ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58
ORIGINAL: geofflambert
ORIGINAL: iley
Sorry that was back in the olden days you had to send actual film off to get developed.
Too much trouble. I had bought a second map and pinned it to the wall.
Used contact paper so we could write on it with a Greece pen.
Lee
I have pics of an Austerlitz battle played on a handmade map with hand-painted cardboard unit pieces. The map took up the better part of 4' x 8' plywood and particle board sheets, laid on sawhorses. The pics were at various points in the battle, but they're Polaroids (or the Kodak knock-off) and they suck.
The map was painted with watercolors and the pieces with oil or acrylic (don't remember). They were decorated with rub off numbers and symbols for the unit types. Think I still have it but I'm missing some of the pieces.
I don't think it was that game but a similarly large one and I had a cat get up on it and bat some of the pieces around in a game in progress. [:@] He learned never to get up there again. Reconstructed it accurately, I believe, with the help of my opponent.
In the early 70 my older brother used to play some kind of naval wargame with miniatures. Must have been scenarios as they only took an afternoon. They rented out the HS gym and used the whole basketball court. I thought it was about the geekiest thing I had ever heard of in my life. Girls were far more interesting.
What?!? Are you a moose or a meese?