Sacrilege83 wrote:
Welcome.
Normally I wouldn't recommend the GW hobby to anyone, unless you are a
Die Hard Middle-Earth fan & love to paint or love table top wargames. So here's my list of questions to you to see if you should get into this at this late of a stage.
We already know you're a big fan of Middle-Earth so that's a plus!
Do you or your parents have a big account to be spending on expensive miniatures?
Are you in this to game or paint?
Do you have basic painting skills?
Do you have patience to assemble and paint miniatures? (This is important, many people dropped this hobby because it took too long, or they realized they had no time.)
If you're in this strictly for gaming, then painted miniatures don't matter though it would be nice.
Do you have friends or family members that can play with you?
Or a gaming community dedicated to the Middle-Earth genre near by?
Are you familiar with any type of wargaming?
It's better to start off slow to see if this is something you enjoy. Decide on a rulebook to get, The Hobbit Strategy Battle Game or Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game (actually this one could be out of production). Get yourself two opposing warbands. A warband consist of 10 soldiers I believe and a couple of heroes. Choose wisely what sort of warband(s) you want to start (Elves, Dwarves, Orcs, etc.) because if you enjoy the hobby you're going to want to expand into a full armada with the two years that are left in the Hobbit gaming license and 4 years (I think) left in LotR. Good luck and enjoy!
Oh I'm not new to Wargaming haha. I play fantasy and 40k (well 30k), and dabble in Warmahordes, Infinity and Malifaux. So I guess on the one hand, I'm not exactly lacking in projects.
Is there much difference between the Hobbit sbg and the LotR sbg? Can you play both with one book? I could probably get a couple of warbands (Orcs and Gondor or something) quite cheap, trouble is (as mentioned in my last post (this whole 'moderator has to check your post when you're new' is annoying...understandable but now I'm behind haha)) my area is a nightmare gaming wise. The only person I might be able to convince to play it with me atm is my girlfriend and while she likes the modelling/painting side of these games she's never been keen to actually play...
It's bloody annoying because half the week I'm at home and half the week im at my girlfriends and both areas have like no gaming scene at all. That's one of the biggest issues for me to consider. If there was a ready made gaming group that played LotR I'd buy in straight away but it's more of a risk as it is now. But then the longer I leave it...
And sithious, thanks, some good points there. LotR always seemed a lot cheaper (I guess because the plastics weren't customisable like the fantasy and 40k stuff, that used to put me off a bit but building models has become a bit of a chore now, I'd rather paint, and especially rather play these days), so now it can probably be even cheaper than then if I'm careful. But then the Hobbit stuff was the complete opposite of that haha, it was almost laughably priced, some of it.
And good point on the dioramas. I'd not even considered that, in terms of like WHF I always thought if I wasn't using them to play I wouldn't be getting the full value (that's why I have so many damn armies in various stages of completion, I buy an awesome model and then have to have an army to use it...), but I guess with LotR being what it is, it almost lends itself to that kind of display piece. People would know what it was if they saw it in my house, people worth knowing anyway, and there's plenty of inspiration and source material. I would rather play but I guess if I never find anyone to play with that is always an option.
Thanks again guys.