Lamenters, marked by their white helms and kneepads, loincloths, and a decent amount of individual personalised equipment. Sternguard have access to combiweapons.

Sternguard Veterans

The sergeant has a black stripe on his helmet to denote his rank. The tilting plate/ ecranche has a decal from Impatient Tabletop.

Sternguard Veteran Sergeant with combi-melta.

Sternguard Veteran with combi-plasma.

Sternguard Veteran with bolt rifle.

Sternguard Veteran with heavy bolter.

Sternguard Veteran with bolt rifle.

I'm getting much better at freehanding the chequers and chapter icon!

Friday, 13 September 2024

Five Parsecs from Home thoughts

Five Parsecs from Home is by Ivan Sorensen/ Nordic Weasel Games, with a very nice 3rd edition hardback book published in 2021 by Modiphius (also available in pdf). I've played one campaign of nineteen games, taking my crew through an unscripted journey of discovery and disaster. I've put up a summary page for my campaign here.

How it started.

5PfH is a solo skirmish science fiction campaign game. You run a warband of six figures. Combat is pretty simple, and a skirmish would usually take me about 45 minutes. There is a variable initiative system so it is not purely IGOUGO. On the tabletop, the enemy work with a simple AI. There are not a lot of special rules or abilities to remember in the heat of battle, which I appreciate. There were still plenty of things I forgot or overlooked! Some solo rulesets give you too many rules to play with and become too complicated-  the simplicity of 5PfH is a real boon.

How it's going.

The true joy of 5PfH is its campaign system, and numerous D100 tables of random events. Each campaign phase may see you travelling to a new planet, exploring a location, and having unexpected interactions, before even setting up a figure on the tabletop. When it comes to the tabletop, there are a vast array of potential missions and enemies. There are random events within games as well- enemy reinforcements, flanking forces and environmental changes have all affected my games significantly.

Gallius Marbec.
Wanted to become a rogue trader.
Last seen on fire.

I would usually play a game, then complete all of the campaign events and roll to see the details of my next mission- objectives, enemies, battlefield oddities. This would give me a chance to join the events into a coherent story- I would often be somewhat amazed by how a narrative would emerge from a series of D100 rolls. Ivan Sorensen calls this 'adventure wargaming', which reminds me of the '3d roleplay hobby game' logo on the Oldhammer boxes.

Furthermore, by seeing what was next, I would then be inspired to print and paint up the upcoming enemies and think about terrain.

Julio Rybeck.
Wanted to escape with his girl.
Bled out alone by the drainage pipes.

I really enjoyed rolling up characters, but the crew log sheets given are woefully inadequate for all the info to keep track of.

Venda Hezel. Liked tinkering with machinery. Shot.

The combat results can be somewhat binary- figures tend to be alive then suddenly out of action. It can be a bit unforgiving, and a series of bad rolls can see fortunes change rapidly. I never got the feeling of my ogryn Chugger, for example, tanking multiple hits and eventually going down. It was more that he was fine until he wasn't.

EF-733.
Wanted to gather knowledge.
Shot by miners in the ash wastes.

Another issue is the lack of a guiding narrative arc. You will need to do some light DM'ing to tie disparate storylines together and come up with climactic battles. Otherwise, it could be a series of disjointed scuffles. That said, however, there is much more freedom to do what you want within a campaign than you would find in a more railroaded experience requiring specific terrain for scenarios. Once I became more comfortable with not having my hand held, the narrative opportunities with the campaign were limitless.

Lady Heldycryn.
Wanted a life of adventure.
Captured by Genestealer Cultists.
Fate unknown...

Money was never really tight for my crew. They paid off their ship pretty early, and then built up a large armoury of captured and found weapons and equipment.

Roma Jyan.
Her lover died.
She was shot by cultists.

The game is miniatures agnostic. I shoehorned it into a Necromunda setting, and enjoyed making weapons, enemies, and terrain fit the scene. It would work very well for Star Wars as well, and Firefly or the Expanse without aliens.

Konrad Rathgir. Left on his own terms to become a freelancer.

I highly recommend the Compendium as well. This is a grab-bag of rules variants and options that can be bolted onto your games as you see fit. The scenarios are not always balanced, potentially being either quite easy or devilishly unattainable, and the Compendium gives even more variety and stops your games being too one-sided as your experience grows. There are many more things in here which help alleviate some of the minor quibbles I've mentioned above- but it does run the risk of become unwieldy, looking for rules all over the place.

I would like to see some ideas for light vehicles and mounts- mechs, jeeps, bikes, skimmers, horses/ giant lizards etc. Maybe something for crew-served weapons?

Stazie Rendir, Underhive Guide.
Multiple gunshot wounds.

I've had thoughts of another campaign, with a smaller crew as they try to escape the Underhive. More milliasaurs and sump spiders, less reliable weapons and ammunition. The beauty of 5PfH is how flexible the system is and how it grows its own narrative.

Corvin Akenz. Traitoris extremis. Boo, hiss!

Highly recommended for solo campaign skirmish science fiction gaming!

Chugger, the people's champion.
Retired peacefully, gives circus rides to orphans.
Definitely not dead.

Monday, 9 September 2024

Five Parsecs from Home. Necromundan campaign summary

I've completed a Five Parsecs from Home campaign set in Necromunda. Here's all the battle reports! 

0. Meet the Crew

1. Delivery. The Crew sneak into a guild facility.


2. Revenge! Roma's old colleagues come for her.


3. The Ash Wastes. Marbec's first encounters with the strange miners.


4. Holding out for a hero. Attacked by Orlocks, who will save the crew?


5. Fighting the squatters. Marbec confidently takes on the Squats.


6. Rogue Servitors. Can the Crew disable the device?


7. Vigilante posse. A bounty hunter comes after the crew!


8. Payback! The squats hold a grudge...


9. Squigged! Squigs!

10. The armoury job. The Crew take a mission to blow up an arms cache.


11. Old Friends. The crew encounter the sinister miners again.


12. Cornered! The miners ambush the crew under cover of darkness.


13. Assassinate. The crew goes after a rabble-rouser in the refineries.


14. Chugger vs the Iron Hounds. Have the Orlocks bitten off more than they can chew?


15. Death in the sump. Vicious fighting in a toxic hellhole.


16. Through the forge. The crew fights drug-fuelled genhanced Goliaths.


17. Ambushed! Professional soldiers hit the crew.


18. A secret revealed. Marbec takes the crew deep into the Underhive...


19. The close. Last stand of the crew!

Friday, 6 September 2024

Five Parsecs. Campaign Game 19. The Close

Last time, in Hive Primus...

Gallius Marbec had entered the Underhive and stolen a blasphemous totem. As the crew load their shuttle to leave Necromunda, the cultists send a crack team to exact their revenge...

"Stop them! Get back our sacred icon!"

The cultists tactically advance across the shuttle bay.

The crew run from the shuttle after hearing the blast.

Roma takes a commanding position, but realises she is exposed.

Chugger doesn't waste time thinking- he comes out blasting!

Marbec directs his crew to a hasty defence behind the pipes.

The cultists still have a way to go.

The crew put a weight of fire across the hangar.

A marksman tries to slip into the room...

... but Chugger guns him down! (Deafening poor Hezel.)

The cultists' fire is becoming more accurate. Hezel goes down.

As the cultist deploys his heavy stubber, Lady Heldycryn takes him out.

Marbec slags a cultist with his plasma gun.

The marksman is back! But Lady H snipes him first.

The cultists are closing the gap, but Marbec feels confident.

Stazie Rendir tries to flank the cultists with her shotgun.

A second wave of cultists appears, led by an ominous cloaked figure.

Chugger downs another!

But the numbers are great.

Stazie misses with her shotgun!

She, too, is taken out.

Roma Jyan goes down under the weight of incoming fire.

Marbec decides to run for it.

The flanking cultists get a clean shot on Chugger- the ogryn goes down.

The cultists close the trap.

Marbec's armour saves him from multiple shots.

A cultist commander is at the shuttle!

Lady Heldycryn leaps off the pad. The exit door is so close...

She fights off a cultist, as the flamer gets a clear shot at Marbec.

Marbec staggers to the door- he reaches out to the control panel, but collapses. His campaign is over.

Whew! What a finale! I had planned to complete a twentieth mission, but after such a dramatic and definitive battle I've decided to wind up this campaign here. I haven't done any post battle rolls. Did the crew live or die- who knows!

I used an 'elite' force from the Five Parsecs Compendium as enemies, as well as some of the variant and random rolls. Not only were the enemies tougher and better fighters, but there were more of them coming on in waves. I think there were fifteen in the end against the six crew.

The shuttle is an FDM print from The Dragon's Rest. The ramp opens and closes.

Did Marbec escape? Is he nursing his horrific wounds in the Underhive and planning vengeance? Would anyone listen to his crazy tales of monsters in the ducts? Or did he die forgotten, his crew destroyed?

Postscript:


"I have saved the icon for you, masters."

Betrayal! I never trusted Corvin anyway. Where was he in this battle? How did he fight off three genestealers last time?

Next time: my thoughts on Five Parsecs from Home.