D&D Monster Manual 94: Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears & Doppelgangers

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears & Doppelgangers

I’ve decided to keep hitting the D&D models in an effort to knock those remaining numbers down so we can play the boxed games at our leisure. Today’s fodder is a trio of Bugbears and a trio of Doppelgangers. Or to put it another way – a trio of decent-for-boardgame models and a trio of trash.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears

The Bugbears are some of the better sculpts to come out of these Adventure Boardgame boxes – solidly “Nolzurs” quality, which makes total sense.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears

They do at least manage to have a little bit of character along with some reasonable detail. Of course, I’m judging these things on a sliding scale. They’re not Citadel nor Rackham nor Tre’ Manor or even FFG Boardgame sculpts. They’re very comparable to random Reaper models, for example.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears

But yeah, ultimately they’ll do the job, and I’m happy with this trio of Wookiee-wannabes. Browns and metals, pretty simple, but enough details on them so I needed to have my eyes open to paint them over the course of a few days.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Doppelgangers

The Doppelgangers on the other hand are much more on the trash side and were two coats of Contrast over white spray, two or three layers of drybrush, a little bit on the faces and eyes, and then the bases. I guess it’s probably a byproduct of trying to create finely detailed models in this scale in this material.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Doppelgangers

They look pretty much like Greys to me, but I guess this is their “unchanged” form before they use their polymorphine to take the shape of that Ork Bodyguard model before assassinating the Warboss to put an end to the WAAAGH for the God-Emperor of Mankind. Or summat like that.

Dungeons and Dragons Miniature Figures D&D Temple of Elemental Evil – Bugbears & Doppelgangers

I thought I’d add in a Player Character model here so the size difference can be seen. The Bugbears have a bit of bulk to them, while the Doppelgangers look pretty weedy. If you enjoy looking at Bugbears, why not wander over to Faust’s Blog, Double Down Dice and check out his recently-painted gang of bears that don’t actually look like bugs.

D&D ̶M̶o̶n̶s̶t̶e̶r̶ Hero Manual 93: Tomb of Annihilation – Dragonbait, Saurial Paladin & Birdsong, Tabaxi Bard

Dungeons and Dragons, D&D Tomb of Annihilation Heroes - Dragonbait, Saurial Paladin & Birdsong, Tabaxi Bard

My final pair of D&D models for the month are a pair of heroes from the Tomb of Annihilation Dungeons and Dragons Adventure Boardgame.

Dungeons and Dragons, D&D Tomb of Annihilation Heroes - Dragonbait, Saurial Paladin & Birdsong, Tabaxi Bard

Well, technically we have the final D&D model I completed in May (Dragonbait). That’s the lizard man in case you hadn’t already guessed! Alongside the first model I completed in June (Birdsong). Birdsong is the Tabaxi (cat-man) Bard, because of course a cat would have a name like Birdsong… :/

Dungeons and Dragons, D&D Tomb of Annihilation Heroes - Dragonbait, Saurial Paladin & Birdsong, Tabaxi Bard

The painting state of my D&D Adventure Boardgame boxed set painting is in an odd spot right now –

The next of these games chronologically – Temple of Elemental Evil has:

All heroes completed

5/7 Villains completed (just the Ettin and Black Dragon to go)

and 3/30 (28?) of the Monsters painted (those Hobgoblins)

So either 30 or 31 models still to be painted…

 

Following that is Tomb of Annihilation with:

2/6 heroes painted – (these two)

6/9 Villains completed (3 human-ish models to go)

and all 28 of the Monsters painted since I finished those Sheletons and Zombies the other week.

Leaving 7 more models to be painted.

 

Finally (not counting that Campaign expansion thing), there’s Dungeon of the Mad Mage with:

None of the 5 heroes painted.

8/10 Villains completed (2 human-ish ones left)

15/30 (26?) Monsters painted – the easy ones, though.

 

So.. kind of a mess. I feel like I should focus on the 7 ToA models since it’s the closest to completion and it scores me another completely painted boardgame, but maybe I should grind through the lower-effort monsters from ToEE first instead? Maybe mix in some of the monsters and heroes/villains from Mad Mage with whatever else I do here and there to just slowly get those numbers down?

And it’s probably time to try to find and paint the couple of ignored hero models from the first two games – Ravenloft and Ashardalon. For completeness sake if nothing else…