Mercifully, perhaps, this will be a very short post, since I have made a video of all the Wollongong Wargamers' games throughout the year:
The highlight of any wargaming year, big 'Mega Games' take a lot out of me. Particularly in the last few days prior to the event, I often think - this is the last one I do! I only ran two this year, Talavera back in April and Borodino in November. I think both were successful, although there are always lessons learnt. My reflection is that the key to success is to be selective about who you invite, and leave plenty of time between games. If someone has strong views about an alternative approach to the one you are taking, then have the wisdom to politely invite them to run their own game. This need not be divisive, simply present it as a 'Battle of XXXX Day' with a display of varying approaches/scales/rulesets. On the other hand, being surrounded by enthusiastic, willing and helpful players is incredibly energizing. Already I have an appetite to run two more in 2025, ideally coinciding with the 210th anniversary of Waterloo and the 220th anniversary of Austerlitz. June and December are probably far enough apart! None of us is getting any younger and it is within the power of us all not to have any deathbed regrets when it comes to wargaming epic battles!
A perennial issue is the long and frequently predicted death of the hobby, owing to the aging profile of wargamers.
Whilst taking no credit myself, dare I say the Wollongong Wargamers are bucking the trend in this department. Aussies are generally non-judgemental or 'sniffy' about fashions and trends, but in particular we welcome a very diverse range of games/rulesets and approaches. Gaslands, for example, is by far our most popular and frequently played game. At the same time we publish a calendar of our 'core' games to tempt folk who have to make a bit of an effort to come in, but can expect and plan for a particular game to be 'laid on'.
MaK - dystopian Sci Fi. |
No matter how much of a dyed in the wool Grognard you may be, once you take a closer look there is always something to admire in anyone's approach to gaming, and often I am left quite jealous at the modelling skills and brushmanship involved in less traditional genres.
Scale issues cropped up repeatedly this year. Entirely selfishly, moving to a smaller property, I have downsized my core scales to Warlord Epic for horse and musket, and 1:144th / 12mm for Cold War and WW2.
Young Daniel's Prince of Wales Own Volunteers - epic painting! |
Initially I was alone in this and had to provide both sides for any game I laid on, but 2024 has seen a slow but steady increase in the acceptance of these smaller scales, to the extent that my Waterloo bash will be in Epic scale.
However, the advent of two new rulesets this year have set me on a retrograde path! Achtung Panzer! is an entertaining set of WW2 tank skirmish rules that are designed for 1/56th - 28mm scale models...
and Clash of Steel is an innovative and exciting set of rules set in an alternative post war epoch redolent of interesting and evocative AFVs - all in 1:100th - 15mm scale!
So best wishes for 2025, and please remember the wise words of that soldier poet Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr:
Men do not quit playing because they grow old; they grow old because they quit playing.
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