(Para a versão em Português, clique aqui)
| This box art goes hard! |
Recently I've acquired this nice kit from the Italian manufacturer Lucky Toys, one of their last releases so far (from 2009!)
This one gives us a small Walachian army, consisting of a few bowmen, halberdiers, some light infantry, light cavalry and a few horse archers.
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| the axemen in this set are very versatile: they work well either as Wallachians, generic European peasants or Vikings |
There are also a few casualty miniatures, which are always some nice miniatures to have, and two very cool-looking standard-bearers, which kind of look like hooded executioners.
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| These standard-bearers are too bad-ass looking and they fit very well both in "real-life" or "fantasy" armies (specially in evil fantasy armies, due to their scary style) |
The highlights of this kit are the miniatures:
1) ...of Vlad Tepes, a.k.a Vlad the Impaler, a.k.a Vlad Dracul, the Wallachian hero who inspired the legend of Dracula, which inspired Bram Stoker's most famous book (which is, of course, one of the most influential books in modern literature). This is a miniature of him wearing his "nobleman garments" (the same he is wearing on his most famous portrait), obviously not what he would wear in a battlefield (as the guys from Plastic Soldier Review wrotte back in the day when this set was new). Nevertheless, this is a very cool and unique miniature, proper to be used in the command group of a Wallachian Army, specially in a siege scenario (i.e. Vlad Tepes is wearing his courtly clothes because he was hosting a banquet in his castle when, suddenly, a Turkish war band surrounded it in a siege);
and...
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| Vlad Tepes Draculea in 1/72 scale (and the most badass-looking bannerman miniature in the background) - his sword is "bendy" and not meant to look like a scimitar! |
These miniatures have some other uses outside of making a Walachian army. They can represent:
- Medieval or Renaissance Russians, Ukranians, Serbians, Albanians or any other "Eastern European looking" army;
- Barovians (a fantasy realm - a domain from Ravenloft, whose dark lord is the vampire Strahd von Zarovich, mentioned above);
- Generic "men from a village being raided by Vikings" (a village in a cold mountainous place)
- I guess these figures might also work as mercenary Cossacks or as Stradioti, due to their heavy clothes, cloaks, boots, fur-trimmed caps (kaftans), etc.
The bad side of this set:
- There are 4 of each horse pose, which means there are 4 horses in that "epic pose" standing on the two hindlegs, which is not very cool - perhaps there could be 1 horse like this and the other seven in more "normal" poses.
- There are 2 causalty poses (good) and 4 "almost casualty poses" (not so good) - as shown in the picture bellow. The "almost casualty" could have been just 1 soldier, and the other 3 could've been an extra fighting pose.
- The box art implies that there would be a figure representing Vlad Tepes wearing his battle armor and riding a war horse, but there is not such figure. A pity. I'll probably use one from the Dark Dream Studio "16th century Medieval Knights" set, because of their awesome armours (although they are not Eastern-European looking at all, but I'm not a historical purist, I just want my sets and battles to be and look cool)
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| In the scene above: the hero, armed only with an axe, prepares to face the skeleton brought back to life by the terrible vampire necromancer! |
Eventually I'll paint these beautiful miniatures and post the pictures here!
See you next time!









