Sunday, January 29, 2023

COLLECTION DIARY: JANUARY 2023


I am very happy to have these wonderful new models for my ALIENS COLLECTION! I got the sexy Marine APC from Eaglemoss literally a week before they closed up for business. It was only $40 and I felt like it was to much of a good deal at the time... and I was right.


Arnie and Jessi look like they stepped right out of PREDATOR... and so does the... Predator.
🤗🛒💞



Happy ALIEN-PREDATOR UNIVERSE Collecting Boss out!

Friday, January 27, 2023

BOSS' LOTR: ANGMAR BLACK ORCS


I have a lot of cool and appropriately creepy ideas for my ANGMAR BLACK ORCS. These concepts and models are right out of REAL TOLKIEN, and will replace most of the core GW Orc troops. I hate the frumpy orc models that GW keeps allowing to linger 20 years past their time. It is glaringly obvious to most of us non-historical gamers that the fantastic modern  AOS models are based directly off the LOTR books and WETA Middle-Earth concepts. All of this beckons me do the right thing by my LOTR collection.


The GW Isengard army is fine. I am only adding a few extras to it, but more on that later.
It is worth looking at WETA on some of the better art sites. You will see many critters that look like GW AOS models and things that are based on some of the deep and frankly obscure Tolkien concept notes in his letters. Grandfather talks about things that he wanted to do with all of the factions, but just could not figure out how to add them into the text of the actual stories... 


ANGMAR IS MY FAVORITE EVIL ARMY AND THE FIRST 1/4 OF 2023 IS IT'S BLACK HOUR!


💀🔮🖤🔥
MIDDLE-EARTH Boss out...

Thursday, January 26, 2023

THE NEW BATTLETECH PAINT SET IS COOL 🤗🎨🖌

I like this! The Battletech Models are perfectly sculpted to work great with Contrast/Speed-paints! I am just getting into this type of painting and seeing a lot of new products for it is cool I think. 

Catalyst Game Labs and The Army Painter have partnered to create the BattleTech Starter Set, harnessing the cutting edge Speed Paints to make it easier than ever to paint your ’Mechs. It’s a perfect companion to the fully assembled, out-of-the-box play that Catalyst’s BattleTech miniatures provide.

MCP: HAIL HYDRA! 🖤💀⚡

MARVEL CRISIS PROTOCOL - HYDRA TANK TERRAIN & ULTIMATE ENCOUNTER

Players test their skills against the pinnacle of Hydra might in this new pack for Marvel: Crisis Protocol! A twisted machine of occult warfare, the Hydra Tank found in this pack has one purpose: total annihilation. No mere terrain feature, this pack contains everything players need to wage battle across a Hydra-dominated field in the all-new Fire at Will! Ultimate Encounter. Whether they take control of the Hydra Tank itself or those who oppose it, all will know the power of Hydra. 1/13/2023


MARVEL: CRISIS PROTOCOL - RIVALS PANELS - WEAPON X PROGRAM

The famous rivalry between two of the deadliest weapons to emerge from the Weapon X Program hits the tabletop with this new pack for Marvel: Crisis Protocol! Logan once counted Sabretooth among his few friends as the pair fought beside one another on a covert team, but Sabretooth’s unslakeable bloodlust tore the team apart, and now they face off as bitter rivals. Featuring beautifully sculpted new miniatures of Logan and Sabretooth, this pack adds new versions of these iconic characters to players’ rosters and introduces the new Weapon X Program Affiliation to Marvel: Crisis Protocol. Additionally, players will also find 6 Team Tactic cards that further enhance Logan and Sabretooth’s abilities as well as several props that allow players to customize their bases.


Now I have everything I need to make a dam-cool hidden base for my MCP Games!
🖤💀⚡🤗


Monday, January 23, 2023

BOSS' LOTR: ANGMAR ORCS (Contrast Paint: Orruk Kruleboyz)

I just found this good painting channel full of AOS painting demo videos for many of the models that I am using for my LOTR Games! These are helpful since I have not dived deeply into the whole Contrast Painting jungle just yet... but I'm about to!




💀🔮🖤🔥
MIDDLE-EARTH Boss out...

Thursday, January 19, 2023

STAR TREK ✨⚡🌠 ATTACK WING ALLIANCE 2 UNBOXING!


This is great fun to see! The gang are doing a series of demo videos soon! Imagine how much more love people (not talking about we TREKERS) would have for this game if these set had been released a few years ago... but we'll have them and that is still awesome!




_heart__rvmp_by_bad_blood.gif ALL OF THIS NEW TREK GLORY MAKES ME VERY HAPPY! _heart__rvmp_by_bad_blood.gif


Happy BIG TREK Boss out!

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

BOSS' LOTR: MY NEW LOTR HEROES & VILLAINS MINIATURES PART 1

I always like to add some fun things to all of my Miniatures games, as my friends know very well. This need comes from growing up playing all of the great RPG games. I love that GW has made a lot of LOTR models, but in my brief time with the game I have found the HEROES selections to be limited. Sure the main characters are there, but what about the many supporting characters other than goofballs such as Barliman Butterbur 🍞🧈🧀🍺😁... I need a little better and more! 🤗


🤍🌲✨💞   💀🔮🖤🔥
MIDDLE-EARTH Boss out...

Monday, January 16, 2023

RIP CHRISTOPHER TOLKIEN

We Remember You Christopher Tolkien

This wonderful man valiantly endeavored on the behalf of his father's works to ensure that they would endure for future generations... I love him for that. 

I am sharing some of the better items about Christopher, published at the time of his death.
 


“And then it seemed to him that […] the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise.” (J.R.R. Tolkien, The Return of the King, The Grey Havens)

Christopher Tolkien passed away on 16th January. He was the third son of J.R.R. Tolkien, his literary heir and executor. He published 24 books by Tolkien after the death of his father, including Tolkien’s life’s work, The Silmarillion. Without Christopher Tolkien’s tireless work, Middle-earth would be a great deal smaller. An obituary.

Childhood & Youth

Christopher John Reuel Tolkien was born in Leeds on 21st November 1924 as the third son of John Ronal Reuel and Edith Tolkien. He received his first name in honour of Christopher Wiseman, one of his father’s closest friends. He had two older brothers, John Francis Reuel (1917-2003) and Michael Hilary Reuel (1920-1984) and a younger sister, Priscilla Mary Anne Reuel (*1929). When Christopher was born, J.R.R. Tolkien was a lecturer in English at the University of Leeds. Christopher was particularly close to his father from an early age on. According to the biographer Humphrey Carpenter, Tolkien wrote in his diary after Christopher’s birth: “Now I would not go without what God has sent.”

In 1925, J.R.R. Tolkien became Rawlinson and Bosworth professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford and the family moved to his new place of work. In his childhood, Christopher had a great love for model trains. He attended first the Dragon School in Oxford and later the Oratory School near Reading. The children were especially excited, when their father told them his self invented stories. Christopher hung on his lips with particular suspense when J.R.R. Tolkien told stories about hobbits, elves and evil characters. Thus Christopher gained early insights into the vast Legendarium that had sprung from his father’s imagination. Some stories J.R.R. Tolkien even made up especially for his children, for example the one about the Hobbit Bilbo, who finds himself caught up in a great adventure.

In 1938, Christopher was diagnosed with a strange heart disease – he had to lie in bed for months. During this time, J.R.R. Tolkien took intensive care of his son, so that their relationship continued to grow. Tolkien wrote in his diary: “[The boy has turned into] a nervy, irritable, cross-grained, self-tormenting, cheeky person. Yet there is something intensely lovable about him, to me at any rate, from the very similarity between us.”

A Ring and the Second World War

After the great success of The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien’s publishers wanted to know more about Hobbits and asked for a sequel. J.R.R. Tolkien started it in 1937 and it should take 12 years until The Lord of the Rings was completed. Christopher played an important role in the process, always helping his father and being the first critic to provide valuable feedback. He typed some chapters on the typewriter and, more importantly, drew the first maps of Middle-earth. These cards are still used today in The Lord of the Rings.

In 1943, during the Second World War, Christopher joined the Royal Air Force and, coincidentally, was stationed in South Africa, the country where his father was born. Over the next two years, numerous letters (more than 70 have survived) travelled back and forth between Christopher and his father. They prove how strongly Christopher was involved in the creation of The Lord of the Rings. J.R.R. Tolkien sent large parts from the Fourth Book of The Lord of the Rings to his son, and he gave his father valuable feedback on the course of history, but also pointed out small discrepancies, such as different moon phases within the same period of time. In the letters Tolkien also tells a lot about his daily life and about the work on The Lord of the Rings, so that today we have an almost complete picture of Tolkien’s life during this time. The letters were published in 1981 by Christopher and Humphrey Carpenter.

Study & academic career

After the end of the war, Christopher graduated in 1949 from Trinity College, Oxford, with a degree in English, which he had begun before the war. He followed in his father’s footsteps, with whom he shared not only an enthusiasm for Middle-earth, but also a love of ancient Germanic languages. After his studies he became a lecturer in Old and Middle English and Old Icelandic at Oxford University and published academic writings on Old Norse sagas and the works of Geoffrey Chaucer. Like his father, Charistopher made a name for himself as a philologist and medievalist. His B.Litt. Thesis includes, for example, an annotated edition and translation of the Old Norse Hervarar Saga.

In 1963 Christopher became a Fellow at New College, Oxford. Christopher now regularly attended meetings of the “Inklings”, the literary circle of friends around his father and C.S. Lewis. The other members felt that he could read from the evolving Lord of the Rings manuscript better than his father. Christopher was the last living member of the Inklings. In 1951, Christopher married Faith Faulconbridge and in 1959 their son Simon was born. The marriage was divorced in 1963. Christopher married his second wife Baillie Klass in 1967, with whom he has two children, Adam, born in 1969, and Rachel, born in 1971. Together with Baillie, Christopher published Letters from Father Christmas in 1976, letters that J.R.R. Tolkien had written and illustrated for his children between 1920 and 1943.

The Steward of Middle-earth

J.R.R. Tolkien died on 2nd September 1973. He had worked on Middle-earth all his life and its myths and legends, producing far more material than had been published in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. What was to happen to all the manuscripts, notebooks, papers and notes that J.R.R. Tolkien had left unfinished? Would The Silmarillion, for which Tolkien had warmed up his publisher after several attempts and which he had promised fans again and again, ever be published? Who would have been better suited to dedicate himself to the huge estate than Tolkien’s old assistant and comrade-in-arms: his son Christopher. Christopher spent the next 45 years doing what we are so grateful to him for today: the meticulous management and meticulous editing of Tolkien’s Legendary Book. He became the Steward of Middle-earth. Just as the Steward of Gondor had taken over the tasks of the King until his return, Christopher now shouldered the enormous task of “completing” Middle-earth. For this he even gave up his fellowship at Oxford in 1975.

In 1975 the first works from J.R.R. Tolkien’s estate were published: The Guide to the Names in The Lord of the Rings contains J.R.R. Tolkien’s notes for the translators of The Lord of the Rings. That same year he moved with his wife Baillie to the south of France, to a secluded estate near Drauguignan, surrounded by pine and olive trees. The international fuss about his father and the resulting interest of the fans was probably still very present in his mind when he decided to leave Oxford. With him moved 70 boxes of his father’s unpublished writings. In 1977, probably the most important work Christopher edited was published: The Silmarillion. In this “Genesis of Middle-earth” Christopher summarized those versions of stories which he assumed his father had considered to be definitive.

In 1980 The Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth was published with further versions and stories. From 1983 to 1996 The History of Middle-earth followed, a 12-volume series depicting the origin and development of Middle-earth and Tolkien’s works. In it, Christopher presents and comments on the stories of his father. With The Children of Húrin (2007), Beren and Lúthien (2017) and The Fall of Gondolin (2018) he completed the last independent stories from The Silmarillion. In the preface to The Fall of Gondolin he announced that this would probably be his last publication. He had “threatened” this already in the preceding Beren and Lúthien, but this time he was right. But Christopher also worked on his father’s scientific works. His writings Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Pearl and Sir Orfeo (1975) and Beowulf (2014) are translations by Tolkien from Middle and Old English. The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun (2009) and The Fall of Arthur (2013) are poetic adaptations by Tolkien based on old material. J.R.R. Tolkien’s essays Beowulf: The Moster and the Critics and On Fairy-Stories are still groundbreaking for his subject and were published in 1983.

Christopher was not only editor and publisher, but as the chairman of the Tolkien Estate, he also took care of the financial and legal aspects of his father’s estate. He retired from this position in 2017. It is reasonable to assume that by arranging the contract with Warner Bros., Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, New Line Cinema, Amazon Prime and the Tolkien Estate, he ensured that the family had a decisive influence on the artistic direction of the Amazon LotR series – another valuable legacy of his work as Tolkien’s literary executor.

The significance of his work

Although Christopher’s immense achievement and his tremendous contribution to his father’s work is undisputed among Tolkien fans, there has been repeated criticism of Christopher’s work. Some complained that it contained too much Christopher and too little J.R.R. Tolkien. In his meticulous treatment of The History of Middle-earth, however, Christopher proved his credibility to many.

The achievement of Christopher Tolkien can hardly be put into words. Not only had he continuously worked on the complex literary legacy for over forty years and published it in a total of 24 publications, it cannot be denied that much of Middle-earth’s success is due to his commitment. Without him we would not have The Silmarillion, The History of Middle-earth and the many other fantastic stories left unfinished by his father. Remember: In a time without the internet, every single title Christopher published had been eagerly awaited. Practically all of them were bestsellers.

By publishing them regularly, he has helped to ensure that interest in his father’s creative genius has never waned, but has in fact continued to grow. Tolkien fans and researchers today have access to the creative development of one of the most successful writers of all time, to life and work, and in a form that is unparalleled. None of this would have been possible without Christopher Tolkien, who was uniquely qualified to fulfil this task.

Thank you for Middle-earth, Christopher Tolkien...Thoughts on Christopher Tolkien


Christopher Tolkien, who played a major role protecting the legacy of his father’s “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, has died. He was 95.

The Tolkien Society and publisher HarperCollins UK confirmed Tolkien’s death. The Centre Hospitalier de la Dracenie, a hospital in southern France, said the son of author J.R.R. Tolkien died there Thursday.

Tolkien’s life work was closely identified with that of his father. He helped edit and publish much of the science fiction and fantasy writer’s work after J.R.R. Tolkien died in 1973.

Among the books the younger Tolkien worked on were “The Silmarillion,” “The Children Of Hurin,” and other texts that flesh out the complex world his father created.

He also drew the original maps that adorned the three Lord of the Rings books - “The Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Two Towers” and “The Return of the King” - when they were published in the 1950s.

Tolkien Society chairman Shaun Gunner said “millions of people around the world will be forever grateful to Christopher for bringing us” so many of his father’s literary works.

“Christopher’s commitment to his father’s works have seen dozens of publications released, and his own work as an academic in Oxford demonstrates his ability and skill as a scholar,” he said. “We have lost a titan and he will be sorely missed.”

J.R.R. Tolkien scholar Dimitra Fimi said Christopher Tolkien helped the public understand his father’s works.

“Tolkien studies would never be what it is today without Christopher Tolkien’s contribution,” she said. “From editing ‘The Silmarillion’ to the mammoth task of giving us ‘The History Of Middle-earth’ series, he revealed his father’s grand vision of a rich and complex mythology.”

🤍🌲✨💞
MIDDLE-EARTH Boss out...

LEGION: MOFF GIDEON & THE DARK TROOPERS ARE GREAT!

These new expansions look great and I am very happy that they are finally coming to the game!
🍷🧐🎩

The cunning Moff Gideon enters the battles of Star Wars: Legion in this new Commander Expansion! Continuing to serve the Empire after the Battle of Endor as a leader of his own remnant of Imperial forces, Moff Gideon is the cornerstone of a new Battle Force players can utilize in their games of Star Wars: Legion. With the Darksaber in hand and his three signature command cards at his disposal, he’s ready to fight to restore the glory of the Empire.

Imperial armies get a terrifying new addition with this expansion for Star Wars: Legion! Elite combat droids programmed for maximum destruction, Dark Troopers are not deterred by fear, danger, or concern for their own survival. As a new Imperial Heavy unit, the seven Dark Trooper miniatures in this expansion give players a variety of ways to terrify their opponents, including a XS-IV Assault Cannon Trooper, an SM-9 Frag Launcher Trooper, and an Mertalizer Trooper. Beyond their standard and heavy weapon options, the Dark Troopers are also accompanied by a new programming upgrade that gives players another way to customize their approach to battle.

 These NEW Bad Boys fit perfectly with our First New Evil Boy Krennic and his Death Troopers!


  Happy Imperial Boss out!  

Friday, January 6, 2023

NEW LOTR TERRAIN: CITY OF OSGILIATH KITS 🌆 ANNOUNCED!

This Recreating the Ruined City of Osgiliath weekend article is full of cool new images and general LOTR-nerd stuff. I (WE, right gang?) need this... all of it! Unless it is a trillion bucks, in which case all of this stuff is on Etsy too. I hope GW prices these kits reasonably so we can buy several... We'll know soon!


🍷🧐🎩
THIS IS ALL VERY NICE STUFF!



🤍🌲✨💞
MIDDLE-EARTH Boss out...

Sunday, January 1, 2023

BOSS' BIG STAR TREK: NEW BOSS EMOTES PART 10

I have been working on my BIG version of the STAW Game since the Winter of 2014... 
 I will keep it going boldly!

This painting represents about half of my actual FEDERATION FLEET as of January 2023

"To Boldly Go... Where No Man Has Gone Before!"
 








More Boss BIG TREK coming in 2023...