5/18/2023 0 Comments Dropzone commander cityscape![]() ![]() ![]() I assembled one of each ground unit and put them up in front of the new camera rig. If these aren’t as good as the originals then I don’t think anyone should mind, because these are pretty impressive. Now the big risk with doing something like this is that you can end up with a drop in quality. Put the three of these together and you have the same force as the original starter with a bonus APC. Each sprue has a medium dropship, main battle tank, anti-air tank, armoured personnel carrier and 2x stands of infantry. Each side is made up from 3 identical sprues. The starter set miniatures are plastic and they’ve been quite cleaver. The DzC miniatures are cast mostly in resin with the infantry done in white metal. What I’m most interested in are the miniatures so I’ll focus on them.įirst things first: these are not the same as the original starter set miniatures. ![]() I’m not going to look at the entire box contents – save to say there’s plenty in there. In a pretty cleaver move, Hawk Wargames released a 2-player starter that for about $110 AUD that gives you everything required to play: miniatures (2x starter armies), rules, cardboard scenery, tokens, dice, etc. I’d been on the fence about this game: the first and second points had me in a push-pull that combined with no local interest had me doing other things. This game has created quite a bit of debate: it’s not cheap, it looks spectacular and is not the only 10mm sci-fi game to come out recently (Spartan Games’ Planetfall). The game is in an odd little scale – 10mm – that’s not particularly popular (6mm and 15mm on either side are quite popular). Dropzone Commander, produced by Hawk Wargames, has been around for a while. ![]()
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