Friday, January 9, 2015

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 6 - priming the miniature

Here are some picture after I primed the miniature. I used Army Primer mate white.



It looks like that the primer had problems to stick on the games workshop plastic glue. Along the seams of the backspine where I used that glue I have cracks in the primer surface.



Tuesday, January 6, 2015

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 5 - eye stalks cleaned up

The gaps at the eye stalks have now been closed with green stuff.

The next step will be to prime the mini.
I used some clear tape to protect the base from getting hit by the primer. This will allow me to use the normal base and I don't have to worry about holding the mini during spray priming.


Saturday, January 3, 2015

Colorful Potions Part 2: Designing a potion list

Reviewing the ideas of the Colorful Potions it is clear that we will need some lists of characteristics that our potions may have.
  • colors
  • tastes
  • smells
  • consistency
  • physical description (like bubbling, swirling, sparks)
  • name of the potion (perhaps a history)
  • description of the container
  • possible side effects
  • quality of the potion
  • recipe (is there a recipe which the players could uncover)
  • rarity
Some of these characteristics are unique to the recipe of the potion and some may vary. To not adding another dimension of complexity the smell and taste should be the same. Just beware that it might be hard to smell some tastes like for example a salty taste.

Let's create lists for each of these entries and discuss their impact on the game:

colors
The impact on the game is minor. Perhaps there might be some situations where you are not able to distinguish colors like in the darkness or using special types of darksight.
Colors could be: red, blue, green, yellow, gray, black, white, colorless, multicolored, light and dark versions of some of them.
There might be several more colors, but since I want to have several potions that might have the same color a smaller set will do some good here.

tastes/smells
I guess these might be unlimited, but lets make up a list of some obvious ones: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, fishy, honey, almonds, vanilla, dung, earthy, like flowers, like beef, smoky, acidic, like soap

consistency / physical description
this is just a description for the feel during drinking and how it behaves when it is poured out of the flask.
sticky, watery, cream, with particles in it, fuming, smoky, bubbling, light emitting

name of the potion / rarity / recipe
The name of a potion shouldn't just be "Healing Potion". Give it a name connected to your campaign.
Synonyms for potion:
potion, elixir, tonic, liquor, dose, balm, medicine, brew, philter, draught, analgesic, application, balsam, compound, cream, formula, oil, water, salve, agent
The name is strongly connected to the campaign you play as is the rarity of a potion. The rarity is most likely connected to the price of a potions and also to it's recipe. The ingredients might be hard to get or the recipe is a secret only shared among a guild. It might also be that for healing potions you need divine power to brew them or the priests/gods might forbade them: They may be illegal, which might be typical for poisons. Think about a priesthood in power that ban all healing potions to ensure that people have to come to their temples to receive healing.

quality and side effects
These both go well together. Let's define quality of a potion: a normal potion should have the desired effect and none to moderate side effects. A better quality potion should have either a better effect, a longer usability or a less side effects. A low quality potion should have instead a lesser effect and stronger side effects. All this should also be incorporated into their price. 
Another option might be to say that an strong effect also implies a strong side effect
side effects: none, weak, medium, strong
quality: low, normal, high
potion effect:: weak, normal, strong

Friday, January 2, 2015

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 4 - adding the eye stalks

The eye stalks were glued into there sockets. Their direction was adjusted with a 28mm figure in front of it to ensure that some of them directly look at anyone in front of the miniature.
Some of them slipped in there sockets, so I restrained them with tape.




The eye stalks did not fit perfectly into the miniature and almost all of them leave small ridges and obvious edges which need to be smoothed out by green stuff.


Monday, December 29, 2014

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 3 - Basing the mini

Next step in building the the Eye Tyrant is to base the mine to allow to adjust the direction of the eye stalks.

Gale Force 9 included two different bases: a clear oval base and a sculptured base. Additionally there are some magnets included to build a removable base.

I decided to go with the clear base and use the magnets.
First thing I noticed is that the clear base is not completely flat and can swing a little bit back and forth. The second thing is that the magnets seem not strong enough to hold the mini really tight. Just by trying out it snapped several times from the flight stand. Most probably I will exchange the magnets for stronger magnets.

Here are some pictures of the based mini. Also two of the eye stalks are attached to the mini but not yet glued to it. I want the eye stalks to aim to possible characters surrounding the mini. Most of them should look to the front direction but some should look to other sides.







Tuesday, December 23, 2014

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 2 - Assembling the body

Here are some pictures of the boday assembly.
As suspected there are several gaps left. I decided against more filing and will fill the gaps with green stuff.








I actually glued the two side and the spine first. Make them match as much as possible. Then I assembled the lower and upper jaw together with the two tendrils and always checking that it still fits the backside of the mini. In the last step I glued the front to the back.

I tried thin plastic glue but since the mini didn't hold the parts by itself I had to swith to super glue.

And here to pictures after the gap filling.



Wednesday, December 17, 2014

GF9 Eye Tyrant Part 1 - What's in the box?

I got hold on one of the Dungeons & Dragons Eye Tyrants / Beholders from the Gale Force 9 collector's series. I plan to use this mini as a villian in one of my forthcoming adventures, so it's time to get it build up. The painting will most probably take a while.

Here an unboxing of the mini.
The box is roughly 6' x 8.5' x 1.5' and consists out of reinforced cardboard.






 The model parts are wrapped in bubble foil bags:


Here the unwrapped resin pieces:

A zoomed in section with the body parts and their back side:

Some pieces like the eye stalks are still attached to their mold spurs, other are packed loose but you still can see the mold channels to the spurs. There seem to be no mold lines directly across the piece. They are all hidden at the edge of the pieces.


Even it is not listed on the package, my box came with a clear base, a clear pillar, two pieces which seems to be a connectors between model and base and a pair of flat magnets.



I didn't find any instruction, but for most parts it seems obvious how they are assembled.

The pieces will clearly need some cleaning. Currently they do not fit. It looks like that there will even be some gaps after assembly that might need some green stuff.