As I bounce about my backlog, I'm always pleased to find use for the miniatures that I've owned the longest.
Due to the fact that in the early nineties the only place to buy miniatures in my hometown was a model shop with a limited selection, many of these older models are from less well known ranges.
Such is the case with these three...
These are three 'Future Savages', formerly from Grenadier and now sold by Mirliton SG. They've loitered in my collection, run with my Necromunda Gangs (mainly Goliaths as Juves) and for the last 20 years have languished in a friend's garage.
However, they are now back in my possession and destined for the Capital Wasteland as Raiders in Fallout Wasteland Warfare.
I've already added one of this set to my Raiders gang as a Psycho, and these three will be joining the crew, adding a bit of muscle and a savagery to the hunting pack.
There is a fifth model from the set, but someone in their infinite wisdom chopped his hands off in a poorly executed plan to get him holding a Necromunda shotgun (which would look like a cannon in Fallout), so I need to do some careful kitbashing to get him ready for action.
They are an eclectic bunch armed primarily with brutal close combat weapons.
This guy used to be holding a cleaver, which had been chopped off to allow him to have a ranged weapon (again for Necromunda), and so I've scaled things back to give him a less bulky weapon that can potentially pass muster as a pipe rifle or similar weapon.
He's still got his fighting claw and a somewhat anachronistic sword. Who knows where he found that, but it's definitely the sort of thing that would be kept and given a name by an image conscious (check out the hair) scavenger and later looted and sold by the Lone Survivor because it's not as good as a Shishkebab.
One of the things I've struggled with painting for a while is black skin. This time I followed some online advice and went for Wyldwood contrast paint over a coat of Gulliman Flesh.
It looked terrible and so I tried to salvage it with some Mournfang Brown highlighting and ended up much happier with the outcome and this it likely to be my goto approach (minus the Gulliman Flesh) in the future.
A further highlight was added with an extremely light drybrush of Ushabti Bone, but I applied this to the all three models to make them dusty from there time in the wilderness.
One of the things I like about this set of miniatures are the idiosyncratic details on each model. This one has a bird skull fetish, jewellery made from the teeth of some foul creature and most of a teddy bear.
Admittedly, a couple of these elements root this character in the eighties: the floppy disk and digital watch. They are not quite right for Fallout, but they're still fun details.
Finally, I like the fact that these three add to the running theme in my Raiders of them clearly spending too much time on their hair. Bright dye jobs, mohawks, whatever the last guy had and, in this case, dreadlocks all indicate that they want to look good whilst butchering settlers.
I probably have enough Raiders to play the free narrative campaign Modiphius released when the Raiders were launched, but I'll look into running it solo as finding time and opponents for all the games I want to play is hard and at least Fallout Wasteland Warfare has a well developed solo mode.
Painted: 374
Lead Mountain: 638
Really nice work. All the details on those (quite old) models are really good. Weekend Boris is an eerie resemblance.
ReplyDeleteI think Weekend Boris is officially his new name.
DeleteGreat looking wasteland warriors, and always nice to finally find a use for models acquired, do like the variety in body types. For darkskin, Catachan flesh is a good base, then use steel legion drab, mixed in, with the base colour, and finally highlight with steel legion, but this is just one version, as there are many tones you can do.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip. One of the things I find a touch blinkered on GWs part is that their 'flesh' contrast paints are all on the Caucasian side of things. Yes, you can use any colour but it does suggest an unconscious bias in the thinking.
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