Inquisitor Hersch and Epistolary #3

The Kingbreakers‘ Librarius continues to convene. Inquisitor Hersch and random Epistolary #3:

hersch-front hersch-back

Backstory

Inquisitor Hersch, on the left, is head of the Inquisition’s continual monitoring of the Kingbreakers. Since the fall of Forestway to the ruinous powers, a small but aberrant number of the chapter’s battle brothers have manifested psychic ability. The Inquisition is understandably concerned about what that might portend. In turn, the Kingbreakers resent the harsh scrutiny much of the chapter received immediately following the planet’s collapse. However, over the course of several battles and campaigns now the two have been forced to fight alongside each other. Over the course of these the two have for the moment developed a tense but workable relationship. In gameplay terms Hersch is usually my standin for Torquemada Coteaz, whom I’ve fielded fairly regularly in 7th edition.

The librarian does not yet have a real backstory. I’ve been thinking though that he’s some sort of itinerant Epistolary, possibly from the Grey Knights, traveling the Imperium to give aid where he can. In gameplay terms he basically makes an appearance when I need a whole bunch of librarians, i.e., the Apocalypse Librarius formation, five psychers that together can open a warp rift on the table.

Models

Both of these guys were put together and painted quickly. Inquisitor Hersch was assembled at 6am, in the dark,  in a frantic rush immediately before a tournament because the models I had been using for Coteaz did not have thunderhammers and I didn’t want any hassle. Both are models from a Grey Knights Strike Squad box with some extra bits, e.g., a Chaos skull helmet and a librarian’s book from somewhere that I converted to be held as if reading.

I’m very happy with the build of both models. Hersch has the weight and dynamic, fighting force appropriate to Coteaz, matching the heft of the standard model and the charater’s statline and equipment. The librarian has a more composed, static feel to his weight, with a great clutter of books and purity seals and whatnot hanging all over. The Strike Squad armor is suitably ornate for these learned veterans, and the psychic hood arch as well as the archaic, warp-tuned backpacks clearly indicate “psyker” as appropriate for both.

The paintjob is nothing too fancy, but very serviceable and was quick to do. They were respectively based black and white, mostly by the vagaries of what spray paint I had on hand when they were primed, but it’s interesting to note that they came out the same regardless. The silver metal is Leadbelcher drybrushed with Mithril Silver and washed with Nuln Oil. The gold parts are a Brass Scorpion base heavily drybrushed with Burnished Gold, drybrushed again more lightly with Mithril Silver, and washed with Nuln Oil for the most part but Gryphone Sepia on the shoulder pads and Hersch’s helmet. Overall this sequence makes for a muted, worn looking gold, rather than the blinged out super shine Coteaz frequently rocks, the former being more in keeping with the Kingbreakers’ general aesthetic.

The bases have been done up very simply and in dark colors to be a simple contrasting background for the relatively shiny metal, and to fit in with the Kingbreakers’ standard wasteland bases theme.

40k IG Colonel WIP

With the Apocalypse looming, the Kimball Prime Manufactorum has belched back into life. Mostly there’s a bunch of Necron flyers and lords as well as some Space Marine airbrushing experiments on the table. But this evening on a whim I assembled another HQ for my IG:

The dude abides.

The dude abides.

Nobody f'cks with the Jesus!

Nobody f’cks with the Jesus!

He’s a simple conversion from the cultist champion in the Dark Vengeance starter box. It would be a really simple conversion except I actually bought him assembled from the bits bin at NOVA this year. I therefore had to carefully cut out the head without damaging the collar behind. Fortunately this was pretty easy. I gather the main body is two pieces, and the head is entirely on the front half rather than being molded into the collar as I originally feared. Instead of having to basically drill it out, I just had to slice through at the neck; the champion’s head is actually still pretty usable. It was then real quick to drill in a bit of a recess and pop on a head from the Tempestus Scions box. A Space Marine Scout rope coil adds some more bits while covering a small Chaosy looking bojangle on the rear of the jacket belt. An embedded Chaos star in the gauntlet is covered with a very thin layer of greenstuff. The Chaos brand on his chest I covered with a greenstuff triangle which I’ll probably notch or line later once hardened. Several of the standard IG commander models have a very similar device indicating rank. The base I think is actually from GW, but I’m not sure. I stole it out of Colin’s basing supplies tub when he left it here to work on our NOVA board.

The PAGE crew maniacally churning through the bits bins at NOVA.

The PAGE crew maniacally churning through the bits bins at NOVA.

Originally I had no plan for the model, but figured I couldn’t go wrong with $1.50 for such a cool figure. I came across him again tonight while scrounging for some other bits and realized he’d make a great colonel. He’s dead on for two of my favorite pictures in the IG codex, Colonel Straken and the Company Commander.

Colonel Straken.  He lost his arm to a landshark.  No, seriously.  That's its skull on his side.

Colonel Straken. He lost his arm to a landshark. No, seriously. That’s its skull on his side.

A Company Commander.

A Company Commander.

The original black and white of the latter was actually my favorite in the book alongside the 5th edition Ogryn picture; the face was less distorted in that version.

In any event, those are great pictures and characters. Unfortunately I don’t really like most of the Catachan jungle fighter models. They’re getting up there in years and often kind of dated and cartoony. Hopefully they did redone at some point soon.

So, Army-wide I’m much more drawn to the look of the Cadian shock trooper models than the Catachans. Conceptually though the artwork for the latter have a lot of appeal. Much of it really exudes a strong Vietnam feel of guys stuck in a horrible nightmare for ages. At some point looking at that company commander image I got this idea of a grungy, ultra-veteran sporting that burnt-out, rogue look who is nonetheless leader of a prim and proper Cadian army. Him and his closest troops have just been through too much to care about much else or anything. With this conversion I now have just such a model, with a scrawnier, starving look that I like and think is more appropriate for that concept than the mega-buff Catachans. I don’t have a name or other background story yet, though there’s definitely an interesting juxtaposition to be had between him and the more WW2 English looking Captain Higgenbotham.

Unfortunately this does mean that my IG is getting pretty top heavy: Two Company Commanders and a Lord Commissar to lead a Command Squad, two Platoons, a Heavy Weapons Squad, and a Sentinel?  Hmm…