15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box – Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160)

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

For various reasons, I didn’t get to take any new mini photos this past weekend, so in lieu of leaving the blog for a week without any updates, I thought I’d sort out these photos I took awhile ago but hadn’t had time to review – two of the many, many almost-identical-but-ever-so-slightly-different houses from Battlefield in a Box’s prepainted range of European houses. Today, we have the Arnhem House and Cologne House.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

Opening the boxes, we see that the actual resin buildings are wrapped in bubble wrap while there’s a square of cardboard that serves to reinforce the thin printed card of the outer “retail” box.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

Like so…

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

I decided to review this pair of them together for a very specific reason. That reason being that the buildings are actually from the same mould – the only differences being the slightly different roof pieces (chimneys in a different location) and the paintwork on the buildings.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

Yep. Front and back, they’re identical. Having said that, they are both fine in terms of being prepainted buildings that you just buy and then plonk down on the tabletop, ready to go – even in their identical-ness.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

The interiors are what I’ve come to expect from Battlefront at this stage – simply painted floors with entirely black walls without doors or windows picked out in any way. I’ll eventually get to repainting the interiors of these and weathering the outside, but that hasn’t been any kind of priority and as such – it’s something I’ll get around to doing when I get to it. As you can also see, each level fits two standard infantry bases inside.

15mm Terrain Unboxing Review: Flames of War Battlefield in a Box - Arnhem House (BB158) & Cologne House (BB160), What a Tanker, Battlegroup, Team Yankee

As always, I purchased these sets from a retailer with my own moneys and have no incentive to say anything good, bad or ugly about them. The painting on these is fine. It’s fit for purpose and as always, the biggest benefit of these is “Open box, put on table. Done!” In that, I really see zero problems. Adding a little weathering/drybrushing will really make a difference on these, which I will do at some stage. These double-storey buildings are a bit pricier than a lot of the others I’ve reviewed to date. If you have access to a 3D printer and have the time to spend printing and painting, you may want to instead go down that route instead, because buying a bunch of these to make a town will get pretty pricey pretty quickly, and there really isn’t a lot of difference between these two. They work for me, but as an objective review I have to give these a square thumbs in the middle, mostly due to their price.

If you want something that you can just unbox and drop straight onto the table, though – these still do very much have their place. While I feel like I’m no slouch when it comes to getting a decent number of models painted to a decent standard, I’ve also got a lot of models to paint, and these allow me to drop and play. I’ll likely repaint them when I have time, and even supplement them with some of the aforementioned 3d printed buildings in time, but as someone who started 15mm recently without any existing buildings in this scale, I’m ok with having purchased these. As pretty generic European-styled buildings, I’ll also be able to easily use them in different time periods aside from WWII, such as the more modern Team Yankee/WWIII setting for example.

 

Zombicide: Green Horde – Trebuchet

Zombicide: Green Horde - Trebuchet

I really haven’t been painting much from the Fantasy Zombicide games over the last couple of years. I get a large Abomination done every so often, or some “3D terrain elements”, but getting to work properly on the game itself is still a ways off, as even with a somewhat renewed Zombicide focus, it’s mostly on the modern stuff. So after sitting on my painting desk for a good couple of years, and pretty inspired by the quick and easy job I got done on the Journeys in Middle Earth Siege Engines, I spotted this thing buried under some junk and decided to just get it done.

Zombicide: Green Horde - Trebuchet

The only differences I really made to the standard playing piece was to heat-treat the rope’n’rocks so I could pull it out from inside the body of the machine and leave it on the ground alongside, and to add that ground alongside by putting it onto an oval base, from Reaper. I’m not sure what all those other ropes are for, but it’s probably best not to ask…

Zombicide: Green Horde - Trebuchet, Gondor Battlecry Trebuchet

The now-completed model can be used in a variety of fantasy games besides Zombidie – it’ll fit into the Warhammers and AoS and LotR and Kings of War games – sure, the base is a bit smaller than standard for a lot of these, but I needed to keep that base small for the model’s primary use – Zombicide.

Zombicide: Green Horde - Trebuchet, Oldhammer WHFB Iron Claw Goblin Catapult Bob Olley,

Using the Gondor Battlecry Trebuchet as well as Oldhammer WHFB Iron Claw Goblin Catapult (couldn’t find the goblin crew easily) show a good range of size comparison with other fantassy game war machines – so as you can see, it’s very usable.