GreatKhanArtist wrote:
Well, I started painting up the figures and that's going quite well. They have a very basic guide on the back of the rulebook, which is nice to reference for what goes where, especially for those of us not familiar with samurai armour. I'm not going to go crazy painting these: base colour from the Citadel foundations range, wash and a highlight for pretty much everything. Basic sand bases and some clumps of foam that fell off the Woodland Scenics trees and they're going to be done.
The game is quite straightforward. What I really like is the tokens mechanic, just as it is different from everything I've played before. It can be a bit unfair, however, as not every character gets to activate every turn. Also, once you lose guys, it seems difficult to make a comeback. This game also seems very centered on samurai, which is fitting, but makes you wonder what the rest of the troops are doing on the board. So far, a fun introduction to war gaming with basic, easy to grasp rules, but not a game I would rush out and buy all the expansions for.
May I recommend the osprey series of books? Or "the samurai source-book", mostly by stephen turnbull, the English speaking world foremost (living) Japanese historian who isn't Japanese.
You might want to use gloss laqure paint for the wood Armour and weapons, this gives the inane effect of the lauqur to the armour (which was laqured)
don't ristirct yourself to warlord ether, perry minitures (who made the lotr sculpts, and steelfist miniatures have a nice range and theassaultgroup do early (7th-13th century samurai), there's also kensei''s 30mms and eurkeka minitures, women can be got from annie at bad squiddo games.
You are of course welcome to make your own samurai hero, indeed I think that's part of the fun.
Additional
https://www.oshiromodelterrain.co.uk/catalogue28.html, and john jenkins designs have some nice samurai terrain, and mdfs are best from TRE models, and you can get a castle keep from
http://www.battlefieldaccessories.com.a ... astle-28mm