I completed painting a First World War British platoon last year and I then made a start on the Germans but only managed to paint a couple of NCOs and ten riflemen before allowing myself to become distracted.
My plan for January this year was to complete the rest of the German platoon and a group of Stosstruppen. The aim with the stormtroopers is to have just enough to substitute for figures in the regular platoon and make it look more like Stosstruppen than regular infantry. I didn't really need to have a duplicate platoon.
I'm pleased to say I hit the January target and that's pleasing for two reasons - firstly, it's just good to have this project back on track and the core German platoon painted, and secondly, I'm going to try and make 2022 a year for completing projects, before I embark on anything knew. Now, I know, that's a foolish thing to make public, I think we all know how easily these sort of resolution are to break, especially in this hobby of all places. So far, so good, this First World War project has been very slow coming together.
Like my British platoon, all of the figures are from Great War Miniatures. I really do like these sculpts, they are full of character. While their British are very good I think the Germans are my favourites.
My intention is to use these to play Through the Mud and Blood from Too Fat Lardies. I'm also interested in a variant they published in one of their Specials entitled 'CoCing up the Mud and Blood' which merged elements of Chain of Command with Through the Mud and Blood. As it happens the origin of Chain of Command lay in a request for the Lardies to create a Second World War version of Through the Mud and Blood. What started as an adaptation finally morphed into Chain of Command as we know it today, an entirely new rule set altogether and one I particularly like. So I'll be intrigued to see how that variant works.
Those rules and these figures are more suited to reflecting the units and combat from 1916-18, a period of great tactical development that saw the shape and composition of the infantry platoon in all armies transform considerably from the organisation in 1914. The German platoon is generally made up of four squads with between eight and ten men in each, sometimes these squads will each have two teams, one of riflemen and an LMG team; at other times it had a specialist grenade squad and at others a specialist LMG squad. Given the variation I've tried to put together enough figures to cover most options.
The men are led by a mix of NCOs and junior officers. I've based these on slightly larger bases than the riflemen and in some cases added terrain items to help record the leader's command initiative level.