77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth (Reaper Bones) D&D Monster Manual 34/Realm of Chaos – Nurgle’s Children 2020 #23

Reaper Bones 77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth

Well, after finishing Goremaw the Rather Large Worm and maaging to get him posted up yesterday, I immediately got stuck onto today’s model – another Reaper Bones feature. This time, Mudgullet, the Froghemoth – also from the Reaper Bones III Kickstarter campaign. The
“Froghemoth” part seems to have become a deleteted reference now. I guess because “Frogehemoth” is apparently a real D&D thing. Something I only learned yesterday via accidently seeing one pop up on Amazon. When I saw it appear as a goal during the Kickstarter, I assumed (for some reason) that it was an original creation. More fool me to think that Reaper had any originality at all. They’re a decent company with generally nice-to-very good models and products (sticky Bones excepted), but let’s face it – pretty much everything they do is based on D&D or some other IP of someone else’s. I mean, we ran on GW for their lack of creativity and plethora of obvious pop culture references, but Reaper apparently just comb their way through the Players’ Handbooks and Monster Manuals and whatever other splat book they can get hold of…

Reaper Bones 77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth

So back to Mudgullet here – Yesterday when I discussed the fact that I’ve had three big, annoying Reaper Bones models taking up way too much space around the house, I suggested that I might be able to get another one of them finished. This is the second of those three that I was referring to and hoping I might be able to get completed – and also one of the oversize models that was destined for the next Tray anyway. Thanks once again to Ann’s Miniatures of Magnitude Challenge for May & June for giving me the impetus to actually get the damned thing finished, like, NOW. TODAY. (Actually yesterday by the time this goes up, but as I type this the PVA on the base tufts are drying alongsiode the final coat of gloss varnish.)

Reaper Bones 77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth

So when I actually saw this thing pop up in the stretch goals for the third Bones KS, my own D&D-limited mind went to different place. I thought of Warhammer’s Nurgle Plague Toads, by Forge World. Clearly, the Froghemoth model would fit in with my Daemonic Nurgle force as a gigantic daemon. A Greater Plague Toad, if you will. I’ll just find some appropriately epic Nurgle Daemon rules, and use it as a proxy in friendly games. It’s got a lot more chance of that happening than actually being used as a D&D Froghemoth! The base originally seemed to have a kind of aquatic theme, with a pile of roe behind Mudgullet. I added a few resin skulls and then painted them all in bone, so they kind of fill an ambiguous, dual purpose. Are they supposed to be skulls, or eggs? Yes.

Reaper Bones 77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth

One final point on the whole Nurgle thing. Yes, I was “lazy” by just painting it green and calling it Nurgle. If you see the real plague toad models, they’re covered in pustules, torn skin, tri-marks of Nurgle and so forth. Now, if I cared more about this model, I might have attempted to go to town with greenstuff and putty. Now, I wouldn’t have been able to do nearly as much as the amazing job Pandora’s Bitz Box did there, but even so – but – this big arse chunk of heavy, cheap, underdetailed, sticky bones PVC just doesn’t warrant that kind of time investment. Even enough to add triad-pustules. Nope, I had enough trouble fighting the tackiness of this damned thing. Even with liquid greenstuff used as a primer coat and AK Interactive’s paint-on Matte varnish on top, some of it still remains tacky. Nope. Proper care and work goes to proper models. This thing is painted, and it looks decent – I call that good enough!

Reaper Bones 77581: Mudgullet the Froghemoth, Nurgle Plague Toads, Oldhammer Beast of Nurgle, Oldhammer Plague Bearer of Nurgle

So will I get the third of the giant Bones models completed in time for Ann’s Challenge? Maybe. There’s just under 5 and a half hours left of June here in Australia as I type, or I could go with another 23 or so hours for the US West Coast. I think Ann allows stuff to be finished and posted up by the 3rd of the moth for her challenges, so I just might. The painting is about 95% done, but there’s a lot of flock to add and have dry, so perhaps it’ll be done, perhaps not… Either way, it’ll also be something that qualifies for my own The Jewel of July challenge that begins in just under 5 and a half hours!

I do also have two more smaller-but-still-larger-than-an-ogre models that I may be able to finish by the 3rd that would also fit in Ann’s challenge. Wish me luck!

D&D Monster Manual 33: 77579: Goremaw the Devourer (Reaper Bones)

77579: Goremaw, Great Worm, Reaper Bones, Goremaw the Devourer

I’ve finally completed one of the larger models I’ve ever started painting – Goremaw the Devourer, aka Goremaw, Great Worm, from the third of the Reaper Bones Kickstarter campaigns. I can’t say that it was an especially fun or rewarding experience, but I am satisfied well enough with the finished product, and more satisfied simply because the product is finished. I started on my Goremaw after seeing the fantastic job that fellow blogger, Dave Kay had done on his back in December ’17January ’18. Originally, I had been going for a black carapace to Goremaw, as I already had a pair of not-Purple Worms from Reaper that were long-finished, and seem(?) to fit the proper D&D scale (I guess, maybe?) better. However, the big, chunky detail on Goremaw’s PVC just didn’t work well with the greys I’d drybrushed on, and then Goremaw then sat around for a couple of years, neglected and shoved to the side…

77579: Goremaw, Great Worm, Reaper Bones, Goremaw the Devourer

Over the couple of years it eventually became one of two, then three of the larger Bones models sitting around, just endlessly taking up space on various desks and table in the house, waiting to be completed and moved the hell out of my way. But uninspiring enough to actually work on. With the advent of me trying to use Dave’s “Tray” concept to get models painted by limiting what I can work on, I decided to add Goremaw to my second tray. Which I’ll start right after I complete the models on the first tray, and then my 2 “Reward” models that I’m going to allow myself to do. The plan was that this would also allow me to contribute Goremaw to Ann’s Miniatures of Magnitude Challenge for May & June.

77579: Goremaw, Great Worm, Reaper Bones, Goremaw the Devourer

Well, except that all these D&D boardgame figures I’ve been painting lately haven’t actually been from the tray. I’ve been allowing them to queue jump because they’ve been (mostly) quick and (mostly) easy to finish, and because we’re playing those games – so it makes sense, right? Painting figures for a game that you’re actively playing being a priority? Of course. But the drawback there is that there’s still 8 figures, 5 terrain pieces and 1 …other on the Tray needing to be completyed (not counting the three that are finished and just photographed alongside Wormy here, but not posted yet because this post is going up first).

So my solution? Well, another exception to The Tray, this time for Ann’s Challenge. After all, what better thing than a painting challenge to motivate us to complete a model that’s just been a right pain in the arse to get done?

77579: Goremaw, Great Worm, Reaper Bones, Goremaw the Devourer, 77006: Great Worm

So over the past couple of days, I’ve added Goremaw to a large plastic base from Reaper, added slate, acrylic putty and sand to build it up, texture it and work the original PVC into it (adding Liquid Greenstuff texture to the smooth PVC rocks integral to Goremaw). And then it was time to pivot the black and yellow into what you see here. Yes, I’ve gone for the “Purple Worm” scheme again, because, well, why not, I guess? At this point it really doesn’t matter to me that much, and painted is much better than taking up space on my desk half painted.

First using Contrast paint to stain the existing greys into purples, and then working from there using traditional purple paints. I finished the model with weathering powders – both worked into the base as well as into the large scales of Goremaw – after all, it’s bursting out of the ground here – not stepping out of the shower!

Anyway, not my favourite model but one I’m satisfied to have completed. Thanks to Dave for getting me started on this big miniature, and both endlessly seeing the annoying thing on my desk next to my PC and even moreso, to Ann for the motivation to finish the thing off.

I’ve got 2 more of the larger Bones models sitting here – both quite close to completion. Both closer in fact, than Goremaw had been – and I got him from Zero to semi-hero in 2 days. I think it might be time to try for the next one, and then, just maybe, the third? How many days left until the end of the month? 😮