JWH, in his Heretical Gaming blog, recently put up a post - inspired by the late great Peter Young - on the advice he would give to a wargamer just starting out. It is a post worth reading and as an added bonus leads naturally to a person wanting to put up something of their own on the same topic.
So what would I tell a younger person starting out on their wargaming adventures?
1) Do what you enjoy. Obvious, but harder to keep to than you'd think. There are times when a person buys into something for some other reason: because it's good value; because you feel you should; because you make a plan with another gamer or group; because it might be good for a rainy day. You really don't want to waste time and energy into armies or periods or rules that you won't enjoy. Life is too short.
2) Build both sides. Wargaming is often a solitary activity, so don't be reliant on others. People move; people get busy. Keep your independence. Make sure that you can use those figures solo.
3) Expand on what you have. Easy when you play ancients or WWII, but it applies to other periods too. Why build Romans and Britons in 2mm when you already have part of what you need in 15mm? If you have Carthaginians, you're not far off being able to field an army of Spanish, Gauls, or Numidians. Have Marian Romans? Build a few more units of legionaries and you'll be able to play out Roman civil wars till the end of your days. But see point 1 - choose your expansions wisely!
4) Make wargaming friends who know more than you. I was fortunate enough to make the acquaintance early on of a couple of grizzled wargame veterans. They show you the standard, give you good practical advice, and help remove mental obstacles. Invaluable.
5) Get things while you can. You have to be sensible (well, maybe not all of us!), but work on the principle of get what you need when it's available. Vendors close down, lines disappear, prices go up, and personal circumstances change. If you can afford to get what you need now, do it. You can paint at your leisure, but you may not be able to pick up 240 Macedonian phalangites from that manufacturer at that price ever again...
6) Push yourself to paint hard while your eyes are good. Once they go, you'll wish you had painted more when it was easy!
7) Invest in making your table look good. You can have the loveliest armies in the world, but they only look as good as the terrain they are situated in.
8) Be as consistent as you can with your basing and painting styles. Try to do things in such a way that what you produce now will work with what you will produce in ten years.
9) Find some board games you like. They are easy to set up (provided you have some space around the home) and they offer a different perspective. You can game when you don't feel inspired, they are portable, and they are a great way to introduce non-gaming friends to the hobby.
10) Take things seriously, but not too much. You need a certain amount of fire and motivation to get projects underway and finished, but we're only playing with toy soldiers. It's not worth making enemies over and some of those rants a person can go off on don't always look so righteous five years down the track!
11) It's a big hobby. You will have times when you're on for certain aspects of it and times when you're not. Make the most of it all - writing, blogging, rules-writing, painting, researching, playing, youtubing, terrain-building, podcasting, and whatever else. Enjoy the variety and don't stress when you're having a fallow period.
12) Be aware that your gaming will go through different phases. Life will intrude. You will have times when there are funds to use and times when there are not. Use the former to help you get through the latter!
13) Have a big idea to work towards.
14) Have fun!
Thanks for the inspiration JWH (and many others at different times), and anyone reading please feel free to add comments or link below to your own takes on this.
Cheers, and hobby on!
Excellent advice! I started to read this then went back to the start and read it all, to the tune (in my head) of Baz Lurhman's Everybody's free to wear Sunscreen. It totally works!
ReplyDeleteHaha, excellent. Just listening to it now!
DeleteA thoughtful and engaging rumination. The only addition I would suggest would be 5A: Game While You Can; with the years, friends will pass (sadly) and others will have their ability to game limited by health issues. Don't miss opportunities for gaming when they present themselves.
ReplyDeleteAmen brother.
DeleteYes, very good point. I've been lucky enough not to have been forced to face this so much as yet, so I will take the advice.
DeleteExcellent points, here and at Heretical Gaming. And Ed's addendum above is poignant as well.
ReplyDelete#5 has burned me more times than I care to admit, consuming $ and time.
#3 is starting to build up some momentum with one of my projects. Classical Greeks can easily fight Persians, then add in some Celts/Galatians, how about some Macedonians next which leads to Successors, and Carthage is just over the horizon as are Pyrrhus and the Romans...
You're going well with #3! It's nice to feel that progress is being made, that's for sure - and then you have the prospect of lots of lovely battlefield possibilities!
DeleteA list we can all relate to. Point 9.. have a boardgame, good advice for EVERY gamer, something to turn to when other avenues of gaming are just not happening.
ReplyDeleteI would advise a new gamer to start low density, perhaps at the skirmish level, it is quicker to kick start and can be built opon.
Yes, good point Norm. I've never really been a skirmish gamer but did use Lost Battles and C&C:A scenarios as goals - I could paint what I needed for one scenario, then build on that to paint a few more to be able to play another one and so on.
DeletePlenty of good advice listed there.
ReplyDeleteCheers Peter, thanks very much.
DeleteIt’s taken me fifty years to figure out number 2. Excellent article, thanks for sharing Aaron:)
ReplyDeleteCheers
Kevin
Thanks Kevin!
DeleteAll very sensible points, all I would add is start Napoleonics early enough so that you have a chance of having finished armies before you die!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Hahaha - provided you live to be 120!
DeleteThanks for the kind word and the link - appreciated. I think I agree with all your points - maybe with 5, I think there are two possible ways of interpreting it: get everything you 'need' for an army, or getting everything you 'might ever need' for that army. I would tend to advise myself the first rather than the second - unless I was going to limit myself to one pair of armies only. And I was definitely writing to my younger self, I can definitely see why other people writing to their younger selves would advise or emphasize different things.
ReplyDeleteIt was a very interesting list of points, thanks for posting.
Good point - I'm a usually a get everything you need rather than get everything you might ever need, but have done both!
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