D&D Monster Manual 48: Tomb of Annihilation – Giant Four-Armed Gargoyle

D&D Dungeons and Dragons Tomb of Annihilation - Giant Four-Armed Gargoyle

Another D&D model now, though this time from the Tomb of Annihilaiton set. The Giant Four-Armed Garegoyle is pretty much exactly what it says on the tin. As with the previous Gargoyles I painted years ago from the Castle Ravenloft D&D set, I painted this one with the same stonework colours I used on his base. I added some putty and carved in the lines on it to create the simple flagstones, as I do with the larger-based models in these sets, and the only other thing I really did here was to add in a little bit of purple and green via washes to add some tonal depth to the otherwise pretty boring grey of the model.

D&D Dungeons and Dragons Tomb of Annihilation - Giant Four-Armed Gargoyle

This one is a decently-sized model. Not sure what it’s like in the game, but I’m possibly not looking all that forward to meeting this model in-game if it’s anything like its smaller cousins scaled up…

D&D Dungeons and Dragons Tomb of Annihilation - Giant Four-Armed Gargoyle, Castle Ravenloft - Gargoyle, High Elf Mage With Sword 021003901, Gary Morley, 1998

Scale shot!

High Elf Mage with Sword (Gary Morley, 1998)

High Elf Mage With Sword 021003901, Gary Morley, 1998

“Too Sweet!”

This model is one I started painting several years ago. A High Elf Mage from that Warhammer Fantasy range’s refresh back in 1997, I needed a High Elf Wizard model to represent Immeril, the Eladrin Wizard character in the Ravenloft D&D boardgame that we’d started playing the first time around way back then. Eladrin, it turns out means “Elf” and “Elf-kin”. So a High Elf mini was roped into play. This particular model is one I liked, as it’s a little more subdued for a Warhammer model (ie: no gigantic hat)

As I noted some time ago, I don’t want my High Elves to look like everyone else’s High Elves. Silver armour with blue trim. It’s a good looking scheme, no doubt, but everyone’s models look like that! Instead, I took inspiration from World of Warcraft (which I was still playing at the time) and their High Elf offshoot, the Blood Elves. I’m not going to go into their convoluted background here, suffice it is to say that they look aesthetically pleasing and also different enough to the standard.

So I did that.

High Elf Mage With Sword 021003901, Gary Morley, 1998

The main drawback was the fact that when we stopped playing these board games, all those years ago, I also stopped working on the related models, and so this guy sat in a tub, with a bit of red on him for years. When we started playing again, painting/completing this character wasn’t a big priority until it started getting used, when we were into the second campaign and did a character shuffle. At that point, this model was being used on the table and then it wasn’t until after my Sigmarite Warrior Priest (as a D&D Cleric) got completed that I plucked this one out of the active game to finish off. Bjorn the Stormborn also announced a Painting Challenge for High Elves and Skaven around this time, and I hoped to also get this guy done as part of that as well. Unfortunately, as well as all of those stars aligned, personal circumstances also intervened, and I wasn’t able to complete this model until Early September, and I’m obviously only getting to posting it up now, at the start of October.