| My fierce army, lined up and ready to go. Shooters on the right, fighters on the left. |
Showing posts with label Rhys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhys. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Battle Report - Lego Wars
Last weekend Rhys and I tried out Lego Wars. This is a much simplified version of wargaming, based on rules found here. The beauty of the system is that we can play with any toys that Rhys wants to. We, of course, played with Legos.
Monday, October 15, 2012
Sci-Fi Monday - Battle Report - X-Wing
The other night I arrived for our Thursday night game and Tony was running Jonathan through an introductory game of X-Wing. They both had bought starter sets, and I had brought mine with me. After the intro game we decided to play a big game of X-Wing instead of the scheduled LotR. 100 points each side, and nine ships on the table later, we were ready to go.
| The brave and scrappy Rebel line prepares for battle. |
Friday, October 05, 2012
X-Wing Follow up
I've had X-Wing for a week now. It has been a huge success. Not only has Rhys been asking to play but Owyn has played a couple of games. They both love the models and understand the mechanics. They are a little hazy on the maneuvering part but they love rolling dice and moving their ships. They smoked me in one game and much rejoicing, and dancing, ensued.
Rhys still wants to learn Lord of the Rings, but he is in love with X-Wing.
This one is definitely going in the Win column.
Rhys still wants to learn Lord of the Rings, but he is in love with X-Wing.
This one is definitely going in the Win column.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Mini gaming with the Wee
I was recently directed to this post about gaming with small children. I have had three posts on my search for games to play with Rhys. In the first one I talked about a home grown dungeon crawl game. It quickly lost its appeal. Owyn got bored after the first session, Rhys stuck with it for a few more but was, obviously, not really interested.
My second go around was Lego Castle Fortrann. This never got played. Rhys has discovered the online version on the lego web site and he plays that from time to time. When last reported, we were planning on playing the following weekend. The boys decided to take all of the pieces and mix them in with the rest of their legos. That didn't work out so well, then.
The third go around saw me buying one of the Dungeons and Dragons board games. While this game doesn't scale very well with two players, a couple of modifications have us playing it successfully. This game was a hit and Rhys loves his "Dungeon Game". Every couple of weeks we pull it out and have a go at it.
Incidentally, in the post above, I mentioned that we were going to see a 3/4 scale X-Wing. That did happen and it seems churlish of me not to include a picture.
So.... to make a short story long and interminable, while Rhys is enjoying his Dungeon Game, it is not the ultimate answer because it is not playing Lord of the Rings, which is what he really wants to do. In addition to the complexity of the rules I am reluctant because of the way he plays with the models. They tend to end up getting banged together in combat. This is fine with squinkies or lego guys, but not with my painfully painted minis.
The post that started this whole story off has a good answer. A miniature game using any and all miniatures, with simple rules and very little math. Army size is determined by number of dice. "We're playing a twenty dice game tonight". Each troop/dinosaur/robot/whatever is one dice. Each General is two. Vehicles or large monsters are more, up to four.
Movement is in inches and every unit gets a free reform; this gets rid of fiddly maneuvers that little boys would not dig at all. Shooters move 2", fighters 4" and cavalry/vehicles 8". Fighters hit on 3+ and wound on 4+. Shooters and vehicles/monsters hit on 4+ and wound on 5+.
Once you've bought your troops you divide them into units, though we may play it as a skirmish game with single models. Models are either fighters or shooters. Fighters hit and wound better, shooters can shoot from a distance but have a harder time hitting and wounding. Vehicles can't fight. Terrain is simple. Roll dice and move around until one army is destroyed. "Ferb, I know what we're going to do today".
This is going to be a winner. We'll pull out the lego guys and build some armies and start fighting. I can hardly wait. The inventor of the game calls it Tourna. While that is a grand name and all, I'm going to Rhysicize it right now and call it Lego-War.
By the way, there are at least two other Lego wargames out there that I am aware of, though neither is appropriate to my target audience.
The first is BrikWars, which has been around for a long time. The key thing with this game is that anything goes and if you are thinking about it too hard then you are missing the point. I highly recommend a read through the rules. This is how Legos should be played with.
The second is Mobile Frame Zero. This is a lego mech game. The rules will run you about $20. They sell kits for the mechs, though anyone with a Lego collection should be able to build their own. Rhys and I will be checking this one out a bit down the line.
My second go around was Lego Castle Fortrann. This never got played. Rhys has discovered the online version on the lego web site and he plays that from time to time. When last reported, we were planning on playing the following weekend. The boys decided to take all of the pieces and mix them in with the rest of their legos. That didn't work out so well, then.The third go around saw me buying one of the Dungeons and Dragons board games. While this game doesn't scale very well with two players, a couple of modifications have us playing it successfully. This game was a hit and Rhys loves his "Dungeon Game". Every couple of weeks we pull it out and have a go at it.
Incidentally, in the post above, I mentioned that we were going to see a 3/4 scale X-Wing. That did happen and it seems churlish of me not to include a picture.
![]() |
| This thing lives at the local airplane museum, Wings over the Rockies. |
The post that started this whole story off has a good answer. A miniature game using any and all miniatures, with simple rules and very little math. Army size is determined by number of dice. "We're playing a twenty dice game tonight". Each troop/dinosaur/robot/whatever is one dice. Each General is two. Vehicles or large monsters are more, up to four.
Movement is in inches and every unit gets a free reform; this gets rid of fiddly maneuvers that little boys would not dig at all. Shooters move 2", fighters 4" and cavalry/vehicles 8". Fighters hit on 3+ and wound on 4+. Shooters and vehicles/monsters hit on 4+ and wound on 5+.
Once you've bought your troops you divide them into units, though we may play it as a skirmish game with single models. Models are either fighters or shooters. Fighters hit and wound better, shooters can shoot from a distance but have a harder time hitting and wounding. Vehicles can't fight. Terrain is simple. Roll dice and move around until one army is destroyed. "Ferb, I know what we're going to do today".
This is going to be a winner. We'll pull out the lego guys and build some armies and start fighting. I can hardly wait. The inventor of the game calls it Tourna. While that is a grand name and all, I'm going to Rhysicize it right now and call it Lego-War.
By the way, there are at least two other Lego wargames out there that I am aware of, though neither is appropriate to my target audience.
The first is BrikWars, which has been around for a long time. The key thing with this game is that anything goes and if you are thinking about it too hard then you are missing the point. I highly recommend a read through the rules. This is how Legos should be played with.
The second is Mobile Frame Zero. This is a lego mech game. The rules will run you about $20. They sell kits for the mechs, though anyone with a Lego collection should be able to build their own. Rhys and I will be checking this one out a bit down the line.
Thursday, August 09, 2012
First Mini Ever - Part 2
In this post here I narrated the story of Rhys' first mini. He has finally finished painting it. I dull coated it today so it is as ready as it is going to get.
| "The Master" in all his glory. |
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Four month plan +
There's a lot I want to do this year, since I'm trying everything that catches my fancy for twelve months. I've called it the year of rules but I'm also dabbling in scales, mediums and genres. The only real rule I have is that all of my gaming activities have to be games.
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| This year I'm deliberately being a gaming magpie. |
Labels:
15mm,
Blogging,
boardgames,
Drop Zone Commander,
Gruntz,
Hail Caesar,
Historical,
Kings Of War,
lotr,
Rhys,
Romans,
Rules,
Saga,
Sci/Fi,
Warhammer
Saturday, June 02, 2012
First Mini Ever
Rhys is in love with the Lord of the Rings. It's no Star Wars, mind, but it's a very close second. When I play on Thursday nights I usually have him with me at the store. He used to call it Daddy's store. Then he started calling it Rhys and Daddy's store, which we still do.
Collectormania is a very friendly store, where they have known Rhys his whole life. It is under the second set of management, in the time we have been going, but it has kept the same vibe. They have a box of star wars minis, the soft rubber pre-painted ones, that they keep around for kids to play with.
I take Rhys in and he plops down at a table, out of the way, and plays with the star wars guys on some un-used terrain. He will also take breaks and watch me play LotR. He loves the Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game. He desperately wants to play. I've worked with him on the basics, moving guys, counting pips on dice, that sort of thing. He needs practice, but he's getting there.
He also loves the minis. Sadly, he likes to play with them like he does with his Legos, which is bad for the minis, to say the least. Two years ago the manager of the shop gave me some Celtos minis which weren't leaving the shelves. They were, explicitly, for Rhys to paint.
This year he has finally decided that he is interested in painting. He has been badgering me to let him help me when I am painting. Nothing presentable would come of that, but there are other answers. I remembered the Celtos models and pulled them out for him. He was very excited by that, but saw the flaw, in that they weren't based. All models have bases of course.
Rhys first had to pick a model to be the "Master", (he loves him some Star Wars). Once he had that task completed it was just a matter of prepping the model. I glued it to the base, then I helped him get the mold lines off. He missed a couple, but I left them so he could see exactly why "flash sucks". I primed it for him yesterday. This weekend we are going to set up a small painting station for him, next to mine.
I'm really looking forward to seeing what he does with this, and to spending the time with him.
Collectormania is a very friendly store, where they have known Rhys his whole life. It is under the second set of management, in the time we have been going, but it has kept the same vibe. They have a box of star wars minis, the soft rubber pre-painted ones, that they keep around for kids to play with.
I take Rhys in and he plops down at a table, out of the way, and plays with the star wars guys on some un-used terrain. He will also take breaks and watch me play LotR. He loves the Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game. He desperately wants to play. I've worked with him on the basics, moving guys, counting pips on dice, that sort of thing. He needs practice, but he's getting there.
| SWMBO brought this haul home last night. I'm so excited. For the boys, of course. Not me. That would be silly. |
| He's a fairly splendid sculpt. I hope he appreciates the sacrifice he is about to make. |
This year he has finally decided that he is interested in painting. He has been badgering me to let him help me when I am painting. Nothing presentable would come of that, but there are other answers. I remembered the Celtos models and pulled them out for him. He was very excited by that, but saw the flaw, in that they weren't based. All models have bases of course.
| The "Master". I went with a lighter primer so he could see the detail more easily. |
I'm really looking forward to seeing what he does with this, and to spending the time with him.
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Games for the wee ones
Rhys goes with me to the store on Thursday nights. While I play or talk, he hangs out and plays with Star Wars minis on some of the store terrain or plays the DS. Lately he has been wanting to play LotR with me. He'll be right around the table, "measuring" things with a tape measure. Thursday nights are special bonding time for Daddy and Rhys, but he is also starting to intrude into the games. So far, everyone at the store has been very nice about it, but I obviously need to get Rhys his own game that we can play together.
You see, Rhys is seven and has special needs. He doesn't grasp the rules for LotR yet. He's, among other things, developmentally delayed about a year and a half to two years. I've been looking for the right game for him, but have not been able to find something. I finally gave up on buying it and decided I'd just have to make something up. He loves the mini's and he loves the Lord of the Rings.
I decided on a dungeon crawl game. I wanted something simple and quick to pick up and put out. I don't have any dungeon tiles but I do have Spacehulk. Problem one solved. They may be Space Ship tiles but to a little boy they are tunnels and rooms in a dungeon.
You see, Rhys is seven and has special needs. He doesn't grasp the rules for LotR yet. He's, among other things, developmentally delayed about a year and a half to two years. I've been looking for the right game for him, but have not been able to find something. I finally gave up on buying it and decided I'd just have to make something up. He loves the mini's and he loves the Lord of the Rings.
I decided on a dungeon crawl game. I wanted something simple and quick to pick up and put out. I don't have any dungeon tiles but I do have Spacehulk. Problem one solved. They may be Space Ship tiles but to a little boy they are tunnels and rooms in a dungeon.
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