ABC Conversation Hour is a Podcast that consists of two people, two mikes and an hour of conversation. This means that they get into the meat of the interview rather than just skating over the top.
One that caught my eye was The true story of Chow Hayes, Australia's first gangster.
Here is the Link:
https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/conversations/jack-hoysted-chow-hayes-rpt/10565084
Chow Hayes was a Sydney underworld figure in Australia's 1920s and 30s. I really recommend this as a listen, just to understand the times and how the criminal element behaved at the time. It is evocative and will help anyone thinking of creating a Push (Gang) for ARBM.
Good Bye 2018.
Matt
Wednesday 26 December 2018
Tuesday 11 September 2018
2mm Projects Overload
Seems I am in overdrive when it comes to 2mm projects at the moment, with ARBM projects fighting to get into the workflow. The ability to reproduce large battles in a relatively small space has proved to be overwhelming.
The Process:
I use 3mm thich MDF bases from Battlefield Accessories. Generally 40mm wide bases, with two 2mm x 3mm magnets in the rear face so that I can attach details using magnetised 40mm x 10mm information panels.
Multiple castings are glued to their base prior to undecoating (by hand), painting, flocking and finally varnishing to keep everything where it belongs.
I used to paint a crazy level of detail on 2mm casting. My eyes and the three foot rule have lead to a simplification of the painting process. Now it consists of:
English Civil War:
I was intending to write my own rule for the period, but the release of For King and Parliament may have made that process redundant as it represents units at the level I wished to model.
I have about 50 bases undercoated and 22 completed. Base size is 40mm x 20mm with a magnetised 10mm attachment on the rear for information.
Napoleonic:
I have 4 armies all based and undercoated.
The Painting Desk - 2mm ECW |
Multiple castings are glued to their base prior to undecoating (by hand), painting, flocking and finally varnishing to keep everything where it belongs.
The complete process, right to left. |
- Base.
- Undercoat back.
- If cavalry paint horses.
- Drybrush white.
- Drybrush trousers.
- Spot paint jackets.
- Spot paint faces.
- Spot paint headgear.
- Drybrush pikes and tips (if needed).
- Paint flags.
- Varnish Figures.
- Flock.
- Varnish Bases to harden the flock.
English Civil War:
I was intending to write my own rule for the period, but the release of For King and Parliament may have made that process redundant as it represents units at the level I wished to model.
I have about 50 bases undercoated and 22 completed. Base size is 40mm x 20mm with a magnetised 10mm attachment on the rear for information.
The first batch. |
I have 4 armies all based and undercoated.
- French.
- British plus Portuguese and Spanish.
- Austrian.
- Russian.
All are based on 40mm by 30mm bases, with magnetised rear for information.
I intend to use Blucher and FPGA, both of which assume that a base represents a Brigade.
War of the Spanish Succession:
I have completed my test bases using a single base to represent a Brigade. My aim is to replay the Battle of Blenheim using a set of rules I am currently developing. I use a scale that allows me to reflect the full 10 mile wide battlefield on a 8' table.
Bases are 60mm x 30mm plus 10mm for unit information.
American Civil War:
Again using the one base to a brigade, I have about 20 bases completed. The rules will be either Bitter Angels (a FPGA variant), Alter of Freedom or a custom set I have in the works.
Basing is again 40mm x 20mm plus 10mm for unit information.
Ancients:
Big Red Bat Cave is again causing problems with their To The Strongest rules. I am using 40mm x 20mm bases the last 5mm of which is devoted to unit info.
I have complete small Republican Roman and Carthaginian armies with more to come.
Romans and Carthaginians |
It goes without saying that all the miniatures are Irregular, provided by Eureka Miniatures.
Happy Gaming.
Thursday 19 July 2018
Max34 - The cars that ate Murrumbeena #2
Here are some photos of my painted cars. They are complete with the exception of weathering. I have a few more still on the work bench, mainly Matchbox Models of Yesteryear with Eureka bits added on. Unfortunately these will have to wait till my next shiny is scratched.
With the exception of the the last vehicle all are made using bits from Eureka Miniatures.
With the exception of the the last vehicle all are made using bits from Eureka Miniatures.
Happy Gaming,
Matt
Sunday 1 July 2018
Cleaning up the painting table.
I am one of the lucky few that has a permanent painting table. Unfortunately a flat surface no longer existed anywhere, so time for a major clean up.
I am using Battlefield Accessories Vallejo paint racks and their painting station. They each hold 50 bottles, but I assume that they were prototypes as the website only shows the 70 bottle version.
Already I am finding things a little easier. The real test will be to see if can keep it this way. The painting station is changing the way I paint 28mm figures, with 16 holders. It is good, but not perfect. I think the addition of a heavy washer on the bottom of each holder will help keep them from being knocked over by two thumbs here.
Here is a direct link to Battlefield Accessories store.
I am using Battlefield Accessories Vallejo paint racks and their painting station. They each hold 50 bottles, but I assume that they were prototypes as the website only shows the 70 bottle version.
Here is a direct link to Battlefield Accessories store.
Saturday 30 June 2018
The Australian Post-Master General's Department and the Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union
My latest foray into a faction revolves around the Australian Post-master General's Department (PMG) and the Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union (APWU).
My intention was to create a small platoon of postal workers that I could use as an interesting faction either within a state's forces or part of a militant group of workers. To this end I have painted 8 bases and a commander in 15mm using Eureka Miniatures WW1 British Infantry in Sinai wearing caps.
Australian Post-Master General's Department
The Australian Post-Master General's Department was headed by the Post-Master General, Sir Robert Archdale Parkhill (1878-1947) from October 1932 to October 1934. He was seceded by Alexander John McLachlan (1872–1956), a United Australia Party senator from South Australia.
Following federation in 1901, the colonial mail systems were merged into the Postmaster-General's Department (PMG). They were responsible for telegraph and domestic telephone operations as well as postal mail. An airmail service was introduced in 1914 and the licensing of wireless broadcasting services added in 1923.
Australia's first public radio station opened in Sydney on 23 November 1923 under the call sign 2SB with other stations in Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and Hobart following.
A 1927 Royal Commission into wireless broadcasting came about from listener dis-satisfaction with the programming and coverage of the manufacturer/retailer driven services. In mid-1928, the Government established the National Broadcasting Service to provide the service and coverage the existing stations were unwilling to provide. This service was funded by a compulsory license fee, chargeable to all owners of radio receivers. As licenses for the larger (Class A) stations came up for renewal they were cancelled and reissued to the National Broadcasting Service - with their transmitters and studio equipment being purchased by the Government.
The Postmaster General's Department was given the responsibility of running the new service. To complement the license-fee funded Class A stations, a Class B Licence was established for privately run stations which would not have access to license-fee revenue but would be allowed to carry advertising and become the Commercial Stations we know today.
The first B Class Licences to Commence Service were 2UE (Electrical Utilities), Sydney on 26 January 1925, followed by 2HD (Mr H A Douglas), Newcastle on 27 January 1925, and 5DN (Mr E J Hume), Adelaide on 24 February 1925. Claims by 2BE (Burgin Electric Co) that they Commenced Service on the 7 November 1924 (the day their Licence was granted) is not supported by Archive records and a more realistic date would be after July 1925.
It became politically unsustainable for the PMG's to run the National Broadcasting Service, so on July 1, 1932 the Government established the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) to run the National Broadcasting Service.
Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union (APWU)
In 1912 two separate unions were registered to covered postal workers. They were the Australian Letter Carriers' Association and the Australian Telegraph, Telephone Construction & Maintenance Union (later known as the Australian Postal Linesmen Union of Australia). In 1913 the Postal Sorters' Union of Australia was formed. The Australian Letter Carriers' Association changed its name to the Commonwealth Public Service Fourth Division Employees' Union of Australia.
In 1925 the three unions amalgamated to form the Amalgamated Postal Linesmen Sorters' & Letter Carriers' Union of Australia. It changed it's name in 1926 to the Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union (APWU).
The APWU covered postmen, sorters and linesmen. Front line workers, essentially postal clerks and telegraphists were covered by the Australian Third Division Telegraphists & Postal Clerks Union.
I have added some period photos to our Very British Civil Forum War Room
Link to the VBCF
My intention was to create a small platoon of postal workers that I could use as an interesting faction either within a state's forces or part of a militant group of workers. To this end I have painted 8 bases and a commander in 15mm using Eureka Miniatures WW1 British Infantry in Sinai wearing caps.
Australian Post-Master General's Department
The Australian Post-Master General's Department was headed by the Post-Master General, Sir Robert Archdale Parkhill (1878-1947) from October 1932 to October 1934. He was seceded by Alexander John McLachlan (1872–1956), a United Australia Party senator from South Australia.
Following federation in 1901, the colonial mail systems were merged into the Postmaster-General's Department (PMG). They were responsible for telegraph and domestic telephone operations as well as postal mail. An airmail service was introduced in 1914 and the licensing of wireless broadcasting services added in 1923.
Australia's first public radio station opened in Sydney on 23 November 1923 under the call sign 2SB with other stations in Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and Hobart following.
A 1927 Royal Commission into wireless broadcasting came about from listener dis-satisfaction with the programming and coverage of the manufacturer/retailer driven services. In mid-1928, the Government established the National Broadcasting Service to provide the service and coverage the existing stations were unwilling to provide. This service was funded by a compulsory license fee, chargeable to all owners of radio receivers. As licenses for the larger (Class A) stations came up for renewal they were cancelled and reissued to the National Broadcasting Service - with their transmitters and studio equipment being purchased by the Government.
The Postmaster General's Department was given the responsibility of running the new service. To complement the license-fee funded Class A stations, a Class B Licence was established for privately run stations which would not have access to license-fee revenue but would be allowed to carry advertising and become the Commercial Stations we know today.
The first B Class Licences to Commence Service were 2UE (Electrical Utilities), Sydney on 26 January 1925, followed by 2HD (Mr H A Douglas), Newcastle on 27 January 1925, and 5DN (Mr E J Hume), Adelaide on 24 February 1925. Claims by 2BE (Burgin Electric Co) that they Commenced Service on the 7 November 1924 (the day their Licence was granted) is not supported by Archive records and a more realistic date would be after July 1925.
It became politically unsustainable for the PMG's to run the National Broadcasting Service, so on July 1, 1932 the Government established the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) to run the National Broadcasting Service.
Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union (APWU)
In 1912 two separate unions were registered to covered postal workers. They were the Australian Letter Carriers' Association and the Australian Telegraph, Telephone Construction & Maintenance Union (later known as the Australian Postal Linesmen Union of Australia). In 1913 the Postal Sorters' Union of Australia was formed. The Australian Letter Carriers' Association changed its name to the Commonwealth Public Service Fourth Division Employees' Union of Australia.
In 1925 the three unions amalgamated to form the Amalgamated Postal Linesmen Sorters' & Letter Carriers' Union of Australia. It changed it's name in 1926 to the Amalgamated Postal Workers' Union (APWU).
The APWU covered postmen, sorters and linesmen. Front line workers, essentially postal clerks and telegraphists were covered by the Australian Third Division Telegraphists & Postal Clerks Union.
I have added some period photos to our Very British Civil Forum War Room
Link to the VBCF
Wednesday 30 May 2018
Max34 - The cars that ate Murrumbeena.
I have been painting Eureka Miniatures Mad Maximilian cars, plus using their bits box to make more using Matchbox Models of Yesteryear.
The matchbox vehicles are great, but check scale. I found a list on line containing the correct scale for the whole range. The range from 1:32 to 1:86, most falling in the 1:40 - 1:60 range. Note a few, including the Crowley truck are 1:48, the same scale all my ARBM vehicles use.
Make sure you get the accessories pack from Eureka Miniatures. It contains all sorts of goodies. Nic also has a few new car bodies to select from. I am sure he will bring them to Little Wars.
Proof there are sooo many bits to chose from.
Here is just one of the vehicle.
Photos of the final product still to come.
Happy gaming,
Matt
The matchbox vehicles are great, but check scale. I found a list on line containing the correct scale for the whole range. The range from 1:32 to 1:86, most falling in the 1:40 - 1:60 range. Note a few, including the Crowley truck are 1:48, the same scale all my ARBM vehicles use.
Make sure you get the accessories pack from Eureka Miniatures. It contains all sorts of goodies. Nic also has a few new car bodies to select from. I am sure he will bring them to Little Wars.
Proof there are sooo many bits to chose from.
Here is just one of the vehicle.
Photos of the final product still to come.
Happy gaming,
Matt
Black Dog Stole My Life!!
Sorry for the huge gap, the Black Dog (depression), stole my life. Again.
Doing better so I have been working on some cars for Max34.
More to follow,
Matt
Doing better so I have been working on some cars for Max34.
More to follow,
Matt
Thursday 22 March 2018
Who Stole the Last Five Weeks and ARBM Post-1945.
Hi Again,
I apologise for the delay in updating the Blog. Ill health got the better of me and I have spent 5 days each week asleep. I normally lose a day each week. Fortunately these incidents rob me of my concept of time, making life bearable.
Below is an email I wrote to Richard Shepard that I believe is worth sharing. (I also freely admit to being lazy.) It gives some ideas about post-WW2 ARBM.
I apologise for the delay in updating the Blog. Ill health got the better of me and I have spent 5 days each week asleep. I normally lose a day each week. Fortunately these incidents rob me of my concept of time, making life bearable.
Below is an email I wrote to Richard Shepard that I believe is worth sharing. (I also freely admit to being lazy.) It gives some ideas about post-WW2 ARBM.
*********************************************
Hi Richard,
I am glad you enjoyed the book.
I have no plans beyond 1940, at least not in terms of
another book, although a smaller endeavour may be on the cards. This is
primarily the startling revelation that it took me over 3 years to complete the
first book.
In writing ARBM I tried to avoid prescribing the future so
that gamers could take the setting where they would. That said I have always
had my own narrative.
I like the idea of belonging to the Commonwealth and taking
pause to defend it during WWII, with conflict reigniting soon after peace is
achieved. This gives us a changed world order with a vast array of new weapons
and technology available, much of it surplus and captured items. Using Konflict
’47 or any set of WW2
rules to model this is easily achieved and from your note sounds like the way
you would like to go. Just give some thought to what you believe happened in
the first phase of the conflict, where map line are now drawn and what
allegiances have been forged or broken.
The other appealing concept is for Japan to have become actively
aligned with Westralia somewhere between 1933 and 1939. This would radically
change the conduct of the WW2, making Australia a key battleground,
particularly if they had supplied troops as well as weapons. Again Konflict47,
Bolt Action, etc can be used to represent this.
Whatever the alternative, the influence of the Soviet Union
with the labour unions or potentially Queensland, as you have alluded to, makes
a post 1940 conflict between Queensland (or parts thereof) and NSW very
interesting. If this takes your fancy (and given you have the models) a post
1945 conflict of this type sounds really interesting. Soviet equipment up north
against British and US kit down south, supplemented by captured(?) German and
Japanese items potentially available to all protagonists.
If you wish to share your ideas and approach then the ARBM
page on the Very British Civil Forum is recommended. The Interwar page of Lead
Adventure is also worth a visit.
Happy Gaming,
Matt
Thursday 15 February 2018
How to obtain a copy of ARBM
Welcome to A Right Bloody Mess aka ARBM.
ARBM is a self published source book for gaming in an alternate 1930s Australia. It covers the lead up to the Australian (civil) War which starts in April 1933, and the major factions involved. It is a similar concept to A Very British Civil War.
The book is 282 pages, full colour, cloth-bound hardcover with dust jacket. It is designed to sit on the shelf beside the wonderful tomes of the 1970s by likes of Donald Featherstone and Bruce Quarrie.
It retails for A$80 / £45 / US$63 / €51.
As it comes direct from the printer, shipping is very reasonable. Postage is A$10, £3, US$4, €4. This covers up to two copies. After that postage double for up to ten copies. By way of comparison, Australian postage would be A$18 if I was to do it.
Copies of ARBM can be obtained from Eureka Miniatures or directly from me, the author. My email address is:
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au
Happy Gaming,
Matt
ARBM is a self published source book for gaming in an alternate 1930s Australia. It covers the lead up to the Australian (civil) War which starts in April 1933, and the major factions involved. It is a similar concept to A Very British Civil War.
The book is 282 pages, full colour, cloth-bound hardcover with dust jacket. It is designed to sit on the shelf beside the wonderful tomes of the 1970s by likes of Donald Featherstone and Bruce Quarrie.
It retails for A$80 / £45 / US$63 / €51.
As it comes direct from the printer, shipping is very reasonable. Postage is A$10, £3, US$4, €4. This covers up to two copies. After that postage double for up to ten copies. By way of comparison, Australian postage would be A$18 if I was to do it.
Copies of ARBM can be obtained from Eureka Miniatures or directly from me, the author. My email address is:
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au
Happy Gaming,
Matt
Wednesday 7 February 2018
A Generous Review on Lead Adventure
A Mr wharfedalehome (possibly not his real name) has left a review of ARBM on the Lead Adventure forums that I would like to share: Direct Link to Review
His comments are very generous and I would be lying if I was not extremely flattered. As well as the link above I have pasted his review here. I hope others find the book as valuable.
Matt
(Author of ARBM)
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au : If you are interested in obtaining a copy, I can contacted here.
wharfedaleme Re: Australian Civil War or "A Right Bloody Mess"
« Reply #91 on: January 26, 2018, 01:44:49 PM »
This is a book review of A Right Bloody Mess by Matthew Clarkson. I don’t normally write reviews of, well, anything. I think that if a product is good enough it should sell itself. I know that in an age of mass media and image building this is very much a minority view. So be it. However I think that A Right Bloody Mess (ARBM) is truly exceptional and deserves acknowledging and widespread exposure - hence the review!
The book blurb elegantly and succinctly summarises the entire book for me, so I quote it in full:
Welcome to A Right Bloody Mess, an alternate history of civil war in Australia during the 1930s. A Right Bloody Mess provides you with everything you need to know about the first year of the Australia War, the events leading up to the crisis and its participants. A Right Bloody Mess is a plausible, alternate-reality sandbox environment bursting with historical detail. Created by a wargamer for wargamers, this volume is full of comprehensive information about Australia in the early 1930s and the factions involved in the conflict.
These are ambitious claims I think you’ll agree. But the truth is, Matt delivers these and more with style. OK, enough of the effusion. Here’s the nitty gritty:
Title: A Right Bloody Mess
Author: Matthew Clarkson
Price: £45 / A$80 + postage (you need to ask for local rates as it varies considerably)
Publisher: self published, Australia 2017
Distributor: http://www.eurekamin.com.au/ or direct from the author at: ARBM1933@iinet.net.au
Importer to UK: None at present (but it really deserves somebody to get behind this exceptional product)
Support & Information: from the author at: http://arbm1933.blogspot.co.uk/
Format: hard back, 6” x 9” (your regular hardback book size).
Pages: 275 pages (there is probably more information in this one volume than has been published on all of VBCW in 10 years. OK, this is not a competition, I’m just trying to give you an idea of what you get for your money).
Quality: professionally bound, with colourful dust jacket, beautifully printed on semi-gloss sepia paper (gives it a very 1930s feel), lavishly illustrated with hundreds of images (troops, models, flags, equipment, interesting places, personages, maps, plans – you name it)
Contents: The contents are broken down into 6 sections:
• Section 1 – An Overview of the Australian War (background on Australia in the 1930s, the constitutional crisis over funding that provides the “what if” trigger [ie: like the Edward Abdication crisis in Britain for VBCW] that led to the kidnapping of New South Wales’ Premier, Jack Lang on 13th May 1932 by the New Guard [ie: the “what if”], and what subsequently happened)
• Section 2 – Australian Armed Forces Pre-Secession (a breakdown of Australia’s army, navy and air force in the 1930s including their equipment and weapons, details of civilian weapons and equipment that could be pressed into service)
• Section 3 – Descent Into Chaos (commentary on the factionalisation that led to war, how troops might be organised equipped and uniformed, model figures that you can use or adapt)
• Section 4 – Faction Guide (a long and imaginative list of factions that you could organise anywhere from the towns of New South Wales and Victoria to the outback of South Australia or Westralia. Factions cover left wing union and political groups, state organisations such as police, criminal gangs, right wing extremists as well as immigrant groups and more)
• Section 5 – Wargaming ARBM (using and adapting miniatures, useful rules to model ARBM, setting up scenarios and campaigns, how to play skirmish, platoon ands regimental sized games, how to add roleplaying elements, two fully fleshed out examples of Factions from Section 4)
• Section 6 – Additional Information (the use of Morale and Quality in an Aussie setting, Primitive 30s technology, raising Militia units, taking the history beyond the opening year of 1933, designer notes, useful links)
This is a work of love by Matt and a real thing of beauty. It is an inspiring, fun and intriguing wargame book on a believable, exciting and new campaign. So if you want to know what happened to Jack Lang, figure out who are the New Guard, want to lead the Australian Light Horse into battle or fancy tooling up an old roadster and screaming across the dusty tracks of the Big Red then get this book. Read it and you’ll be hooked, trust me. It’s like VBCW meets Back of Beyond with a dose of Mad Max thrown in. If you think VBCW is a little unhinged and jolly good fun then your Kangaroos will be loose in the top paddock when you’ve read ARBM.
Once in a generation a wargame book sets new standards. ARBM does this and more with it’s novel approach, its exciting ideas and its bravura performance. For me this sits up there with the best - Featherstone's and Bath’s early stuff of the 60s and 70s. Go on treat yourself, you’ll be pleased you did.
His comments are very generous and I would be lying if I was not extremely flattered. As well as the link above I have pasted his review here. I hope others find the book as valuable.
Matt
(Author of ARBM)
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au : If you are interested in obtaining a copy, I can contacted here.
wharfedaleme Re: Australian Civil War or "A Right Bloody Mess"
« Reply #91 on: January 26, 2018, 01:44:49 PM »
This is a book review of A Right Bloody Mess by Matthew Clarkson. I don’t normally write reviews of, well, anything. I think that if a product is good enough it should sell itself. I know that in an age of mass media and image building this is very much a minority view. So be it. However I think that A Right Bloody Mess (ARBM) is truly exceptional and deserves acknowledging and widespread exposure - hence the review!
The book blurb elegantly and succinctly summarises the entire book for me, so I quote it in full:
Welcome to A Right Bloody Mess, an alternate history of civil war in Australia during the 1930s. A Right Bloody Mess provides you with everything you need to know about the first year of the Australia War, the events leading up to the crisis and its participants. A Right Bloody Mess is a plausible, alternate-reality sandbox environment bursting with historical detail. Created by a wargamer for wargamers, this volume is full of comprehensive information about Australia in the early 1930s and the factions involved in the conflict.
These are ambitious claims I think you’ll agree. But the truth is, Matt delivers these and more with style. OK, enough of the effusion. Here’s the nitty gritty:
Title: A Right Bloody Mess
Author: Matthew Clarkson
Price: £45 / A$80 + postage (you need to ask for local rates as it varies considerably)
Publisher: self published, Australia 2017
Distributor: http://www.eurekamin.com.au/ or direct from the author at: ARBM1933@iinet.net.au
Importer to UK: None at present (but it really deserves somebody to get behind this exceptional product)
Support & Information: from the author at: http://arbm1933.blogspot.co.uk/
Format: hard back, 6” x 9” (your regular hardback book size).
Pages: 275 pages (there is probably more information in this one volume than has been published on all of VBCW in 10 years. OK, this is not a competition, I’m just trying to give you an idea of what you get for your money).
Quality: professionally bound, with colourful dust jacket, beautifully printed on semi-gloss sepia paper (gives it a very 1930s feel), lavishly illustrated with hundreds of images (troops, models, flags, equipment, interesting places, personages, maps, plans – you name it)
Contents: The contents are broken down into 6 sections:
• Section 1 – An Overview of the Australian War (background on Australia in the 1930s, the constitutional crisis over funding that provides the “what if” trigger [ie: like the Edward Abdication crisis in Britain for VBCW] that led to the kidnapping of New South Wales’ Premier, Jack Lang on 13th May 1932 by the New Guard [ie: the “what if”], and what subsequently happened)
• Section 2 – Australian Armed Forces Pre-Secession (a breakdown of Australia’s army, navy and air force in the 1930s including their equipment and weapons, details of civilian weapons and equipment that could be pressed into service)
• Section 3 – Descent Into Chaos (commentary on the factionalisation that led to war, how troops might be organised equipped and uniformed, model figures that you can use or adapt)
• Section 4 – Faction Guide (a long and imaginative list of factions that you could organise anywhere from the towns of New South Wales and Victoria to the outback of South Australia or Westralia. Factions cover left wing union and political groups, state organisations such as police, criminal gangs, right wing extremists as well as immigrant groups and more)
• Section 5 – Wargaming ARBM (using and adapting miniatures, useful rules to model ARBM, setting up scenarios and campaigns, how to play skirmish, platoon ands regimental sized games, how to add roleplaying elements, two fully fleshed out examples of Factions from Section 4)
• Section 6 – Additional Information (the use of Morale and Quality in an Aussie setting, Primitive 30s technology, raising Militia units, taking the history beyond the opening year of 1933, designer notes, useful links)
This is a work of love by Matt and a real thing of beauty. It is an inspiring, fun and intriguing wargame book on a believable, exciting and new campaign. So if you want to know what happened to Jack Lang, figure out who are the New Guard, want to lead the Australian Light Horse into battle or fancy tooling up an old roadster and screaming across the dusty tracks of the Big Red then get this book. Read it and you’ll be hooked, trust me. It’s like VBCW meets Back of Beyond with a dose of Mad Max thrown in. If you think VBCW is a little unhinged and jolly good fun then your Kangaroos will be loose in the top paddock when you’ve read ARBM.
Once in a generation a wargame book sets new standards. ARBM does this and more with it’s novel approach, its exciting ideas and its bravura performance. For me this sits up there with the best - Featherstone's and Bath’s early stuff of the 60s and 70s. Go on treat yourself, you’ll be pleased you did.
Monday 5 February 2018
The NSW Riverina - A Major Hot Spot
Shelldrake has started a thread on the ARBM War Room, over at the VBCF, that looks at the importance of the Riverina area. Here is the link: Riverina Information
Shelldrake has been very generous with sharing the information he has found, some of which is new to me. If you are prepared to look there are some real gems hidden in the archives. Ideas for new factions or scenarios can be generated by a few searches through the newspapers of the era.
My post (below) shows why this is the epicentre of conflict in 1933.
Here is a lot of information on the Riverina Movement in the 1930s:
Riverina Movement - Charles Stuart University
This was used as the basis for the faction within ARBM. The area's extremely strong desire for autonomy from NSW (and Sydney in particular) made the alliance with Victoria so plausible.
The most interesting event is not contained within my book as it happened in August 1933, and did not fit my timeline. A Royal Commission was convened to determine if NSW was too large to be effectively managed as a single state. It recommended that NSW be split into three parts, one of which was the Riverina Area. The Government in is usual wisdom decided to ignore the advice. With the departure of Lang and improving economic conditions, the Riverina Movement and the royal commissions findings slipped into obscurity.
In the context of ARBM, the NSW Riverina is a major hot spot and one of the most interesting areas within which to game as every major faction is represented in some way. You have the following:
So in summary, YES the Riverina area is a major hot spot for ARBM, particularly in the initial flurry of activity. How the map is drawn after a year of conflict is for gaming groups to define.
Matt
(Author of ARBM)
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au : If you are interested in obtaining a copy I can contacted here.
Shelldrake has been very generous with sharing the information he has found, some of which is new to me. If you are prepared to look there are some real gems hidden in the archives. Ideas for new factions or scenarios can be generated by a few searches through the newspapers of the era.
My post (below) shows why this is the epicentre of conflict in 1933.
Here is a lot of information on the Riverina Movement in the 1930s:
Riverina Movement - Charles Stuart University
This was used as the basis for the faction within ARBM. The area's extremely strong desire for autonomy from NSW (and Sydney in particular) made the alliance with Victoria so plausible.
The most interesting event is not contained within my book as it happened in August 1933, and did not fit my timeline. A Royal Commission was convened to determine if NSW was too large to be effectively managed as a single state. It recommended that NSW be split into three parts, one of which was the Riverina Area. The Government in is usual wisdom decided to ignore the advice. With the departure of Lang and improving economic conditions, the Riverina Movement and the royal commissions findings slipped into obscurity.
In the context of ARBM, the NSW Riverina is a major hot spot and one of the most interesting areas within which to game as every major faction is represented in some way. You have the following:
- The Riverina Movement and its supporters. To them its homeground.
- Local groups within the region opposed to any move toward independence or who desired to retain the connection with Sydney and NSW.
- Victoria, who effectively invade northward into NSW, offering the Riverina area statehood within the Victorian nation.
- NSW had just been invaded by Victoria. Naturally, such a slight could not go unanswered.
- Queensland goes to the assistance of its southern neighbour and ally. While committing troops and equipment they also wanted a degree of control, so integration of forces was discouraged or hampered. NSW-QLD rivalry does not evaporate.
- Western Australia may wish to assist Victoria, but to do so involves sending men or material eastward via the rail link thru ...
- ... South Australia, who are allied with NSW but don't want to upset WA or Victoria, their neighbours. The Murray River, the boundary between NSW and Victoria, ultimately flows into SA, bringing with it problems as it is a navigable waterway. In the state's north-east, the population's loyalty would be split between SA, VIC and the Riverina Movement. Just to make things worse, the Trans-Australian railway is subject to raids from the ...
- ... Australian Red Centre (ARC) who are opposed to WA's secession.
- Every faction above has a multitude of smaller factions within it, many of which span the territory of multiple major factions. The largest of these are the Union Movement and right-wing organisations such as the New and Old Guard. They are capable of acting across boundaries as its members are spread across the continent. The objectives of these geographically diverse groups may oscillate between assisting the state they reside within and attacking it. Further, these large organisations are far from homogeneous, with sub-factions pursuing their own agendas.
So in summary, YES the Riverina area is a major hot spot for ARBM, particularly in the initial flurry of activity. How the map is drawn after a year of conflict is for gaming groups to define.
Matt
(Author of ARBM)
ARBM1933@iinet.net.au : If you are interested in obtaining a copy I can contacted here.
Tuesday 30 January 2018
Historical Information Sources
This is a post I made on the Very British Civil Forum: ARBM War Room.
It is quite amazing what stuff exists in the archives.
The 1933 Census was one of my primary documents for writing ARBM. I considered a Census in the year I was writing about a lucky coincidence. (Shelldrake generously posted the link to the PDF. 1933 Census He has made a number of interesting posts recently that are well worth reading. VBCForum: ARBM War Room )
The Australian and State yearbooks are particularly interesting if you want to know everything from population distribution to exports and imports for an area. Here is the link to the 1934 Yearbook. 1934 Australian Yearbook. From here you can also get access to the state's yearbooks, except for SA and TAS who didn't produce them till more recently.
If you want to uncover information about the various factions, and probably discover more, then a trawl of the Australian archives provides a vast amount of material collected by the Attorney Generals Department: Investigations Branch and the organisations they morphed into. (The Commonwealth Security Service in 1941 and later Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, aka ASIO in 1949) The files hold official correspondence, surveillance reports, newspaper clippings, etc. Some of which is still redacted, more due to the files being scans of the original paper file rather than being classified. These files provided an insight into the numerous factions that existed at the time and were my primary source for factions presented in ARBM. With the exception of the ARC, which I created, all the factions presented really existed and many were under active surveillance.
Here is the link to the National Archive: National Archives of Australia If you start by searching on a faction from the book you are interested in you should find something. The New Guard and CPA (Communist Party of Australia) information is voluminous and will provide many nuggets.
The Newspaper archives are also useful if you know what you are looking for. I generally use Trove at the National Library of Australia. Trove
Matt
https://arbm1933.blogspot.com.au/
It is quite amazing what stuff exists in the archives.
The 1933 Census was one of my primary documents for writing ARBM. I considered a Census in the year I was writing about a lucky coincidence. (Shelldrake generously posted the link to the PDF. 1933 Census He has made a number of interesting posts recently that are well worth reading. VBCForum: ARBM War Room )
The Australian and State yearbooks are particularly interesting if you want to know everything from population distribution to exports and imports for an area. Here is the link to the 1934 Yearbook. 1934 Australian Yearbook. From here you can also get access to the state's yearbooks, except for SA and TAS who didn't produce them till more recently.
If you want to uncover information about the various factions, and probably discover more, then a trawl of the Australian archives provides a vast amount of material collected by the Attorney Generals Department: Investigations Branch and the organisations they morphed into. (The Commonwealth Security Service in 1941 and later Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, aka ASIO in 1949) The files hold official correspondence, surveillance reports, newspaper clippings, etc. Some of which is still redacted, more due to the files being scans of the original paper file rather than being classified. These files provided an insight into the numerous factions that existed at the time and were my primary source for factions presented in ARBM. With the exception of the ARC, which I created, all the factions presented really existed and many were under active surveillance.
Here is the link to the National Archive: National Archives of Australia If you start by searching on a faction from the book you are interested in you should find something. The New Guard and CPA (Communist Party of Australia) information is voluminous and will provide many nuggets.
The Newspaper archives are also useful if you know what you are looking for. I generally use Trove at the National Library of Australia. Trove
Matt
https://arbm1933.blogspot.com.au/
Sunday 21 January 2018
Eureka Miniatures, Cancon and Max34
Living 10 minutes walk from Eureka Miniatures means I am able to drop in every month, talk to friends and generally enjoy the wonderful characters that make up our hobby. Nic is always welcoming and always has new greens to ogle at. This combination means that I am able to get miniatures that he has put on to molds but not formally released on the website.
Nic and Eureka Miniatures will be up at Cancon over the coming Australia Day long weekend. Along with many delightful new figures he will also have copies of my Book, "A Right Bloody Mess" for those of you who wish to delve further into the Australia in the 1930s.
One of his latest offering is the Mad Maximillian range of cars, accessories and figures. These are all 1930s inspired and offer incredible modelling opportunities. There is a corresponding set of rules, Maximillian 1934, abbreviated to Max34, by Ara from Mana Press.
Max34 is a simple and fun set of rules, with the ability to tailor vehicles statistics to match your creations. It is based in the ARBM setting and is a great example of my desire for the gamers to take the ARBM setting where they will.
Here are a couple of cars I have borrowed from the web. These beautiful examples are by Pappa Midnight and show what can be achieved.
Nic and Eureka Miniatures will be up at Cancon over the coming Australia Day long weekend. Along with many delightful new figures he will also have copies of my Book, "A Right Bloody Mess" for those of you who wish to delve further into the Australia in the 1930s.
One of his latest offering is the Mad Maximillian range of cars, accessories and figures. These are all 1930s inspired and offer incredible modelling opportunities. There is a corresponding set of rules, Maximillian 1934, abbreviated to Max34, by Ara from Mana Press.
Max34 is a simple and fun set of rules, with the ability to tailor vehicles statistics to match your creations. It is based in the ARBM setting and is a great example of my desire for the gamers to take the ARBM setting where they will.
Here are a couple of cars I have borrowed from the web. These beautiful examples are by Pappa Midnight and show what can be achieved.
Friday 12 January 2018
2018 is Here (and my 1st International Delivery)
The silly season is over and 2018 is upon us.
The first copy of ARBM delivered outside Australia arrived today, the lucky gent hailing from Scotland. Deliver was 16 days. Not bad as this included New Year. It looks like 3 week delivery times are a good approximate, except for November/December when all bets are off.
So what does this new year hold for me? Truthfully, I have no bloody idea.
The first copy of ARBM delivered outside Australia arrived today, the lucky gent hailing from Scotland. Deliver was 16 days. Not bad as this included New Year. It looks like 3 week delivery times are a good approximate, except for November/December when all bets are off.
So what does this new year hold for me? Truthfully, I have no bloody idea.
- I have a novel in the planning phase.
- I need to clean up the games room before my wife gets involved.
- I would like to play more board games, hopefully dragging my wife beyond Carcassonne.
- I have three rule sets in development, getting one through play testing would be nice.
- Keep working on Rommel scenarios for ARBM.
- Finish my example CoC forcelists for ARBM.
- Learn IABSM and adapt for ARBM.
- Paint more.
- and the list goes on.
Now for something interesting.
An Australian Red Centre mobile patrol late in the conflict. Trucks are armed with German supplied MG-34s.
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