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My son started playing 40k at a school club, and I got my (20 year old stuff) down from the loft to join him. Admittedly , it’s taken over the dining room a bit, but my wife just walked past rolled her eyes and called it “Numberwang with models”.
Tikay Fortooun wrote: My son started playing 40k at a school club, and I got my (20 year old stuff) down from the loft to join him. Admittedly , it’s taken over the dining room a bit, but my wife just walked past rolled her eyes and called it “Numberwang with models”.
I can’t stop laughing.
Your wife is incredibly perceptive about 40k...
You're now required to shout out "That's Numberwang!" whenever you make a successful saving throw.
Games Workshop Delenda Est.
Users on ignore- 53.
If you break apart my or anyone else's posts line by line I will not read them.
My wife accepts me doing the hobby, but doesn't like the fact much (mainly because I have a room in the house for it that could be used for something she does like.). She really doesn't like the idea of our son getting into it when he's older though.
Excommunicatus wrote: Have you looked at our helmets, Roboute? They've got skulls on them...
"Darling. It's me. You're never gonna guess. They've made me the new Leader of the Imperium!.....yeah, yeah, stuck in a throne....But this is an opportunity I've just got to take!....well they were hardly going to give me the job when everything was going really well, were they?'
This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 2019/04/21 15:30:26
Horst wrote: What the hell is numberwang? Is it some sort of british game?
Lol
Numberwang was a running set of sketches from the Mitchell & Webb Show. It was a surreal, often sinister, and absolutely incomprehensible gameshow, where all the contestants seem to be aware of strict rules the audience cannot possibly infer from what they're seeing.
It was a sort-of spoof of a bunch of wildly overcomplicated gameshows on UK TV in the early 90s, but taken to demented, Tim & Eric-y ends.
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Tikay Fortooun wrote: My god, Mitchell and Webb even got the pricing strategy right!
I particularly like the 400 sided dice and the indexes to the rulebooks.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2019/04/21 21:15:57
AngryAngel80 wrote: I don't know, when I see awesome rules, I'm like " Baby, your rules looking so fine. Maybe I gotta add you to my first strike battalion eh ? "
"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."
ph34r's Forgeworld Phobos blog, current WIP: Iron Warriors and Skaven Tau +From Iron Cometh Strength+ +From Strength Cometh Will+ +From Will Cometh Faith+ +From Faith Cometh Honor+ +From Honor Cometh Iron+
The Polito form is dead, insect. Are you afraid? What is it you fear? The end of your trivial existence?
When the history of my glory is written, your species shall only be a footnote to my magnificence.
jim30 wrote: In all seriousness, there are some seriously good benefits for kids.
1) Less screen time, more physical social interaction with other humans.
2) Art / creative thinking skills as they paint and develop their forces.
3) Stats / Maths as they consider probability and run numbers and the like in their heads.
Its a hobby with a lot of soft skills that matter and is far better than just playing fortnite all day!
about 10 years ago I got a trio of neighborhood kids playing. Two bought a handful of eBay-marines, the last did a wonderful job kitbashing anything and everything into an Ork contraption. His mom said having something to focus on helped his ADHD. Also, I had these 13 year-old kids figuring out probability in their heads faster than some college students with calculators.
I'm currently assembling a couple opposing armies of Lego minifigures (15-20 figures each, plus cavalry options), hopefully to get my son into gaming using Song of Blades and Heroes when he's a little older. Until then, I have a super-simple ruleset to use them with.
The goal is to move on to using my real wargaming models (probably starting with my old copy of Battlemasters, my first wargame), but until then minifigures are perfect as they are indestructible, prepainted, and weapons/armor can be swapped around.
"By this point I'm convinced 100% that every single race in the 40k universe have somehow tapped into the ork ability to just have their tech work because they think it should."
I don't know... I have the problem of my wife wandering by the table, snagging a mini and going 'Cool! I need this!' - and the the mini tries to eat the party in her next Eberron game.
The Auld Grump - seriously, that is what happened to some of the Night Stalker minis we picked up for Vanguard.
This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2019/04/26 22:53:51
Kilkrazy wrote:When I was a young boy all my wargames were narratively based because I played with my toy soldiers and vehicles without the use of any rules.
The reason I bought rules and became a real wargamer was because I wanted a properly thought out structure to govern the action instead of just making things up as I went along.
Vulcan wrote: If she complains too much, show her the price of golf clubs and a round at the local golf course. Should make her see reason.
When I worked for GW I used that exact strategy with married couples. More often than not, the wife would let the husband go wild in the store.....
.Only a fool believes there is such a thing as price gouging. Things have value determined by the creator or merchant. If you don't agree with that value, you are free not to purchase.
My wife's not a gamer and has no interest in ever becoming one - and I'm fine with that.
She does recognise it as part of my "me" time, my decompression time, if you will. It's important, especially for couples, to have interests where they can do stuff without the other.
As for my spending, years in a crap-paying job meant I only bought stuff I really "needed" for my gaming, and not spur of the moment things. I limit my spending much more than she ever would.
I'm OVER 50 (and so far over everyone's BS, too).
Old enough to know better, young enough to not give a ****.
That is not dead which can eternal lie ...
... and yet, with strange aeons, even death may die.
“Well the outlay for a single club looks quite high, bear in mind you only need 14 of them. If you husband took up something like Warhammer you need thousands of the damn things.
People near me in the store were getting an intro to Necromunda last night and all I could think of was the OP's wife saying it's Numberwang with models.
"Roll a die, see if you run out of ammo, roll a die, see if you hit, roll a die, if it's higher than the strength you take a wound, roll a die, see if it's a flesh wound, roll a die, roll a die, roll a die, that's Numberwang!"