Sunday, September 21, 2025

First Batch of 28mm Gripping Beast Goblins

 

    My first batch of Gripping Beast 28mm metal goblin archers from their Ragnarok line
Having "warmed up" painting two batches of Warhost Orcs from Hobday & Hicks, it was time to begin work on the main purchase of my 28mm Orc army for Dragon Rampant. Awhile back, my friend Rusty and I split a large batch of 28mm Gripping Beast metal orcs & goblins that a friend was selling. Many were still in the packs, but others had been based up on 1" MDF circles in preparation for painting. However, when he pulled the plug on his project, he offered it up to me. Not needing as many as he had, I offered to Rusty to split it with him, and we agreed.

    I love the faces on these "nasty goblinses" as Gollum, would say -- great poses and personality!
Most of the figures are from the Gripping Beast Ragnarok Miniatures fantasy line. All are metal figures, which as my readers likely know by now, I prefer. When I split the purchase with Rusty, I tried to do it as evenly as possible. These eight goblins are a good example of that. In the batch, there was a pack of 8 Hill Goblins and a pack of 8 Night Goblins. I made sure we each received four poses from the packs. I chose goblins as my initial batch in case I decide I want to do a game of Sellswords & Spellslingers sometime. Once I finished these, I would have both orcs and goblins, hand weapons and bows -- a bigger variety of foes.

    The Hill Goblins are on left, bare headed, while the Night Goblins were a hood or cowl
The poses were very cleanly cast and had almost no flash. The Hill Goblins wear a long-sleeved robe of some sort, but have no armor or headgear. The Night Goblins are hooded and have a two-part robe. The looks are both very similar, so I figured they'd be a great batch to pair up. I don't intend to do anything to make my goblins look different from orcs. I'll use the same skin tone, the same basic look for their clothing, and similar equipment. My reasoning is that splitting them into two different "breeds" is more of a gaming innovation. In The Hobbit, they are called goblins. In the Lord of the Rings, they are called orcs. Although they're split into different bands and locations, to Tolkien they were the same breed. So, mine will look similar, with the only difference being the size of the castings.

    I used either dark or pale colors for heir clothes and tried to make them look dirty
After priming them with Liquitex White Gesso, I did the flesh first. Same recipe as with the Warhost Orcs -- Walnut base coat, Leather dry brush, and Khaki highlight. Once again, I'm very happy with how the goblin/orc flesh tone came out. I pulled out my list of color suggestions for orc clothes that I'd made prior to painting the Warhost orcs, and selected eight colors. It wasn't until after I had painted the base coat that I noticed the Night Goblins are wearing two different garments. Really, it could be three if you count the hood as a cowl and not part of the loose tunic. Underneath the tunic is a long skirt that comes to the ground. Don't make fun of them for wearing skirts, or they'll "...gut you like a bonefish!" Ha, ha! So, I had to pick colors for the skirts, too.

    For the quivers, I decorated them with "Orc writing" -- from a crude, slashy font I found on Google
Next, I dry brushed the base coat and did the skirts, highlighting them the next day. I actually made a trip to the local craft store to pick up more "orc clothing colors," as I called it. I found only two I really liked enough to buy -- a dark navy blue that had a dull, grayish cast to it and a dark burnt orange. You can see I used two of those colors right away on the Night Goblins' skirts. I'd be interested to see how my clothing color choices sit with my readers. Do they look orc-like enough? I could easily paint them all blacks and grays, but I felt the army would look more visually appealing if they're painted in a variety of dingy pale or dark colors.

    The goblin archers creep out of the ruins and stalk towards their prey
I was curious how quickly the Ragnarok figures would paint up, mainly because I bought so many of them! I do have to qualify that, though. For some, who are used to armies of 200 figures or so, my force is pretty small. However, I have been painting for skirmish games mostly the last several years. So, a batch of around 100 of anything in 28mm is a lot for me! I was pleased that these goblins went very quickly. They don't have a lot of equipment -- just their bow, quiver, sword strapped to their waist, belt, pouch, and then their clothes, which I talked about above. I'm hoping that is a good sign and means this project should paint up quickly.

I pre-ordered Dragon Rampant's 2nd Edition rules, which are due out next month, from Fireland Games. I don't think they'll have them in time for when I see them at Advance the Colors, Oct. 10-11. I'm pretty sure they'll have them in hand when I see them at Fireland Games' own Hold the Line convention, Nov. 14-15 at Camp Perry in Port Clinton, OH. Rampant armies are not huge, maybe just a bit bigger than a Saga army (in some cases). I plan on making 2-3 Orc armies out of the figures I'd purchased, though. I suspect I'll want an entire side of a 6-player game to use my orcs and goblins.

    A final look at all of them lined up, ready to commit murder and mayhem in Dragon Rampant!
After I finished up all of the equipment, I looked over the figures. I liked them, but they looked a little....plain? I briefly thought about giving them bloodstains on their clothes, but felt that could get out of hand! So, I decorated their sword sheaths and quivers. I did a Google Image search for Orc writing and found one that looked all slashy and vulgar, like Tolkien describes it. I adapted the orc runes to the quivers and was pretty happy with how they looked. 

After brown and black vehicle washes, flocking, and spraying with matte clear, they were done! One batch down, SO MANY more to go...! I'm actually taking a break from painting orcs and goblins for a batch or two, though. I've got something else I decided to work in. Stay tuned for what that is soon! 

MINIATURES Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025

  • Miniatures acquired in 2025: 288
  • Miniatures painted in 2025: 208

TERRAIN Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025

  • Terrain acquired in 2025: 40
  • Terrain painted in 2025: 61

SCATTER Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025

  • Scatter acquired in 2025: 115
  • Scatter painted in 2025: 200

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