Karak Norn Clansman
Member
New Deathroller:
Outside the pitch it is undoubtedly useful for Chaos Dwarf conversions. Must-have for Squats.
This Deathroller share some of the weird or boring plate design with the new Bloodbowl Dwarfs, in my eyes, but it also sports lots of good or fun parts. Much more hit than miss, and always good to see Goblins mowed down!
For comparison, here is the recent Deathroller contemporary with WHFB 6th edition (which both I and my brother missed to buy before it went OOP, grumble grumble), the 3rd ed miniature and the original model from WHFB 2nd edition:
To me, the various Deathrollers through the ages tell a lot of Games Workshop's style changes and sculpting advances. There are cycles in creative endeavours, and some aesthetic cycle phases might indeed be golden. I'd happily field all Deathroller generations alongside each other. They all have their charms and strengths, and weaknesses. GW in a nutshell.
Outside the pitch it is undoubtedly useful for Chaos Dwarf conversions. Must-have for Squats.
This Deathroller share some of the weird or boring plate design with the new Bloodbowl Dwarfs, in my eyes, but it also sports lots of good or fun parts. Much more hit than miss, and always good to see Goblins mowed down!
For comparison, here is the recent Deathroller contemporary with WHFB 6th edition (which both I and my brother missed to buy before it went OOP, grumble grumble), the 3rd ed miniature and the original model from WHFB 2nd edition:
To me, the various Deathrollers through the ages tell a lot of Games Workshop's style changes and sculpting advances. There are cycles in creative endeavours, and some aesthetic cycle phases might indeed be golden. I'd happily field all Deathroller generations alongside each other. They all have their charms and strengths, and weaknesses. GW in a nutshell.