Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: The Final Toxic Fatties and The First Toxic Runners

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties and Toxic Runners

Zombicide has been our go-to tabletop game for what feels like around 6 or so months this year. We picked up from where we left off last year when we replayed the Original campaign, and then played our way through the Prison Breakout missions with all of the painted Berserker Zombies. But in the time we’ve been back on it, it’s started to get a little samey in the last month or so as we work our way through the Compendium 1 missions. But given that we have SO much Zombicide content, I don’t want to play through Toxic City Mall until we can do it in a fully-painted manner. So…. it’s time to shit or get off the pot.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

I picked up an extra box of Toxic Zombies earlier this year, and so I started with the four new Fatties. I leaned into blue this time since the previous Toxic Fatties I painted didn’t really have any blue shirts, so once mixed in these will balance out nicely. With the extra canvas space available to me on these models, I had some fun with the t-shirts.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

The drink bottles were an annoying extra detail that I could have done without, but they’re a part of the sculpts and I could at least take respite in the fact that these three are the last cola-bottle-holders I will (probably) ever have to paint.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Runners

With the runners, I continued to entertain myself with their singlets. As with the fatties and even my own choice of pop culture T-shirts, I generally prefer to go with “if you know, you know” but I did want to throw in one of those grey “ARMY” singlets that you see in various media.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Runners

Headbands are a bit of an annoying detail on these. I’ll have to paint one in the next batch with one of those “Kamikaze headbands” that were inexplicably popular in the 1980’s.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Runners

Once again with the T-shirts, we have a nice set of “if you know, you know” – and a mixture again of shirts I like and ones I’d like to shoot at in a game. And one more generic one.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Runners

They really do look like a dance line when the same model is arranged like this in photos, don’t they? That’s why I paint the models and do so in batches – otherwise it’d look like The Clone Wars!

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties and Toxic Runners

And to finish, one more group shot! This pic of all of the 13 Toxic Zombies that I got painted this month also shows one of the most important parts of these finished models – the blotches of Nurgle Rot paint on their bases – this will be so that we can distinguish the figures as Toxic Zombies without having to do something like paint the rims in a different colour – which is something that absolutely works well for gameplay, but I personally prefer to “embed” distinguishing aspects of models into the paintwork when I can…

There’s still over a dozen more toxic runners to go, and then a big ol’ pile of toxic walkers…. 😮

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

A (brief) interlude from the 15mm World War II stuff today, showing the first models I completed in December. These Toxic Fatties (sounds like a Twitter “faction”, doesn’t it!) are from the rather huge Zombicide project that I’ve been trying to keep on bubbling below whatever else I’m working on at any given time. I painted the first two of these some time ago, and had left all of these with only primer, and based (mostly) “paint-textured” so I had the urge to get them painted in November, and got them finished just as we eked into the start of December. Following my plan to amuse myself by being at least mildly offensive while having fun painting t-shirts, we’ve got a comic fan who can probably barely waddle across the room unironically wearing a “Flash” T-Shirt, a wrestling fan showing his love of athletic high-flying with his “AEW” shirt, and a fan of some obscure metal band that nobody except Napster fans have probably ever heard of.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

No back prints for these lads – too many tears in those shirts to make it worthwhile, unfortunately. You’ll notice that all three are carrying cola bottles, but the DC fan has the diet version. Gotta watch the weight!

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

The other five are a lot more bland. Those shirts are pretty much disintegrated, so I just varied their clothing colours while continuing to vary the skin tones slightly. As long as they’re all visibly toxic, it still works for me. I’ll just have to avoid glaringly and overwhelmingly green skin tones on my “regular” zombies when I get to them. For some reason this sculpt features a lanyard with ID tag on it, so I went with a kinda generic look rather than looking for whatever a comic-con or NASA lanyard looks like.

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

Backsides once again. The fleshtones on all these models was largely done using Contrast paints, though using Contrast Medium, in different combinations and multiple layers at times and then picking out the buboes. I want them to look good, but these are all just boardgame models in the end, so I’m not going all out on them. Contrast paints on models like this take care of the flesh tones while letting me practise things like my freehand, texturing on blue jeans and whatnot while just having fun with it – though those bottles were a pain in the arse!

Zombicide Toxic City Mall Expansion: Toxic Fatties

And to finish – the usual! A group shot! This pic of all of the 10 in the set also features the Captain America and Dark Side of the Moon Fatties that I finished way back in May of this year. Now I’ve just started to work on the regular fatties, though I do need to go through the rather tedious base texturing before I can get to the more enjoyable stuff, and most of them aren’t dressed for as much painting fun as the t-shirt brigade of this lot…