Water Well

I picked up this small terrain piece from a vendor at KublaCon. The package identifies it as being from printerrain.com, though I can’t find it on their site.

Water Well

This is my first time painting a piece which had directly been 3D printed. For the price I’m happy, although the layers are quite visible. It came with a bucket, but it was so stringy as to be unusable.

Wreck Age: Caravaneers

The Flockmaster went out of stock at the Adepticon booth, so the kind folks at Hyacinth Games shipped it out free later. And they threw in this pack of two models, which I’ve decided are Caravaneers. They’ll make a nice wandering stranger and his pack boar friend.

Caravaneer (pack boar)

The boar has a nice collection of random gear. I’m a sucker for pack animals, so he’ll fit right in,

Caravaneer

Along with him is this sad looking man, a rifle slung along his back. He’s been walking for far too long, with only his boar to keep him company.

Caravaneers (group)

Wreck Age: Arhk with Anti-Material Rifle

Way back in 2018, a buddy and I scored some promo Wreck Age models. I already painted mine. Since I was painting up the Stakers, Drifters, and Church of Fun, I traded for his.

Arhk Trooper with Anti-Material Rifle

I tried to match the Arhk trooper I bought a while ago, but this one turned out much more orange. My drugged out carnies might be uniform, but my organized security force isn’t. Ah well.

Ultramarines: Drop Pod

From time to time I’ll reach into the hobby vault to feature models painted before I started this blog.

The Drop Pod provided another way to get my Ultramarines stuck in fast, although that mostly meant overextending and letting them die. Oops.

Drop Pod (closed)

I like the idea of letting the drop pod open on deployment, although it does make it hard to handle.

Drop Pod (open)

I painted the model before fully assembling it, which made it pretty easy to drybrush the interior.

Hobby, games, and other amusements