Everyone else has a GW thread...!

Started by Leon, 06 June 2011, 06:20:43 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Trencher

Quote from: goat major on 08 June 2011, 08:48:14 AM

Plus i dread to think of the results if i left my 10 year old son entirely alone iin a room with a lead figure, a drill and a tube of super glue!


Have faith - but only when you've showed him before!  :d


I'm saying that as a father of a son who's 10 year old, too.   ;)
TANK POLO? God, how our gardener hated that game!

Derek H

Young modellers  need to be able to build up their skills, starting with models that are reasonably simple to put together and building up to the more difficult ones.  . 

But Warhammer players need certain figures to make their army competitive so they go out and buy it.  Then they put it together and it falls apart five minutes later. 

Maenoferren

QuoteI wondered where they came from, there were a couple of them in GW T-shirts.  Is there a store near the show?
they had a little table at the far end of the room, there is A GW shop down near the central station :)
Sometimes I wonder - why is that frisbee geting bigger - and then it hits me!

Leon

Quote from: Maenoferren on 09 June 2011, 08:21:34 PM
they had a little table at the far end of the room, there is A GW shop down near the central station :)

Ah right.  I completely missed their table though.
www.pendraken.co.uk - Now home to over 10,000 products, including nearly 5000 items for 10mm wargaming, plus MDF bases, Battlescale buildings, I-94 decals, Litko Gaming Aids, Militia Miniatures, Raiden Miniatures 1/285th aircraft, Red Vectors MDF products, Vallejo paints, Tiny Tin Troops flags and much, much more!

Annatar

10 June 2011, 06:53:36 AM #24 Last Edit: 10 June 2011, 08:22:04 AM by Annatar
My attitude towards GW is nowadays ambivalent ...

There is a bit 'of Schadenfreude' in view of the "finecast-discussion", because of the boast, the price increase and the "we-are-the-hobby attidude". (Latter sometimes reminds me of of religious community ...).

You certainly have to acknowledge the quality of their products and the presence level they managed to achieve for tabletop wargaming.

Contrawise you have to bear in mind the aggressive company policy and you have to see amount of money you have to invest. What i don't like is the making use of the "keep them hungry effect", which is quite perfidious towards youngsters. GW likes to present itself as company of enthusiasts and geeks but acts like selling hamburgers.

I agree with Luddite that GW hasn't produced anything new the days. They still draw breath from the 80's and early 90's. The miniatures miss something originial/playful/kittenish/freakful/new/unique. They rework the old armies over and over and over again ... Interesting topics (Araby, Cathay, Chaos Dwarves...) are left untouched. Instead of inventing/producing something new by themselves, which was once their strength, they buy a license for LotR.

So i watch the way GW goes with somehow nostalgic feelings...

2013 Painting Competition - Winner!

Maenoferren

Their table was about the size of the one your cash register was on :) it had a painting table on it and half a dozen figures in various stages of being painted, and from what I remember a couple of the grass mats.
Sometimes I wonder - why is that frisbee geting bigger - and then it hits me!

sixsideddice

10 June 2011, 01:21:50 PM #26 Last Edit: 10 June 2011, 01:26:39 PM by sixsideddice
GW.... Meh!!!!  No interest, beyond mild agitation and disdain for their sales ethic.

Can`t fault the quality of their wares or their packaging; but lost interest in the childishness of their world creations long ago. I love childishness, I`m Peter Pan remember...  but I don`t  like childish things dressed up and posing as: sleek, dark, 18 plus, and `grown up` but which are really just mindless propaganda tools to get young people to spend more and more and more and more and more and more money in a mindless “I’m  a Sheep BAAAA!” syndrome.

I like the resin casting...  but hmmmm  I can remember when GW`s sales pitch used to be “the heavier the mini the better, look, just like our range... pooh pooh to plastics” I guess it’s just another GW U-turn. They should go into politics.

Six  :D

Steve J

I simply can't understand the move to resin figures. One of my friends at work has extensive experience of both white metal and resin casting and he is equally perplexed by their change. So sum up:

- Resin is brittle in comparison to white metal.
- Resin deteriorates over time due to the effects of UV.
- Resin aggressively attacks the mould surface, meaning more moulds required. A guide is 15-20 shots before the mould is no good.
- Resin requires either a very good vacuum chamber, but realistically a pressure chamber to compress any bubbles to get clean shots out.
- Given the level of detail on GW models, resin is really not ideal for them.
- You get a relatively high level of wastage with each resin shot compared to white metal.

- White metal does not deteriorate over time.
- White metal is flexible.
- You can get over a 1,000 shots out of a mould.
- Any wastage per shot can be melted down and reused.

I hope this explains why we cannot understand their decision.

Leon

Quote from: Steve J on 10 June 2011, 04:08:31 PM
- Resin aggressively attacks the mould surface, meaning more moulds required. A guide is 15-20 shots before the mould is no good.

- Given the level of detail on GW models, resin is really not ideal for them.
- You get a relatively high level of wastage with each resin shot compared to white metal.

- You can get over a 1,000 shots out of a mould.
- Any wastage per shot can be melted down and reused.

These were the main things that surprised me.  We've got items like the A7V, which eats moulds like they're going out of fashion.  We're lucky to get 10 casts out of that one, before it starts to rip apart.  God knows how GW are going to get around that?

And the wastage is another good point.  Miscast metal?  Chuck it back in the pot, no bother.  But with resin, it's all waste.  You can grind it down to a powder, and put it back into your resin mix, but that's a) time consuming, b) affects the quality of the next batch.
www.pendraken.co.uk - Now home to over 10,000 products, including nearly 5000 items for 10mm wargaming, plus MDF bases, Battlescale buildings, I-94 decals, Litko Gaming Aids, Militia Miniatures, Raiden Miniatures 1/285th aircraft, Red Vectors MDF products, Vallejo paints, Tiny Tin Troops flags and much, much more!

Squirrel

GW like to follow fashion, and if you peek in on the collectors/painters forums, resin is 'in' because they seem to think you can get finer detail ..... maybe they are right, I don't know.

They probably think the higher price, and shorter runs make the figs even more collectable =)

Cheers,

Kev


goat major

Quote from: Steve J on 10 June 2011, 04:08:31 PM
I simply can't understand the move to resin figures.

Spot price of tin (from LME.com)

My blog: https://goatmajor.org.uk/
My twitting: http://twitter.com/goatmajor

2014 Painting Competition - Winner!

Nosher

I 'ditto' the arguement about resin.

Nearly every resin model/kit/figure I have bought (including Pendraken resin) has been riddled with bubble holes, horrible cast lines (which to be fair are easier to remove than lead lines) and lumpy bits in very in-appropriate places....
I don't think my wife likes me very much, when I had a heart attack she wrote for an ambulance.

Frank Carson

Steve J

The higher price of the tin is more than offset by mould deterioration, high resin wastage etc. Resin prices etc have also gone up a lot over the past year or so. Just look at the price increases on the FoW resin tanks etc.

Last Hussar

Not a finecast comment but...

My wife has just set up a school club (this is a woman who has NO interest).  GW sent a huge box of stuff - about 30-40 paints, loads of brushes, the tools kit, some terrain, Black Library fiction, etc. 

If you can get past the 'What WH do you play' you will (at least I always have) found the staff really helpful. Obviously they are GW orientated (in the same way Tesco doesn't sell Asda own brand), but they are always willing to take time for you.  I was looking for SYW Russian green, and the guy took the time to try a couple of different pots out for me on an undercoated Chaos Marine.  I bought Warmaster on the strength of a Demo game.

Yes the price and the rules churn annoy me.  I think they have a problem in that they accept the shops will be loss leaders (the local shop employs just 1 man, and that will need to make £50 a day above the cost on figures sold just to cover his wages, before the overheads of a shop).  These act as shop windows for the web site.  They act as a central meeting place for the kids - no club to organise, thus meaning no adults have to be nagged into getting a venue etc, and also they probably get more introductions into 'The Hobby' than all the wargame clubs put together get into Historicals - kids take their freinds in.

What our side needs is more events like the Milton Keynes show (I know - there are problems with setting up shows).  This is in Middleton Hall right outside John Lewis.  It means that there is a contact point for kids to become aware of historicals.  People say GW doesn't bring kids into the 'hobby proper' - well how are they going to find out about it?
I have neither the time nor the crayons to explain why you are wrong.

"The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."
Franklin D. Roosevelt

GNU PTerry

sixsideddice

Hiya Last Hussar,

Yes, I would agree with you, the majority of GW stores have friendly staff (sometimes  a bit over friendly as they crowd you with conversation when all you may really want to do is browse quietly), they are usually helpful, and have a knack at getting you to walk out with something you didn’t even know you wanted (that’s why the staff take a three week course in sales management).

I think the gaming world could benefit from a few more pleasant faces in the games shops, and GW certainly are the leaders on that score...  when it comes to selling their own brand at least. No, my problem with the company as a whole is not on the ground floor; rather it lies at the executive level where the main decisions are made. I know because I worked for GW for years.

I agree - anything that brings the youth into gaming should, in theory, be a good thing. But unfortunately, statistics show that most kids introduced into the hobby through GW tend to STAY with GW and not deviate... until they leave the hobby altogether and find college, jobs, girls, etc. Few carry on and branch out to other facets of the hobby as a whole. Why would they? Games Workshop is like a Mother, provides all their needs, and keeps them informed through their own White Dwarf magazine. GW`s chief concern is to keep their customer base, which relies heavily on the 12`s to 18`s age bracket; which they achieve by an amazing bit of advertising and media saturation...  not to mention their glossy publications , which are shop windows for their latest products.

All in all, I take my hat off to them for having become an amazingly successful business conglomerate.  Plus, you can`t fault their wares which truly are second to none in any scale they cover.

Six

Duke Speedy of Leighton

Quote from: Last Hussar on 12 June 2011, 12:45:39 AM

What our side needs is more events like the Milton Keynes show (I know - there are problems with setting up shows).  This is in Middleton Hall right outside John Lewis.  It means that there is a contact point for kids to become aware of historicals.  People say GW doesn't bring kids into the 'hobby proper' - well how are they going to find out about it?

We at MK try evry hard with that show you know ;)
You may refer to me as: Your Grace, Duke Speedy of Leighton.
2016 Pendraken Painting Competion Participation Prize  (Lucky Dip Catagory) Winner

Leon

Quote from: sixsideddice on 12 June 2011, 11:53:16 AM
... keeps them informed through their own White Dwarf magazine.

I wonder how long that will survive if they're looking to cut costs?  An electronic version would be a much cheaper alternative, and in their target demographic, just as accessible.

:-\
www.pendraken.co.uk - Now home to over 10,000 products, including nearly 5000 items for 10mm wargaming, plus MDF bases, Battlescale buildings, I-94 decals, Litko Gaming Aids, Militia Miniatures, Raiden Miniatures 1/285th aircraft, Red Vectors MDF products, Vallejo paints, Tiny Tin Troops flags and much, much more!

Last Hussar

They tried cutting their catalogue a couple of years back, with the idea it was going all 'e'.  Came back the next year, probably under pressure from parent like us - we buy 2 every Christmas (at £8 a pop!) for the kids.  That may seem a lot, but on a Hours used per £ basis, they are probably the  most cost effective presents we get.
I have neither the time nor the crayons to explain why you are wrong.

"The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."
Franklin D. Roosevelt

GNU PTerry

Leon

I nipped into our GW store this past weekend for a snoop about.  There was no advertising for the Finecast visible in the front window, and nothing really inside either.  The salesguy said the Finecast stuff was "excellent, people online will always knock it."  :-\  Unfortunately, of the 3 blisters I had a look at, 1 had a thin layer of flash across the whole sprue, and the other two had bubbles dotted around them.  Nothing major, and easily fixable with a bit of time and putty, but not quite the perfect modelling experience they'd like to claim.
www.pendraken.co.uk - Now home to over 10,000 products, including nearly 5000 items for 10mm wargaming, plus MDF bases, Battlescale buildings, I-94 decals, Litko Gaming Aids, Militia Miniatures, Raiden Miniatures 1/285th aircraft, Red Vectors MDF products, Vallejo paints, Tiny Tin Troops flags and much, much more!

goat major

there's a podcast called 40k Radio (its on iTunes) which has just done a long interview with Rick Priestly - very interesting on the history of GW, his views on the culture of GW and what he's working on now
My blog: https://goatmajor.org.uk/
My twitting: http://twitter.com/goatmajor

2014 Painting Competition - Winner!