Thursday, 29 January 2026

Mighty Empires XVII c. Part II.

 XVII C. Mighty Empires Campaign Map – Part II



Hi guys, 

in this post let's talk about scales, miniatures and tabletop experiments...

In the first post I introduced the campaign map inspired by Mighty Empires, adapted to the 17th century.

In this second part I want to focus on something just as important: how to represent the campaign physically on the table, and which scale actually works best once everything is laid out.

1) From file to table: printing the map on canvas

One of the most satisfying steps was printing the map on canvas, using the maximum size allowed by the plotter.


note the size of the map next to a 28mm musketeer 


Seeing it laid out physically is very satisfaying, the quality of the print was beyond my expectations, because is larger than the original size of the game in paper.

The canvas surface works perfectly with tokens, avoids glare, and gives the whole setup an almost period-appropriate feel very fitting for the 17th century.






2) The second step was purchasing 17th-century miniatures in 2 mm, mainly tercios and pike-and-shot regiments from Irregular Miniatures.

The idea was never to use them as tactical units (although I am tempted!), but as army tokens at campaign level.

At this scale, a small block can convincingly represent an entire field army. You lose individual detail, of course, but you gain something far more important for a campaign map: clarity and a strong sense of strategic movement.

For this type of game, 2 mm works remarkably well.







the forts, towns and cities are maybe, bigger than I would like, but I think they will do the job. But of course you can use paper o card counters as in the original game.

These Irregula Miniatures models were not meant for play yet, just to see how they interact visually with the map. Do they help reading the territory? Do they get in the way? Do they add atmosphere or simply clutter the table?

So far, the answer seems clear: used sparingly, terrain adds structure and context without stealing the spotlight from the campaign tokens.

I am not sure of the size of the round bases... for big armies maybe 5mm diameter round bases ? do they hide too much terrain under them ?



The 10 mm experiment: Pendraken order:

Still undecided, I decided to push the idea further and placed a custom order with Pendraken Miniatures, this time in 10 mm.

The concept is the same , campaign tokens,  but with far more recognisable formations: visible pike blocks, musket lines, and a stronger visual identity.


I will paint a few of these and see if they do the job better than the tiny 2mm scale.


The key question is :

Does the visual gain justify the loss of scale and table space?

Early impressions suggest that 10 mm looks great,It becomes more “miniatures-driven”.

At one point I even considered something more extreme: using 1/72 scale plastic figures, both from the Thirty Years’ War and the Nine Years’ War.

The idea didn’t last long, but it’s worth mentioning. The result would be spectacular — but it would probably turn the campaign map into a semi-permanent diorama rather than a practical gaming tool. Still, I wouldn’t rule out a limited test at some point.


My conclusions so far are:

1) 2 mm is excellent for strategic-level campaigns

2) 10 mm is visually tempting, but needs careful balance

3) Terrain should remain minimal and functional, probably I will combine cardboard terrain tokens (forts etc) with 2mm metal and resin.

4)Printing the map on canvas was absolutely worth it

I’ll keep experimenting until I find the right balance between playability, visual appeal and historical atmosphere.

There will definitely be a Part III.


Cheers!

Thursday, 8 January 2026

1/1200 Mad for War: 30 Years War's Galleons and fort.

 Hi guys, 

Happy New Year!

Today I’d like to share two small additions to my Spanish fleet in 1/1200 scale, both built and painted for naval wargaming in the Mediterranean during the Thirty Years’ War and Franco Spanish War. The models come from Ark Royal Miniatures, produced under the Warfare Miniatures range, a line nowadays well known among small-scale naval warfare lovers.



The models are a 38 gun frigate/galleon,  an  old merchantman and a 3d printed naval fort. The ships although modest in size, play an important role on the table top.

I also bought scenery in 2mm from Irregular miniatures , intended both for Mad for War naval rules and my campaign map game (see previous post).

The first model is a small merchantman, lightly armed and clearly intended more for patrol, escort, or convoy duties than for line-of-battle engagements. Unfortunately, I no longer remember the exact catalogue reference, but its compact hull and reduced artillery make it immediately recognizable as a secondary combatant rather than a major warship.

For painting, I aimed for a restrained and practical look: muted hull tones, simple decoration, and weathering that suggests long service at sea. In Mediterranean scenarios, this type of vessel works perfectly as a support ship, a scout, or an objective vessel—valuable but vulnerable if caught by heavier enemy units.






The second model is the 38-Gun Frigate, a much more aggressive and versatile design. Fast, well-armed, and capable of independent action, this type of frigate represents, along the galleon/Man o'war, the backbone of many Spanish naval operations during the conflict.

I painted her to stand out slightly more than the galleon, with sharper contrasts and cleaner lines, with paper flags attached.






Both ship's flags are metal painted and paper printed,  the paper flags are slightly oversized, but I don't care about that, because the are easier to identify from distance in games.

Both ships are intended primarily for Mediterranean naval battles, where shorter engagement ranges, coastal actions, and sudden encounters dominate play. In the context of the Thirty Years’ War, they fit naturally into scenarios involving Spanish–French naval rivalry, convoy interceptions, and regional control, but also massive fleet actions.




I started painting this range back in 2023, and I am very happy with it, at 1/1200 scale, these models strike an excellent balance between detail and playability, allowing entire squadrons to be deployed without overwhelming the table.

Now my entire fleet so far:

4 galleys, 2 small galleons/frigates,  a yacht and an armed merchantman, all of them Ark Royal Miniatures , and a 3d printed galleon by Turner miniatures.






Cheers