When stated that way, it makes me think the plural should be “blunderbi” (ie. octopi rather than octopusses)… unless the root is latin then we are talking octopdus, so “blunderbodus”? …but I digress. These look great and the similar but varied scheme will look great on the table next to the warrior unit. Perhaps a few more splashes of gold would dial that cohesion up even more (ie. ring on finger that I can spot ranked up), but the commission looks amazing as is. Would be more than happy to field this unit in my army! Well done!
Isn’t it “Blunderbusserers”?
Na mate, it’s Blundi’s haha
Well, never though to create such a discussion about blundersuss/es/i/whatever. This is the definition by the Oxford dictionary. I think it’s quite reliable source… BLUNDERBUSS | Meaning & Definition for UK English | Lexico.com
He looks great in any colour!
I agree, seen him in blue, red, black, yellow. A quality miniature that looks good in any colour.
I like the blue though.
No no… you have to argue… not agree…
Also… I agree
Even more awkwardly, I think it’s from a Greek root, so the correct plural (which nobody actually uses anyway) is octopodes.
English is the stupidest language, I swear if it wasn’t my native language I’d refuse to learn it out of principle.
Bolt throwers with crew for the masses. Dirty cheap and effective, one of the cheesiest options in my opinion. Did happened also to you that the stoopid hobogoblins become better snipers than elves? When it happens it’s so funny
i havent hit anything in my last 10 matches with the bolt thrower. yet would deploy it 10/10 only because of the name
One of my favourite albums and definitely one of the best soundtracks for wargaming
Cool, didn’t you do something very similar way back? As a Destroyer?
@tjub “Cool, didn’t you do something very similar way back? As a Destroyer?”
Actually, this is THAT project. As the pictures from the old forum disappeared I am going to repost here