This month's edition of Wargames Illustrated featured a sprue of 
Warlord's new "Epic Scale" (known in other terms as 15mm) Napoleonic 
infantry. I managed to convince the good folks at Michigan Toy Soldier to
 give me an extra copy of the sprues so that I could review both. You 
can find the British review here, and a look at the associated mounted troops here.
 The minis are cast in a dark blue plastic that is standard hard 
styrene which holds detail very well. I would have preferred gray plastic but this allows enthusiastic beginners to play the army right out of the box.
       The eight stands of infantry are accompanied by eight skirmishing infantry, a mounted officer and an 
artillery piece.The groups of soldiers are cast joined at the elbows (as period
 drill regulations would have them) with their rifles at shoulder arms 
while the skirmishing infantry are modeled in active poses of firing and
 loading their guns The figures are cleanly cast with no flash and only the
 slightest hint of mold lines. The level of detail on the figures is 
very good, more detailed than many of the metal miniatures that I have 
seen. They are slightly larger than my old Minifig 15s so they ought to 
mix well with the new larger figures that fill the market but I would 
hesitate to try mixing them with the 18mm subjects that some companies 
produce.
 
the back of the sprue  
 
a closer look at the skirmishers;
 good active poses with well proportioned anatomy  
the front of the skirmishers, a good mix of overcoat and uniform 
every bit as good as most metal miniatures    
 the mounted officer and gunners, 
I do like the lad with his hands over his ears 
 
 the front of the mounted officer displays an excellent amount of detail as do the gunners
all of which is raised enough to make painting easy   
 
the rear of the infantry block, the figures aren't all exactly in step and there are small variations in the uniform and equipment, all of which really bring the models to life  
  the front of the same troops, some have oilskins covering their shakoes, others do not and there are small variations in hand position, excellent sculpts
  
 
 the back of the command stand; which features a drummer, an eagle-bearer and a sword-waving officer 
  
 the front of the command stand; the sculptor was smart to place the 
sword of the officer toward the center of the base thus minimizing the 
risk of breakage, but I would be tempted to replace the pole of the 
standard bearer with a bit of steel wire 
        This is a real testament to how far the plastic soldier end of
 our hobby has come in the last five to ten years. These figures are 
better detailed than 28mm models were just a decade ago and are so 
affordably priced that even a beginner can obtain an entire army without
 suffering financial hardship. To anyone contemplating entering 
Napoleonic wargaming this set (the Warlord boxed army contains a 
complete French army infantry/cavalry/guns including rules and some 
terrain for $145US) should seriously consider getting this. I only wish 
that items like this had been available when I was building my armies.
     Very Highly Recommended!
 
Well what is your take on the scale. Is this worth buying? I still have several armies using the old napoleonics.
ReplyDeleteThese are a good match with the old Minifig 15mm range (which most of my armies are) they would be rather smaller than the large 15/18mm products most companies make these days
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