The Last War: Tales from Grampy's War


  • Just goofing off between projects and games, starting with a couple Haunted Tanks.

    Mark II Tank on the 'Frits
    (Illustration:  The 'Frits Driving a Mark II)

    I.  Grampy's Tale: On the 'Frits

    My brother and I learned it the hard way:  you don't laugh at Grampy, you sure as hell don't laugh at his War, and you don't laugh at the 'frits.  "Dammit-a-hell", Grampy yelled one summer, while kicking the old monster black-and-white TV set that seemed to take up most of the dark, stinking lfarmhouse living room, sending empty beer cans and bean cans flying.  "Damt TV's on the 'frits!"

    My brother howled in laughter, and earned a cuff off the ear for his trouble.  "Ow, Grampy!  What are you talking about anyway?  Damn Fritz."

    "FRITS, boy, not Fritz, thee's a difference!"  So Grampy kicked my brother and told him to shut off the old TV, ordered me to fetch another six-pack of Ol' Gravel's All-American Beer, and told us why you never laugh about the 'frits.

    The 'frits are kind of like little people, not made of clay and mud like us, but out of the fire and dark and fog of war and curses of dying men out in No Man's Land, and they're carried on the winds of war, bringing trouble wherever they're blown.

    You see the 'frits sometimes as lights in the dark; you dont follow them, they'll lead you astray. 

    Some of the flyers see them blowing high in the wind by night, glowing eerie in the dark, "Fool-fighters, they  call 'em!"  My brother laughed again, and got his other edar cuffed.  "It ain't no laughing matter, you go follerin' them 'frits, and youwish you hadn't!"

    Sometimes the winds of war blow the 'frits into people, and they come back all broken up, all "shell-shook", as Grampy put it, and my brother almost laughed again - "lots of boys came back from the Last War all wrong, but some of them boys was on the 'frits, and their eyes was all full of screams!"


    (Illustration:  The 'frits love machines, like this Iron Core machine gun.)

    And sometimes, the winds blow the 'frits into machines.  The 'frits, Grampy told us, are clever - they love machines, love to take them apart, love to see how they tick, love to put them back together all wrong.  "Like the damt TV!", Grampy illustrated,kicking the poor set again. 

    One night, Grampy said, the 'frits must have blown their way into a busted tank, because, before you knew it, that tank was rolling through No Man's Land, running the boys over, smashing through defensive lines, and wreaking havoc.  "A HAINTED tank!  Hainted by THEM, it was on the 'frits, and we like to never got it to stop, even with grenades!  You could hear them 'frits, beatin' and 'whalin' on that tank with hammers and crowbars and guns and whatever else they found to get it runnin' like they did, clangin' and bangin' out in the dark, way before you saw 'em comin outta the fog, burnin' and smokin' with the fire of hell itself, all wrapped up in barbed wire and covered in rust!"

    Grampy rolled up his sleeve, pointing at one of his old scars.  "Ye see this?  Yeah, that's where I took some scrapple from the last grenade we had to toss 'em, a soovy-neer for me to take home.  And THAT is why you don't laugh at the 'frits!  Now, turn that damt TV back on, and ftune in Dragnet, and get me another beer!"

    Maybe it was that last kick, or maybe it was the story, or maybe it was my brother managing to supress another fit of laughter from the word "scrapple", but whatever the reason, the TV seemed to work the rest of the night, and a long time after, but we never could find Dragnet on the air again. 

    Never could figure that out.  Damn 'frits might have put that TV back together all wrong, I reckon.

     

    Haunted Tank:  Two Views
    (Illustration:  The Last War:  Haunted Tank, second try:) 
    This began its life as a 1/72 Mark II tank by Master Box, with some light modification, as a follow-up to a first try with a 1/35 scale model that was just a bit too big for my tastes to be suitable for a moving tabletop combatant - the 1/72 scale vehicle is technically underscaled, but just about the perfect footprint for what I was looking for.  I widened the body just inside the treads by about one scale foot using styrene rods to help disguise the small scale a little, "bolted" on a styrene I-Beam bull-bar, scratch-built the rails on top and the I-Beam mounted on top of the rails (more styrene strips), hollowed out the sponsoon on one side (which had taken some light damage during the shipping, packaging, or manufacturing process anyway, with the modification allowing me to add a crew of Reaper Bones Gremlins to haunt the tank with.  The Gremlins are armed with big knives off the shelf, but I used some 1/48 scale shop tool accessory kit bits to replace the knives with hammers and spanners... I figure the gremlins had looted the tank's tool box to soup up this ride and get it rolling into the Last War like this!  The Reaper Gremlins set only included four guys, and I wanted to include a driver, so I improvised using an Oathmark Goblin Slave with scratch-built gremlin ears and hand-sculpted body - there's not much of him visible through the front window anyway.  The two Gremlins in the sponsoon are armed with a modified Iron Core machine gun converted into a loose imitation of a Lewis gun, and there's some sort of pole-arm from a box of Wargames Atlantic Baron's War peasant levy.  There's an unpainted (human) machine-gunner crafted from Wargames Atlantic Cannon Fodder and WWII Italian bits,  posed with the tank for scale.

    Overall, the tank was a fun and easy kit to build - there weren't many parts, they fit together nicely, and the kit was cheap (about US $15) so I didn't feel bad at all about nodifyng it so heavily for this project.  1/72 is by default visibly a bit too small for use with 28mm figures - some of the modifications I made (like widening the body a little, and raising the visualheight with the top rails and such) helped a little, and the tiny size of the Gremlins help disguise the scaling a little.



  • Coming soon:  Grampy's Tale of the Night-Stalker.  Plus, another haunted tank.

    A Handful of Haunted Tanks
    (Illustration:  A Handful of Haunted Tanks with a 28mm figure and ~1/56 Model T for size comparison)

     

    The Nightstalker
    (Illustration:  The Night-Stalker)
    Mantic Nightstalker Scarecrow (right), modified using Wargames Atlantic Lizard-man gas mask and Dead Animal Bits antlers.  The first haunted attempt at a haunted tank, using a 1/35 Whippet, is partly visible in the background; the size of this vehicle compared to 28mm figures seemed tome more appropriate for a terrain building  For the Night Stalker, loosly inspired by insipid "skin-walker" creepypastas I could probably have used a Wargames Atlantic zombie body for this instead of the mantic body, but I built the mini up before the zombies shipped and had the scarecrow body handy, so....


  • with that pic of the 1/72 tank model next to the cannongfodder trooper, i'm wondering if you couldn't convert the 1/72 tank into something for Quar.. they're short, up to about chest high on a human figure. and the fidwog are smalelr still. so that kit could easily make some sort of light combat tractor.


  • @Mithril2098 - I'm sure that 1/72 scale tanks, artillary, tractors, and many "battlefield accessory" type elements will work just fine for the Quar, given their small stature and  the fantasy/sci-fi setting!  They'll probably work fine for Warhammer/40K style goblins, snotlings, grots, and other such critters, too, and I don't see any reason why they couldn't be used for sci-fi Dwarfs in Space and Death Fields Einherjar, and I bet that they'll work brilliantly for equipping the Death Fields Sneakfeet as well!

     

    Some obsrvations:

    • Aside from finding just the right model outside of WWII or '80s Cold War subjects (which is where the majority of the huge selection of 1/72 scale model kits seem to to be focused), your biggest challenges for 1/72 scale would probably be the relatively petite size of hatches, doors, windows, gun turrets with exposed gunners, external accessories like shovels/axes or jerry-cans, and driver's compartments in trucks and cars:  those guns, accessories, seats, and doors will likely give away the smaller scale.
    • A lot of that can be countered by swapping them for scaled-up equivalents from other kits (such as those spare guns from an Iron Core box), or disguising them with bits of Styrene plastic-card modified to look like larger hatches and doors (which is a fairly easy project for most adult modelers, and many younger ones with adult supervision.) 
    • A useful, relatively inexpensive source of sci-fi/fantasy weapons, stowage, and gear are the weapons, stowage, and accessories kits for customizing 1/35 scale model infantry - several manufacturers make this stuff, the kits are relatively inexpernsive, and the WWII British, German, US, and Russian weapons selections typically include some weapons that will work great for the Quar, such as Lewis guns, BARs, and the like - 1/35 is big compared to 28mm, but filing down rifle buttstocks and that sort of thing can help disguise the scale difference, and 28mm weaponry tends to be exaggerated a little anyway, so you can probably get away with it - the machine-guns in these kits are great for replacing the  diminutive 1/72 scale vehicle-mounted guns, and the ammo belts and boxes are great for this sort of thing as well.  (The default 1/72 guns are fine too - a little delicate compared to 28mm figures, but not disastrously so!)
    • WWII Russian miltiary tractors seem to be a weird niche of the hobby with a surprising number of kits available - these tractors would blend in well with the Quar's loosely WWI "Dieselpunk" aesthetic, though the cabs are a bit small.  It wouldn't take much Styrene modeling wizardry to build bigger cabs!  A lot of weirder 1/72 artillary from the Victorian era, up to WWII, would also work well for these guys right out of the box.
    • Naturally, 3D printing gives you even more options for modification.  (Also, check out Wargames Atlantic's digital catalogue, if you've nevr seen it:  WA appears to have added a few WWI tanks since I started this thread, and theylook fantastic for Quar and Deathfields purposes as well as WWI historical gaming!)
    • I kind of wish someone made a sprue of 28mm conversion bits to use as a shortcut for this sort of project, for those who don't enjoy the modeling/sculpting aspect - some simple, non-descript, general-purpose doors and hatches, wheels/tires, machine guns with vehicle mounts, spotlights and headlights, tools and stowage (axes, shovels, sledges, rolled tarps, toolboxes, ammo boxes and belts, jerry cans), and so on would be extremely useful, including for scratch-built vehicles.  (I believe Games Workshop used to make something like that for Warhammer 40K vehicles, probably heavily weighted toward add-on skulls and spikes, but I don't know if an affordable version is still in print or not - I'd be surprised if it were.)

    Anyway, in the case of those tanks and the Quar, I think those tanks are probably just fine as-is, and a little Styrne bits-and-bobs and imagination could disguise the tanks even more with some larger hatches:  the Quar are short for their scale, but broad for their height by the looks at them, and some wider doors and hatches would look best for them.  Some bigger guns, stowage, and accessories sourced from 28mm, 1/48, or 1/35 scale kits will also do a lot help "sell" the implied  28mm scale., for more adventurous modelers.  I think 1/72 scale WWI and many WWII tanks, tractors, and artillary would work great without customization, anyway!

     


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