All, along with several others I've been volunteered to throw together a DBA-sized army for an upcoming weekend-length campaign/tournament....unfortunately Fantasy-based! Now, while I have a LARGE collection of miniatures - not just for D&D, Runequest etc., but also fantasy wargaming from some thirty years ago - I am limited in numbers of what I WANT to field.
Hence the appeal...reading that a LOT of you were roleplayers in other, more rose-tinted days of wine and song....
Does anyone remember the "Minifigs" "Dragons And Dungeons" range that appeared in 1977-78, and came into their catalog right after their original "Mythical Earth" range??? These were frighteningly expensive - but in those days apart from the first Heritage ranges, and the old Garrison "Hyboria" range it was ALL there was 'til Ral Partha etc appeared. There were High Elves, Wood Elves, Dwarves, Kobolds, Goblins, Hobgoblins, Orcs and Gnolls.....
Silly me volunteered for the High Elves, as I've ended up over the years with an amazing twenty of these rare figures....but need another few more for the full DBA-sized force. Does anyone have ANY of these High Elves they'd be willing to sell? They'll go to a treasured and treasuring home!
(God damn you to a slow and painful death, Peter Jackson - I could have just brushed the dust off my old Aquilonian battle line once more....)
...on the National Elf!
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...on the National Elf!
"Well, my days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle." - Malcolm Reynolds
What a trip down memory lane!Hence the appeal...reading that a LOT of you were roleplayers in other, more rose-tinted days of wine and song....
Does anyone remember the "Minifigs" "Dragons And Dungeons" range that appeared in 1977-78, and came into their catalog right after their original "Mythical Earth" range??? These were frighteningly expensive - but in those days apart from the first Heritage ranges, and the old Garrison "Hyboria" range it was ALL there was 'til Ral Partha etc appeared. There were High Elves, Wood Elves, Dwarves, Kobolds, Goblins, Hobgoblins, Orcs and Gnolls.....
Stupidly ditched all my 25mm fantasy figures about 12 years ago.
Thanks. Dave.
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Hi Phylo.
Yup. I was a "serious" wargamer in those days and despised D&D. However, at Chistmas we used to have a role-playing quest, for which I bought a Minifigs goblin (named Murgatroyd) riding a warg and a thief named Rhesus Thrungesprocket.
Somewhere I still have Murgatroyd, his mount and a piece of decaying bluetack that keep them stuck together.
However, at university in the mid '80s I gave Rhesus to an American student friend who was a major Dungeon Master in the USA and he lives on to this day amongst his cast of characters. (The American concerned is now a professor of politics at the University of Moscow in Idaho and probably wouldn't thank me for advertising this element of his past.)
Cheers,
Sid.
Yup. I was a "serious" wargamer in those days and despised D&D. However, at Chistmas we used to have a role-playing quest, for which I bought a Minifigs goblin (named Murgatroyd) riding a warg and a thief named Rhesus Thrungesprocket.
Somewhere I still have Murgatroyd, his mount and a piece of decaying bluetack that keep them stuck together.
However, at university in the mid '80s I gave Rhesus to an American student friend who was a major Dungeon Master in the USA and he lives on to this day amongst his cast of characters. (The American concerned is now a professor of politics at the University of Moscow in Idaho and probably wouldn't thank me for advertising this element of his past.)
Cheers,
Sid.
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LOL in that ENTIRE "Mythical Earth" range, those little Goblins in their hoods and wicker shields were the best! Something about them more closely matched the "feeling" of the books than all the rest.
Then again - I'm weird in that I prefer the cartoon version to Jackson's Epic....somehow it feels more....English?
Then again - I'm weird in that I prefer the cartoon version to Jackson's Epic....somehow it feels more....English?
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Dire as a film yes - I didn't say it was better lol - but its the overall impression. The actors who voiced-over, etc., gave it a sort of "Bright Eyes"- English cartoon feel. Jackson's films are tremendous - as entertainment...but I never liked Alan Lee's visualisations of Tolkien's world. And those have dragged the films off in one direction, almost at a cost to the reader's imagination, and resulted in a mid-Atlantic-newsreader's-accent epic...whereas JRRT was aiming for a particularly English mythology.
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Having sat through The 13th Warrior and Kingdom Of Heaven many times, I'm not sure Ridley Scott mightn't have produced something suitable...I think only Tolkein himself, (or perhaps Speilberg) could have done the book(s) any justice.
"Well, my days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle." - Malcolm Reynolds
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