I've talked a lot about this "War of the Ring" variant--I've tried to come up with clever names, but I'm just going to call it "War of the Ring: Medieval Armies." On and off for the past several months, I've been in the process of converting the WotR rule set into a historical rule set that can be used for the High Middle Ages. This has involved converting the stats of Middle-earth units into historical units, altering the way heroes work in the game, and eliminating the fantasy elements. I'm converting WotR, as opposed to playing Impetus, Warmaster Ancients, Hail Caesar, etc, because WotR is the game that my brother and I enjoyed playing the most. In addition, with the exception of Basic Impetus, its cheaper at this point to just stick with WotR rather than purchase another expensive rulebook.
The original plan was to model a WotR: MA campaign after the campaign in the Knights of Honor video game. We were planning on having a large map of medieval Europe to play through a campaign similar to Warhammer Mighty Empires, with pitched battles when players encountered each other on the map. That doesn't look like its going to pan out. We have four players, and only my brother has his entire army collected. Suffice it to say, no one has their entire army painted! If we worked all summer, we would not have enough time to prepare the campaign before I have to leave and return to college.
Pooping on historical accuracy at this point, the current plan is to at least get one, large, four-way battle of 1000 points in by the end of the summer. The four factions are currently the Kingdom of England, the Kingdom of France, the Grand Duchy of Muscovy, and the Mameluke Sultanate of Egypt.
After that wall of text, here are some pictures.
So, my painted Saracens have been re-based. Their cardboard trays were simply drybrushed. Its a lot cheaper and easier than the previous bases, and it sort of looks a little better as far as the desert theme. A shot of the entire Saracen army so far, made up of one boxed set of Italeri Saracen Warriors:
Below is a shot of my brother's English army, made up of Italeri, Zvezda, and Caesar miniatures. Revell Normans make an appearance as a special unit. Again, pooping on historical accuracy
The entire 1000 point army cost about the same amount as two LotR infantry boxed sets.
Unrelated, here's, yet again, Mr. Eastwood:
I added a lot of weathering and shading to his clothing, but no matter what I do, I'm unsatisfied with my work on the model! Finally, here's a Warhammer snotling I painted for fun:
Currently, I need to finish purchasing my army, restock several paints, and continue creating the different unit statistics. Expect more updates soon!