Friday 29 April 2016

A painty Haqqcident - Jazzy Jeff's shiny trousers & gluey fingers

Hi!

After binging on Infinity for my two weeks off of work (Easter holidays - No being a teacher isn't easy, yes the holidays are good, no it doesn't really balance out, we do it because we care!) I have come back to the real world and am trying to balance work and going to clubs to play. This has meant I still haven't painted any more stuff as I keep playing instead, I haven't written any more blog posts and I have been to the gym a lot less than I should have!

Anyway, I have learnt so much in the last 6 weeks that I could probably have written 6 posts, but I'm going to jut have to settle for one right now as I have a pile of marking staring at me. I'll write up about games I have played in the next post (There is a lot in that I am putting it off!)

Salute

Salute was AWESOME! I have never been before and it was so overwhelming and huge! Inevitably, I spent too much, but I was happy with everything I brought back, it was all stuff I had wanted already anyway:


Sa-LOOT!
Assembly

Flash or not flash? That is the question! How am I meant to know if that tiny spike on top of the gun is flash or a sight? This was my first frustration with assembly of these tiny beautiful models. I now have an eye for this, having started at over 30 models while making them, but occasionally I am corrected. Put my Lasiq on the board the other day and my opponent pointed out the flash on the gun...


Now not flashy Lasiq!
Seems guns are my weak point...  It has also taken me a bit of time to get used to super glue. I superglued myself to a model first time I tried to assemble one. Then there was the time I superglued a complaint code to myself. Also the spraying of the primer in the eye. It's fine, I'm basically an expert now... :/

Advice to other model noobs - pegs. Yeah I could pin. No, I couldn't be patient enough to order and wait for one of those tiny drill things from ebay. I'd probably be awful at it. I'm sure I'll regret this when I drop this bike in the near future:


Super high-tech assembly equipment (Anti-finger gluing technology)
New kids on the block


New kids on the block

HVT. Cute but deadly tiny pig protecting her...
I was pretty happy with the new additions to the gang above. The bikes have been amazing to zoom around with chucking smoke about for my djanbazans and being all impetuous and carefree, chain rifling scary opponents without even blinking. The Jannisaries have been a learning experience because I just got hacked straight away - back to the drawing board with that. Advice of fairy dust and tinbots and things were offered which I am yet to try. I love my HVT who I have kidnapped from Yu Jing and the Djanbazan is a welcome addition to the army as I already love my sniper so much. More on these guys in the next post with all of the gameplay stuff in!

Jazzy Jeff & his female friend

My first dip of a brush into the world of painting Infinity miniatures, or any miniatures for that matter, in fact let's just say first time trying to paint any object in the world ever, was exciting, satisfying and hilarious. James Newman (Gribbley Gaming) helped me as I have not one artistic bone in my body. (I am hoping my saving grace will be patience and mild OCD.) He used a Naffatûn to quickly show me various different techniques one could use to paint. Dry brushing, using thinner, water, layers, washes and highlighting were shown to me at lightening speed and with a deft hand which had more than 10 years of experience behind it. 


Slightly disorganised new painty area :)

The view from my painty area
My attempts to mirror this on a different Naffatûn were... mixed. 

The armour was fairly straightforward to do. Just used some gunmetal paint, then a black wash, then highlighted with silver. Light bounces off shiny things and creates highlights and shadows, yeah science. I get that stuff. I thought, wow this isn't too hard. It looks pretty good. Winning. Although I did keep getting told off for forgetting to clean my brush and not having the paint thin enough. Whatever, it was armour coloured. Cool.

Then I needed to paint the cloth or non-armoured parts. How are you meant to know as a complete novice what is armour and what isn't? Bearing in mind I have no armour knowledge. I mean, it's a bit niche. I'm not really into history and haven't played other table top games and definitely have never looked at actual soliders. I haven't even watched war films for goodness sake. When I asked how you can tell what's meant to be armour and what isn't, Newman looked at me like I was asking how to tell which part of a person is a face. I felt like a moron but I am just not used to miniatures and how they are designed. Was that bit round the arm meant to be made of metal or not? Who knows? Everything is so tiny as well sometimes I had to look away for a minute just to unsquint my eyes and unfurrow my brow for fear my face might get stuck that way. Took me a while to get used to but then it became clearer as I worked my way round the model over and over again. 


Ruined a perfectly good plate for this painting malarky - Hope you're all happy now!
With the armour and 'cloth' (or whatever the hell it is) done, I moved onto the trousers, which for some reason I had decided I wanted to be purple. I later realised the colours didn't go at all between the silver armour, olive ruck sack and then purple... so I have changed my colour scheme now. Anyway, I thought it was fine and I was doing the right thing. Little did I know... I had put the paint on a bit (ahem) too thick. This makes the model 'lose detail', I guess because you're just slathering paint over all of the sculpted lines and designs and sort of covering them up? Surely this wouldn't be such a big deal? Who cares really, it's only a pair of trousers. What detail is even on trousers? So I put the wash on. Maybe more wash will compensate for the less than ideal paint underneath? I'm sure someone said "You can just slap wash on it's fine." Was it fine? THEY LIED. The trousers were so opaque. Like, I can't explain how, but it was like you could actually look at it and tell no light would ever make it through. I don't know how it even looked purple with the black hole properties that this covering clearly possessed. And then, to top it all off, the overzealous wash on top had made them go shiny! Genuinely looked like something out of a 70s disco. 


So here he is - All singing, all dancing, and all shiny!
So, Jazzy Jeff, as he will always be affectionately known, was born. I like to think he keeps up the spirits of the other line troops through song, while wearing his shiny purple disco trousers. His favourites include 'Whoa black betty, Djazbazan', 'Fiday, fiday, gotta get down it's Fiday' and 'Stayin alive'. The Najjarun engineer provides the sandwiches as he has a back pack and they all pull together in spite of the battle taking place.

Anyway, that was my first attempt. Since then, I decided to change the scheme to silver, olive and then green for the trousers etc. Started on the female Naffatûn. She looked great. Even used brown and then sepia wash I accidentally ordered previously to do her hair and it looked good. This is as girly as I'll get, I'm doing the hair of a girl soldier. No one even showed me that, I felt well smug. Here she is, WIP, with way less shiny trousers than Jeff (Sorry for terrible photos):


Not so shiny but just as jazzy
Bright light definitely not helping here!
But then I learnt lesson number 2 - If you don't finish the model and varnish and look after it properly, the paint comes off. So her trousers may not be shiny like Jeff's, but her hair is speckled with grey (primer showing through from underneath) and some of the highlighting is not as pronounced as when I did it. Stupid egg box with tissue in not protecting my lovely model. I HAD TO buy a KR case at salute because of it (that is my excuse anyway!). Is it bad that when I just wrote 'HAD TO' my brain said that it 'had thermo-optic camo'? Infinity on the brain. 

I do have to say that I do feel that despite all of these (failed) efforts, I am glad I'm trying and do stick by what I said when I started: I would rather try to paint my own models and them not look great but at least I've tried, than not even make the effort. So I love my naffatûn, even if she does look very, informally dressed and a bit ill. Maybe a touch too shiny. Still, cool hair so whatevs right?


I love my Naffatûn, even if she looks rubbish. She flames people, it's fine.
Anyway, now my models are snug in a new KR case, along with some new models, which are sitting next to the rule book and core book, and my new metal dice, and NOW I HAVE SPENT FAR TOO MUCH MONEY THANKS A LOT SALUTE.... and I am looking forward to my next painting adventure, and when I find the time I will paint thinly, finish and varnish and then put that model in my nice foam padded hard box case. Although for that to work I'll need to learn to paint faces, which I can imagine will be about as easy as wandering past a hidden deployed tuareg with a shotgun in the second half of your order and surviving.

Next time, lots and lots of games to report back on.

Bye for now :)



Thursday 7 April 2016

Who the hell is she?!

Hi!

Thought I'd just do a bit of an intro before I post about my first games and stuff. Until a few weeks ago I had never played table top games at all, I had never assembled or painted models, and until now I've never posted anything like this online.

My Lasiq sniper surveying the battle field

It has been a whirlwind romance between myself and this amazing game, I have learnt so much and had so much fun I can't wait to play and learn even more! I don't mind losing, I like people playing properly so that I learn as quickly as possible and enjoy finding out more stuff and rules every time I play :) 

So anyway, please bear with my nooby ways while I ramble on about mistakes I make and what I learn along the way. I don't even know what people write in these things really so it probably won't be 'normal' but it will be an honest novice perspective on Infinity. There will definitely be less mad ramblings and more games in future posts! 

Will be posting shortly about my first dabble into painting (including Jazzy Jeff's purple shiny trouser Haqqccident) and my first semi-proper game at a local club which I had on Monday :)

Faction selection

Lots of people k
eep asking how I chose my faction when I started, and which models I ordered, so let's get that out of the way now too...

For my first ever games I borrowed some Pan O models from my opponent’s old army and he played his current faction, Ariadna. Straight away I loved the game. The complexity/sheer number of rules and the many levels to the game made me love it, despite having read that this is what puts many people off of starting to play it (PICK A DIFFERENT GAME THEN!). Having never played any form of table top game ever before probably made it even more exciting to learn. After my first game I was hooked and knew I needed to choose my faction and order my own army asap.

From my first games I noticed just how many orders my opponent could generate with those cheap units and was jel! Once we had played a couple of games and he had introduced camo I loved finding out more about sneaky tactics.

Check out the awesome Gribbley gaming scenery that I got to learn on. Lucky me!
Check out his blog here: 

http://gribbleygaming.blogspot.co.uk/

There were so many factions to choose from so I read the basic ‘fluff’ online to get a feel for them and set about narrowing it down a bit. What I wanted if possible was a faction which had the option of ‘cheap’ units, access to sneakiness and tactical skills but not fully sacrificing technology and having access to heavier units if I fancied it.

So I ruled out Pan O because I never really go for the standard option and also they didn’t have enough sneakiness for me. After playing my opponent’s Ariadna I didn’t want to choose them and be limited by lack of technology in my first army. I wasn’t drawn to the alien factions so that ruled out Combined and Tohaa.

Aleph didn’t feel very ‘me’ – very technological, high points units even for basic line troops and not much options for stripping this back. So this was it – the choice between nomads, Yu jing and Haqqislam. I instantly felt it was a choice between Yu jing and Haqqislam.

So then I just asked around, found out more about both of these and finally looked through the entire temporary catalogue on the infinity website and fell in love with the Haqq models and what their specialist units could do. TO camouflage!



Miniatures

In terms of ordering models, I meant to just order a starter box and ended up ordering a lot more. Oops! I felt like this was the closest I have ever been to fitting into a sexist stereotype. As I looked through all of the beautiful models I couldn't help adding more and more to my order... They say shoe shopping is addictive? Nah. Miniature shopping!

Retail therapy

My first army :)
HB starter box
Daylami (Rifle) 
Daylami (Panzerfaust)
Lasiq (Viral sniper)
Fiday
Ragik
Muyibs

QK starter box
2 x Hafza (Rifle)
Hafza (Spitfire)
Al'Hawwa
Odalisque (Spitfire)
Djanbazan (Sniper)

Support pack
Doctor
Engineer
2 x Nasmat remotes

Naffatûn box
2 x naffatûn (Heavy flamer)
2 x naffatûn (Light flamer & grenades)

Singles
Tuareg sniper
Tuareg hacker
Azra'il
Yasbir
Saladin

Thankings

Should really say thanks to Newman & Co for introducing me to the game and being so patient while helping me to learn, and everyone on the facebook pages for being so friendly and helpful :)

Join the WGC Infinity facebook page here.
Join the UK infinity facebook page here.

Read Newman's blog here: 

Read Pete's blog here: 

Read Greg's blog here: 


So yeah, that's me. 



Bye for now!