As I am unable to go to Julians place this Friday or next, Andrew hosted me after work for a small fantasy game using his home brew rules at his place on Thursday evening. Similar to his WW2 rules, the basic requirement is to role a 9 on 2 D6 to get a hit - with hero figures adding to the roll. As a change from normal, instead of heroes/leaders automatically adding 1, 2 or 3 depending on the level of heroism - we rolled a third dice that had 0 on three faces and either 1, 2 or 3 on the remainder - meaning that instead of automatically adding a number to the heroes role, you had a 50% chance of adding nothing and only around 17% chance of adding 3 - I prefer the old system! The number of times I rolled 7 or 8 but didn't get to add anything was "mildly irritating"
Friday, 20 March 2026
Thursday Night Fantasy Game
We ran two groups each with a vaguely "pirate" theme
I had some female Three Musketeers figures to add to my standard "fantasy" selection and Andrew leant me musket armed Foundry pirates
Above and below are Andrews two groups
As usual, we had piles of treasure to get to and then search, pick up and remove from the table. A twist this time was that out of 4 or 5 possibles, only one would be real - and this was decided by turning over a tile when a pile was searched. Flukely, Andrew was first to reach a treasure pile, and it turned out to be the treasure - so the rest of the game was reduced to us fighting each other as he removed the one real treasure from the table.
One of my bands at another potential treasure site just before Andrew located the treasure elsewhere
My two bands, with Andrews figures in the top right slowly (very slowly as it turned out) lugging their ill-gotten gains towards their table edge.
Mass combat ensued in the central part of the board
One of Andrews leaders tells the girl in blue to get out of his way - she didn't and died on the spot!
The blonde-haired girl in red boots defeated another of Andrews leaders and drove him back - hurrah!
The ladies in green and red were two of my four leaders - here they are in combat with two of Andrews "grunts"
The leader in green was driven back while the two pirates killed each other - both rolling greater than 9 and only requiring a single hit to die.
The female prate in blue/grey is Andrews fourth leader. At this stage, we had around 6 casualties each
A turn later. my fourth leader in dark blue, forced Andrews leader back into deep water, giving her a second hit!
Near the end of the game, Andrew was getting closer to getting the treasure off his table edge, but all of a sudden, I had killed three of his four leaders, without losing any of my own
We had been rolling every turn for a monster to appear - we needed to get a double - right at the end of the game, I finally rolled a double 5 - the number denoting where on the board the monster appeared - 5 was in a pretty benign area, fortunately!
Final view of the central combat area - I think every figure in sight is mine. We tallied up the points, and despite getting the treasure off the table, Andrew lost so many of his figures that I ended up with a win - outstanding!
And another batch of South Island tourist pix! These are from our last full day Friday 6 March
We drove about an hour north of Dunedin to the port town of Oamaru
An old manse (first two images)
And one of many old churches
We then went to a definite tourist stop - a street down by the docks where all the old 1890-1910 buildings have been left almost untouched
Some kind of industrial machinery - I wasn't taking notes, sorry!
For some reason, Oamaru is the self appointed Steam Punk capital of New Zealand
Steam Punk HQ
Old railway station across the road
Town Hall and (of course!) a war memorial
We had to head back this way to pick up the car!
A five minute drive to a seal colony and (if you are there in the middle of the night and lucky) a spot where you might see little blue penguins
As it was lunch time all we saw (and smelled!) was seals
Next stop was here (thanks Google/AI!) Koekohe Beach, located on State Highway 1 between Moeraki and Hampden, about 40 mins from Oamaru or 1 hour from Dunedin
The Moeraki Boulders are large, near-perfectly spherical concretions
They are calcite concretions, formed by the slow accumulation of minerals, mud, and sediment around a core over millions of years.
Next to a 1730mm (5'8") figure for scale 😉
Many feature cracking patterns on the surface, sometimes appearing with crystal fillings, and some remain perfectly intact.
I thought they looked like dragon eggs!
We turned off the main road to someone's gorge - but could not really get a good picture of the very dramatic but short drive through it - this is looking back down towards the east coast in the distance
Another beach - and another seal colony!
Back in Dunedin, we felt obliged to go here - Baldwin Street, located in Dunedin, New Zealand, is officially recognized as the world's steepest residential street, with a maximum gradient of 35% (about 19° incline). The 350-meter-long concrete road rises 1 meter vertically for every 2.86 meters traveled, making it a popular, steep tourist spot known for its extreme slope.
And then we drove out to Port Chalmers
I guess that explains all the logging trucks on the roads....!
Port Chalmers Time ball & Signalling: Historically, Port Chalmers served as a vital hub for flag and time signalling operations. The historic time ball has recently been refitted and restored as a piece of maritime heritage.
Main street of Port Chalmers
A little light refreshment after a busy day of holidaying!
That's it for this post - next time, more winter Germans probably - till then, thanks for visiting and please leave a comment - cheers!
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Looks like it was a fun game Keith and a win as well, didn't see that coming but well done!! Lovely photos, really interesting.
ReplyDeleteThanks Donnie, yes, fun indeed. Good to see you are still enjoying the non-wargaming content too.
DeleteA fun game Keith. I am sure winning helps.
ReplyDeleteVery nice photos of the towns. The buildings are in very good condition. I noticed this in Hobart in the late 80's compared to Sydney's sandstone buildings. The lack of air pollution means the buildings retain their character a lot better.
Thanks Ben - winning always enhances my enjoyment 😁 Good point about the lack of pollution - I would quite like to visit Tassi one day....
DeleteLooks like a fun game and the added bonus of winning
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely right Scotty!
DeleteThanks for the picture tour; always good to see an interesting part of the world (and wildlife) one is never likely to visit. Good game too; a useful reminder that a lot of fun can be had with relatively few figures. :-)
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome David! I think I might prefer skirmish level games over tables groaning under the weight of figures nowadays, although the latter can still be enjoyable too.
DeleteIt was very unsporting of those pirates to dispatch the lady in blue like they did. It looked like a fun game. I'm not sure I'd like to live at the top of Baldwin Street and walk home after a few pints on a Friday evening.
ReplyDeleteIt certainly was, Lawrence, although the rest of my band dealt them out some karmatic death by games end!
DeleteStudents at Dunedin Uni used to race down Baldwin Street in wheelie bins....I would imagine a bit of Dutch courage was involved in that sport!
Lovely looking figures.
ReplyDeleteThanks Richard - Andrew subscribed to a monthly deal with Foundry about 20 years ago and has a large collection of very nice pirate figures
DeleteThe game looked cool, I do like the flat board with the 3d elements placed upon it. Could be a good way to do fighting in big buildings like factories. Piccies. Lovely. I’m guessing seals smell fishy? Notice there’s not a lot of folk around in any of the town shots. Dinner time? Or is it just very low population density like where I live?
ReplyDeleteThanks JBM, I enjoy using the boards for these games, they are a nice solid surface for individual figures on 20mm round bases, and the graphics are pretty cool. Add the 3d scenery on top, and it's the best of both worlds.
DeleteThe town shots are of two or three different places across a whole day, so I think it's a combination of time of year (March would not be our peak tourism season) and local population density. There ARE only 5m people here in a country around the same size as the UK.
Are that explains it. No tourists. I’m practising a degree of restraint in my comments at the moment which is why I didn’t mention the picture of your big balls on the beach. Dammit.
DeleteNice little skirmish Keith and more blue sky 👍
ReplyDeleteThanks Matt, a lot more entertaining than the last fantasy skirmish! We currently still have the same old blue sky, probably will do for another month or two....
Delete