I have been writing this blog for 5 years now. That baffles me. I started posting in an attempt to stay connected with the hobby community; to which I was feeling estranged at the time. I had spent the previous two years focusing on college. I was not able to hang out with my gaming friends due to my job and homework. I was still painting models and terrain, but I was not really playing any games. I thought that posting about what I was working on would helped me to reconnect with old friends (and new ones).
Now, half a decade later I am still writing (ok...there was a year that posts were very sporadic). However my reasons for writing have changed. I am now fairly involved at my local independent retailer. I am part of the Lords of War Batman/DCU league and helped run a few events. I have an online presence in a few hobby groups. I am no longer writing to stay connected, I am connected.
I write now for posterity. I write because I enjoy looking back on what I have completed. I associate events in my life with projects that I was working on at that time. For example, when I look back at the suicide squad that I painted last year. I remember painting them at my desk that I moved into the back of my living room. I moved my desk out there because we had a family member staying in our spare room for the holidays. When I re-read those posts I remember hanging out with family in the living room, watching holiday movies. For me it is not just the words but the feelings as well.
In the future when I look back to these last posts I will remember the first weeks home with my baby daughter. I will remember sitting down to paint the Arkham Guards for a few minutes here and there while the baby ate or slept. I will remember replaying Arkham City with the baby asleep on my chest. I will remember the joy, love and debilitating sleep deprivation that this new phase brought.
So I continue now with the second member of the Arkham Guards. I finished up the assault riffle guard over the last week. I have never tried to paint a darker skin tone before, it turned out OK. The base-coat that I used really did not go on well. Any suggestions for how to paint darker skin?
I played a game last weekend and this model was spectacular. The table was really set up for its advantage (the table was set up by a neutral third party). He was on the highest piece of terrain with plenty of lights all around. The unlimited range and 3 blood damage forced my opponent to think about this guy at all times.
Starfire was also very solid. She put out a lot of blood damage early on, and could take a good number of hits due to her "Invulnerability". The new Nightwing was good too. He bat-wiffed in his first round of hand-to-hand combat, but his speed and ability to get around the board more then made up for it.
There is another reason I write this blog, I enjoy writing it (...or maybe it is the whiskey I drink white I write it...). One more Arkham Guard to go!
Kevin
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