Collector or gamer?

Started by Leman, 19 November 2013, 12:12:10 PM

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Wulf

I consider myself a gamer who never quite gets things together... I can't be a collector if it requires research and actually painting figures...

But I find the question highly relevant for a couple of Kickstart campaigns I've been watching lately (Mars Attacks! and Aliens Vs. Predator, both 28mm minis games), where it's increasingly obvious that most of the backers are only in it for the cool toys. Indeed, the AvP crows are treating the MA! project with scorn because their figures will be better detailed resin instead of cheap plastic. At about 3 times the price...  :(

Malbork

QuoteA gamer however is more focused on the rules mechanisms and how they can be used to best advantage, and is not particularly interested in how good the playing pieces look.

I think is more a definition of a games (rules) lawyer than areal gamer. I remember these types from my school wargmes club years and years ago where one guy would turn up with 1 PzIV, 6 Tiger I and 4 or 6 Tamiya Tiger II because the rules said these tanks existed in 1944 and they could blast the sh** out of our T/34s before we got in range. Since then I've shied away from clubs, which hasn't actually been too difficult as there are none near where I live  :)

As I am therefore a solo gamer (mainly) I tend to be more of a collector, since I have to build up two armies (at least ;D) for each area of interest. Even though my painting skills are average at best, the underlying intention is to put a decent looking, historically accurate (as far as I can tell) force on the table for a scrap that I, and possibly one of our cats, will find entertaining. So I'm both, but probably more of a collector through force of circumsatnce.

petercooman

Quote from: Malbork on 20 November 2013, 04:16:51 PM
I think is more a definition of a games (rules) lawyer than areal gamer. I remember these types from my school wargmes club years and years ago where one guy would turn up with 1 PzIV, 6 Tiger I and 4 or 6 Tamiya Tiger II because the rules said these tanks existed in 1944 and they could blast the sh** out of our T/34s before we got in range. Since then I've shied away from clubs, which hasn't actually been too difficult as there are none near where I live  :)


That sounds like the guy who wouldn't fit in our gaming group   ;D

For WW2 we have about 4 tigers and 3 tiger II's in our combined collections (there are two of us who have a german army, and we sometimes supplement each others forces to make scenarios work), and we have only used 1 tiger, and that in 2 games. For the rest we use pz IV, marder, stugs etc..

Gives for more interesting games actually, no relying on superior armour.

get2grips

Quote from: petercooman on 20 November 2013, 07:01:17 PM

Gives for more interesting games actually, no relying on superior armour.

Agree completely.  If I find a "killer combination" I stop using it or, and this is really fun, let my opponent use it and try to beat it.

It ain't the winning...it's how you win ;)

petercooman

Actually the most fun games we played were our defense games. We put togheter the attacking army about a week before, and then each of the players may complete a list for the defender. The one who has the lowest points on his list (using the bkcII points system)  gets to try and stop the attacker  :D

get2grips


Malbork

QuoteFor WW2 we have about 4 tigers and 3 tiger II's in our combined collections (there are two of us who have a german army, and we sometimes supplement each others forces to make scenarios work), and we have only used 1 tiger, and that in 2 games. For the rest we use pz IV, marder, stugs etc..

Same as me Peter. My German force is 3 Stug III and 5 Pz IV, which I've never used all together.

I'm now contemplating buying a Tiger I and a Tiger II for use with Battlegroup Fall of the Reich rules where most of the forces are pretty much ad hoc and the odd 'big beast' is acceptable and doesn't seem to upset the balance (at least from from a read through). I'm looking for a game which is fun and a reasonable simulation, rather than tryign to build up an unbeatable force.

petercooman

A tiger or two can be great if you use it as an objective though! Like kelly's heroes, move in the town and kill the tigers!

Hertsblue

During the Battle of the Bulge, Joachim Piper sent all his Tiger IIs to the rear of the column because he was so disgusted with their performance. That may give you some idea of how good they actually were.
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

Shecky

From about the late 90s until this year I would probably call myself a collector more than a gamer. During that time I may have played one or two games a year and mostly at conventions where I ran games. So actually some years I didn't game other than setting up games for others to play. I collected many armies in different periods during that time all with the intent of actually playing some day.

This year I would consider myself a gamer as I have probably actually played more games this year than the previous ten combined. I have still amassed more figures this year but with the intent of playing not collecting.

ryman1

I'm a collector/painter, never rolled a dice in anger, wouldn't know where to begin if I'm honest! :-[

I've had a fascination with the collecting side since I was knee high and started on airfix, must have had 20,000+ 1/72 plastics since then (sadly all traded away), it was only by chance that I saw a copy of 'practical wargamer' as a kid when with my mum I popped into a shop and I saw a french lancer on the cover and grabbed it.
From there, I realised that there was a whole community of gamers/painters and I guess it was just the quality of the pics and the lack of a gaming club nearby that cemented me as a collector/painter.
Having a massive unpainted lead mountain is a joy and a curse, joy because I've got a fair sized collection to drool over and a curse because I know I'll never paint everything I buy.
I'd love to game one day but am cautious as I wonder whether I'd enjoy it too much, get into it in a big way and lose the motivation to paint as often as I do.

That said, I will try it one day.  :)

Cheers

Ry

fsn

Dear Mr Ry Man.

DO IT! DO IT! DO IT!

Invest in Don Featherstone's "War Games" and/or "Solo Wargaming". They're available on Amazon, even if they're the execrable John Curry reprints. Start small - a skirmish. The small unit game is perfect for many periods - the Viking raid, two Barons bumping heads, outpost work on the Coa 1809, paras vs bridge guards 1944 - and it gets your figure on a table and moving - gets you used to playing. Ignore the big rule sets, something quick and fun to whet your appetite. I am a solo wargamer by preference, and I have games that can go on for days. (I seem to remember a game that stopped until I had painted some Portuguese Cacadores who were due on as reinforcements.)

Look at a all your figures. Their little eyes pleading, their little voices squeaking "you spend so much time making us look good but you never let us do what we are designed to do. Would you buy a car and never drive it? Would you leave a bottle of wine undrunk? Would you get that Thai bride out the catalogue, the one you like on page 72, and never ..."  Noisy little squeaky buggers - but you get the picture.

Don't be game-curious, jump in and have a whole new way of losing you evenings!
Lord Oik of Runcorn (You may refer to me as Milord Oik)

Oik of the Year 2013, 2014; Prize for originality and 'having a go, bless him', 2015
3 votes in the 2016 Painting Competition!; 2017-2019 The Wilderness years
Oik of the Year 2020; 7 votes in the 2021 Painting Competition
11 votes in the 2022 Painting Competition (Double figures!)
2023 - the year of Gerald:
2024 Painting Competition - Runner-Up!

petercooman

TRy something fast and free, there is loads around!

http://www.freewargamesrules.co.uk/

Hertsblue

I find the motivation for painting is gaming. There's no greater spur to finishing a unit than "it's got to be ready by Sunday"!
When you realise we're all mad, life makes a lot more sense.

www.rulesdepot.net

get2grips

Quote from: Hertsblue on 22 November 2013, 08:15:40 AM
I find the motivation for painting is gaming. There's no greater spur to finishing a unit than "it's got to be ready by Sunday"!

Completely agree ;)


kustenjaeger

Greetings

At the moment my motivation is planning for a series of games in May 2014 - so Phase 2 of my 10mm SYW will be done in December and hopefully some 10mm WW2 desert in the Spring.   However I'll get to solo game with my 10mm SYW as I test different rulesets using the same scenario.    Each of the units (painted and in preparation and planned) are named units hopefully with correct or at least plausible uniforms and colours.

Regards

Edward