@cwo-marc
And when you consider how all the other units, tanks, fighters, bombers, and infantry are all their own scales, having consistency in class seems to make the most sense. At least to me. Even if units are the same size in real life, as you said, its easier for non-historians/enthusiasts to pick up the game if unit type x is scale size x.
Maybe if this was just a naval game or a land war game, then all units could be the same scale. As 3D printing becomes more common, I was interested in hearing how others approached this.
Thanks
Junkers 88 Sculpt Question
-
Side note: in some editions my UK units looked damn near mocha colored but just not enough to make a seperate army at a dimley lit table.
I sometimes have trouble telling them apart too, depending on the lighting. When I was reorganizing my sculpts recently, I took the darker tan British pieces from the older games and reassigned them to India. Great Britain got to keep the lighter beige pieces from the more recent games. This way, India ended up with less equipment-type diversity than Britain (no dive bombers or APCs, for instance) and it also ended up with older models (like the small-sized Royal Oak battleships) – kind of in the same way that the USMC sometimes gets hand-me-down older equipment from the US Army.
-
Lol
-
Yeah I’m trying to work Marines into the equation. I have some good ideas about it. It may not be for everyone. I’m really working at trying to come up with D6 rules for all these units from HBG and all the older editions of A&A. Russia especially, You’ve got the brown and the two shades of maroon. Then there’s Japan whoo boy LOL! Lot’s of good pieces.
-
@CWO:
I sometimes have trouble telling them apart too, depending on the lighting. When I was reorganizing my sculpts recently, I took the darker tan British pieces from the older games and reassigned them to India. Great Britain got to keep the lighter beige pieces from the more recent games. This way, India ended up with less equipment-type diversity than Britain (no dive bombers or APCs, for instance) and it also ended up with older models (like the small-sized Royal Oak battleships) – kind of in the same way that the USMC sometimes gets hand-me-down older equipment from the US Army.
Or we stole em like the M1 Garands in GuadalCanal or Army vehicles in Marine “Amnesty” lots after Desert Storm.
The deal was, you dropped off vehicles not in your TOE, no questions asked and you didn’t get in trouble or have
to abandon usable equipment. The military is quite good about accountability during garrison but not as much during
a SHTF situation.Hows this for “uniform”
-
Yeah I’m trying to work Marines into the equation. I have some good ideas about it. It may not be for everyone. I’m really working at trying to come up with D6 rules for all these units from HBG and all the older editions of A&A. Russia especially, You’ve got the brown and the two shades of maroon. Then there’s Japan whoo boy LOL! Lot’s of good pieces.
Yes, infantry shade variety is very useful. I had lots of fun reassigning some of my infantry pieces when A&A WWI 1914 came out. I’ve copied below my current arrangement – I hope the margins come out properly when I paste my list into this message. A few of the choices may seems odd, most notably my selection for Thailand, but in some cases they were dictated by the wish to avoid putting WWI pieces in an area where they would match the colour of the WWII pieces. So for example I assigned the burnt orange WWI Italian pieces to the European theatre (as Allied Neutral troops) to keep them far away from the burnt orange WWII Japanese pieces in the Pacific, and I assigned the medium brown WWI Russian pieces to the Dutch East Indies (as Dutch troops) to keep them far away from the medium brown Italian pieces in the European theatre.
American / Medium green (current colour): US standard infantry
American / Dark green (Marines from Pacific): US special troops
American / Greyish green (Milton Bradley): US special troops + PhilippinesBritish / Light beige (current colour): British standard infantry
British / Ivory (D-Day): British special troops
British / Sea-foam green (Revised): British special troops
British / ANZAC butternut (Pacific 1940 1st ed): Canada
British / Medium tan (early games): India
British / Salmon beige (Battle of the Bulge): NewfoundlandRussian / Dark wine purple (current colour): USSR standard infantry
Russian / Medium wine purple (Europe): USSR special troops
Russian / Dark brown (Milton Bradley): USSR special troops + MongoliaRusso-Chinese / Red (Pacific): China (Communist)
Chinese / Lime green (single colour): China (Republic)
Germany / Black (current colour): German standard infantry
Germany / Medium grey (Milton Bradley): German special troopsJapan / Burnt orange (current colour): Japanese standard infantry
Japan / Cherry red (Pacific): Japanese special troops
Japan / Medium butterscotch (Milton Bradley): Japanese special troopsANZAC / ANZAC butternut (Pacific 1940 2nd ed): Australia / New Zealand
Italy / Medium brown (single colour): Italy
France / Medium blue (single colour): France (Third Republic) / Vichy
France WWI:1914 / Medium blue: France (Free France)
Britain WWI:1914 / Pale green: South Africa
Russia WWI:1914 / Medium brown: Netherlands
Italy WWI:1914 / Burnt orange: Allied Minors
Austria-Hungary WWI:1914 / Medium green: Axis Minors
Germany WWI:1914 / Dark haze grey: Finland
United States WWI:1914 / Dark greyish green: Thailand
Ottoman Empire WWI:1914 / Turquoise: Turkey
HBG Axis Minors #1 Infantry with Rifle / Light grey: Neutrals
-
Or we stole em like the M1 Garands in GuadalCanal or Army vehicles in Marine “Amnesty” lots after Desert Storm. The deal was, you dropped off vehicles not in your TOE, no questions asked and you didn’t get in trouble or have to abandon usable equipment.
Sounds like a very practical arrangement to me. As I recall, by the way, in Desert Storm the US Army was equiped with M1 Abrams tanks while the Marines were equiped with the older M60 Patton (upgraded with explosive reactive armour, if I’m not mistaken).
-
We were, but we got Army M1s as loaners as well.
Here’s a pic of our M60s in Kuwait. Taken by my now deceased Staff Sgt.
-
Very cool Wil!
Always love seeing your service pics.
-
Wil,
––Oorah!
“Tall Paul”