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Introducing Grand Battle Scale!

Introducing Grand Battle Scale!

Speculation has run rampant in the lead up to this announcement so let’s put all the rumors to bed and answer all your questions!

 

Grand Battle Scale is our name for a completely new range (I hesitate to say range because it will be so much more) of hard plastic 10mm figures. And when I say 10mm I mean 10mm as reckoned by most metal companies: measured bottom of foot to eye with an overall height of around 11.5-12mm or so depending on the figure and pose.

 

10mm to the eyes and about 11.5-12mm total height.

 

As we did with 28mm (also measured bottom of foot to eye and standing 30-31mm) we are staying with a standard wargames size that is already out there on the market. Our figures can be mixed very well with existing ranges, buildings, and any terrain that is labelled 10mm.

Each 10mm set will feature the Grand Battle Scale logo (designed for us by the wonderful Steve Beckett!) and the boxes will be black instead of our normal white to help them stand apart. (Although I have to assume when someone picks up a box that says 328 figures I HOPE they don’t think we could fit that many 28s in there!)

The figures themselves come in a mix on the hard plastic frame. There are some singles, some doubles, some triples, and some five-les (five-figure strips). This should match up well with most basing conventions as 5-6 figures will fit nicely across a 40mm frontage. You’ll have the option of packing them onto the bases or going for a looser order for some troops.

 

When Rob Macfarlane was designing these we printed them out at 28mm size for fun. 10mm are about 60% smaller than 28mm.

 

Like our 28mm plastic sets we don’t provide bases in the box as we don’t know what rules you’ll be using them for. You’ll notice the only plastic sets we make that include bases are for the Quar which have their own game. Once we launch the various rule sets that we’ve been working on we’ll configure plastic sets to include bases that match the basing conventions of those rules.

 

WHY 10mm?

We feel that 10mm is the best of the smaller sizes/scales in wargames figures. 28s are obviously the best of all and will always be the apple of our eyes…but when you want to put on a truly GRAND spectacle of a battle then 10mm is the very best choice. We don’t all have 8’ x 12’ wargames tables and 10mm can give that truly big battle feel in a smaller space while the models themselves retain the charm and detail of a toy soldier.

We also wanted to settle on a well-established small size that folks were already using but could perhaps benefit from the “if you make it, they will come” nature of hard plastics. We didn’t want to create a walled garden with a unique scale that didn’t lend itself to mixing with other manufacturers.

Why do we think 10mm is a superior small size? First let me let the late, great Bryan Ansell of Foundry and Games Workshop fame describe his reasons for not liking 15mm.

Bryan Ansell in Games Workshop days

This is an excerpt from a 1998 Foundry Newsletter titled “Bryan Ansell Speaks Out!” In the first paragraph he makes a reference to “those nasty little 15’s” but then wraps up with this:

 

"AND A SHORT RANT ABOUT FIFTEENS TO FINALLY CLOSE

As I'm sure you must all be aware, the problem with fifteens is that they are just so much work for little return. Fifteens carry a great deal of surface detail; as much as twenty eights, and they take as long to paint as twenty eights too! Except that there's a great deal less pleasure in painting the fifteens, its all too fiddly, it makes you tired and tense, and when you have finished, they will never provide the joy you can experience seeing a 28mm battalion that you've just painted lined up on the table for the first time. Painting twenty eights can be a real pleasure, painting fifteens is just a chore.
Our involvement with wargaming starts with a love of model soldiers, and at least half the pleasure involved in the wargaming process comes from choosing the models, researching the uniforms, painting the units, and best of all, seeing the results of your work paraded on the battlefield. Fifteens just don't have the character and presence to give you that special thrill. I don't think that its a coincidence that our hobby stopped expanding when wargamers started switching from the magic of large scale models to the bland utility of fifteens, and I find it encouraging and exciting that, in Britain at least, so many are switching back at last."

15s then in our minds were out as a useful scale for all those reasons. On the other end, 6mm we feel for infantry is just not big enough to fall in love with the models. 10mm though is big enough to see all the great details and the character of the figures, yet small enough to paint quickly and then get a LOT on the table. Some battles can even be fought 1:1! Yet individual models are even suitable for single basing in some cases! We’ll get into some follow up articles to talk about the scale of games and tables that 10mm will allow you to try out.

 

To give you a sense of 10mm vs. Warlord Epic. Our Ashigaru bookend the Epic ACW and Epic Pike & Shotte 10-man strips. The ACW are 13.5mm (to the eyes) and the P&S are about 14.3mm (to the eyes).

 

WHAT in 10mm?

To kick things off we have two 10mm hard plastic sets: Samurai and Ashigaru. These two sets cover most of the troop types for the Sengoku period and beyond (read all about them and pre-order here). Sculptor Rob Macfarlane is working on follow up frames for the period now and will also be working on the next 10mm range. Studio Director Duong Thieu is also hard at work on a 10mm project (in-between all the other things he’s working on and managing!) but that one is a little further off and will include a game launch. If folks like our foray into this size we’ll be releasing regular new ranges while adding to the existing ones.

 

Samurai and Ashigaru painted and photgraphed by Christian Lemmen.

 

But what about all those 28mm projects? Have no fear we’re moving right along with all of those as well and 10mm is a bonus to our planned release schedule. So far this year we’ve released 15 hard plastic sets and as we enter the second half of the year we hope to crush that pace with many, many more releases across all our ranges. And don't forget that 11 sets of The Damned are on their way as well! 

Happy Wargaming!

Previous article Grand Battle Scale Samurai and Ashigaru Take the Field!
Next article A Big Damned Update!

Comments

russell - June 28, 2024

Hi greeks and persians would be great.haven’t been done by others in plastic.ranked up with all the different coloured units.as well as a 10mm version of your upcoming Chinese army’s keep up the good work.endless possibilitys

Paul Evans - June 28, 2024

Can you please tell us what the follow up frames will be?

David S./FlyXwire - June 28, 2024

Absolutely.
The resurgence of Battle-scales for the masses continues – and fans of Epic Battles, but for on moderate-size tables – continue to Rejoice!

Barry Tyler - June 28, 2024

When do we get ACW 10mm. This could be perfect timing I’m just starting a 10mm ACW project.

Brendan Flynn - June 28, 2024

Totally thrilled with this descision. Nothing is as impressive as hundreds of 10mm mini’s ranked up in formation. So many other advantages too; storage (the whole army fits on a shelf), ease of painting (batch paint a unit of ten in the time it takes to do a single 28mm), ease of terrain making (scratch building at this scale is easy and cheap), cost efficient (a hundred figures for the price of one, or more), and an army looks like an army, not a small representation of one). Frankly, I am not sure there are downsides.

Mark Bevis - June 28, 2024

Well I’ll be damned! For someone who has been selling off his 15mm to switch to 10mm this is BIG NEWS and great news.
For there is one thing that everyone forgets with 10mm – you can use N gauge model railway scenery for your battlefields. There are lots of N gauge card buildings out there, obviously suitable rail track for late 19th C to modern games, and lots of cheap trees via obscure Chinese companies on ebay.

I have found I can paint two 10mm figures in the time it takes to paint one 15mm. And whilst 28mm look great, the footprint of the units (we use 1 figure = 30 men) is so large that manouevre isn’t as possible and makes a mockery of the ground scale of rules used.

I am currently building a 10mm Samurai army with the Pendraken range, so might throw these in for the mix.

David Houston - June 28, 2024

Outstanding. Another vote for the next range being the war of the roses

David Burns - June 28, 2024

Great looking forward to this. Shame there not a great set of rules about. Hope you complete all the Asian army’s first.

Peter - June 28, 2024

Look great. Here’s hoping you go to town with this scale. Would love to see new kingdom Egyptians and hittites for a start.

Chris - June 28, 2024

10mm Seven Years War or Napoleonics would be fantastic

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