THIS POLL IS OPEN UNTIL 4 SEPTEMBER. PLEASE VOTE FOR UP TO 3 CHOICES IF YOU'RE INTERESTED IN HISTORICALS AT ALL
So the discussion regarding historicals was relatively well-received by the people who stayed after BattleTech today, so we're following up with this poll. What (up to) 3 time periods most interest you regarding historical wargaming?
A few notes:
1) skirmish games tend to have between 10-30 miniatures on the table
2) anything defined as "large-scale" would be company-scale on up. So several platoons and some unit attachments for WW2, several bases each representing a Battalion for Napoleonics, and so forth.
3) We're looking to stay away from a few game types, mainly due to cost. Specifically, staying away from Flames of War (WW2 15mm) and Bolt Action (WW2 28mm) because both those games are bloody expensive. You can buy 100, 10mm Napoleonic infantry for $17 from Old Glory, for example. We're trying to keep the scale down to keep the costs down. Ideally we'll all be able to have playable forces for our game for $75 at most. Additionally, small-scale minis are actually easier to paint and make look table-top ready, for those people who don't like painting (Napoleonic Austrians are literally "Spray-paint white, black wash, drybrush white, dot of flesh for the face, draw a line of brown on the rifle, paint the tops of the shoes black, color the plume whatever color your regiment should have it painted, done").
4) We're looking at starting after the new year, and running 1-2 historical games per quarter (every other month, ideally). This is IN ADDITION TO, not replacing, BattleTech.
5) We're going to figure out a time period and rough game scale first, then worry about rulesets and minis. Note that I will personally source the rules to whatever we end up going with, and I will also supply people with the appropriate Osprey PDF books for reference material for your chosen army - all free of charge.
6) Once we have a Top 3 by acclimation, I'll hold another poll where we vote on what we're actually going to play.
For those who were concerned: the name of the book I was talking about after-game is "Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway", by John Parshall and Anthony Tully. The other books were "Dreadnought" and "castles of Steel", both by Robert Massie.