Regardless, I hope you enjoy looking at my work. Unlike most of the others on my list of painters, I don’t do commission painting work. Painter: Jacob Stauttener I am the owner and writer of Must Contain Minis and this is the section for miniatures and terrain painted by me.You can contact him by email at For those interested in local deliver, he is located in the Guelph, Kitchener, Cambridge and Hamilton area of Ontario (Canada). He takes in commission work and specializes in fast and affordable painting to a tabletop standard. Painter: Dave Lamers Dave Lamers is a good friend of mine and to Must Contain Minis.He generally doesn’t take in commission work, but I do like showcasing his work on Must Contain Minis. Painter: Brenden Brown Brenden Brown does absolutely awesome painting work.To see more of his miniatures painting, check out his Instagram account – Painting Sith. He also does renovation and woodworking (Link) if that is what you are after. You can reach him through Forbes Hobbies (Link) in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. He is a commission painter who does superb showcase level work. Painter: Andrew Claessens If you are after fine detail in your painted miniatures, Andrew Claessens is well worth a look.Our goal is to both entertain you and inform you about more than one system of gaming. We play many different games and through our stories you can get a feeling of how the games play, what tactics work for us, and many excellent pictures of miniatures and terrain in action. Battle Reports This section of the site contains all of our Battle Reports.News & Previews Articles about upcoming products and recent releases.We do our best to inform the readers of what they are looking at so they can find the products for themselves if they are interested.
Many are painted, some are not, but they are all neat. Showcases Our showcases show interesting products.In turn, this knowledge can help you decide if a product is right for you. Instead, we present what the product is and some opinions of the product itself.
Perhaps we could even end up saving you some money. Take a look through and hopefully you will find a number of articles of interest to you.
#Two hour wargames terrain generator pdf#
You mention Crossfire in your question, and rightly so: it's a superb and rules light WWII wargame, possibly the most innovative for the period, and also one where the rules "go away" while you're playing.Īccording to one of the guys on the Crossfire facebook book, who claims Arty Conliffe - the author - is one of his closest friends, it's unlikely Crossfire will ever see a release in PDF format. It's really easy to learn and a ton of fun. It's based on the Commands & Colors system, which is *fantastic* if you're just getting started in wargaming, as you have a hand of card with different "activation" orders on it ("activate 3 units on your left flank" "activate 5 infantry squads" etc) which constrain the "choice-space" you have to make on any given turn. It's hex-based, and uses tiny plastic minis. Or if you want really, *really* easy to learn, Memoir '44 could be your jam. If you end up digging that, it's a pretty simple jump to minis. (there are also 2 "main" expansions and an "epic" expansion if you need more). Something like Band of Brothers has a relatively low rules overhead (virtually no tables) and comes with a ton of different scenarios in the base box that gradually increase in complexity. I'd maybe argue that before you dive into the (generally more expensive) world of miniature-based wargames, you try a squad-level hex-n-counter wargame to see if it's something your friends will also dig?