Musings & Meta

Model-less Rules

(This is a Friday afternoon post, examining feelings. It may not be your cup-of-tea. I get a little new-agey in the middle, and then a little religious at the end.)

 

I’m sitting on a couple different rulesets of games that I want to play, but all of which have no models to be found. Deadzone Beta, Dreadball Season 3 teams, Malifaux 2E Beta, Drake: The Dragon.

I count myself as a prolific gamer. I’ll read the rules for a board game just because I have them. I’ve bought countless RP books for systems that I’ll never convince anyone to play. I love rules, I love figuring out how they mesh together to create a system. I love stuffing them into my brain.

There are a ton of people around the world playing Deadzone and giving feedback to the designer. That sounds great…but for some reason, I won’t do it. I’ve already purchased a Teraton Dreadball team, surely I should want to play them? No, I don’t have the models. People whom I know are playing M2E, I’ve picked a crew that I want to learn, let’s do this! No, I won’t play until I’ve got my little Mei Fang and Friends assembled.

It occurred to me to ask a question – why do I I find it so hard to play games for which I have perfectly good rules, but no models?

At first, I thought I was just waiting for the game to be released – the correct models are part of the game, and I can’t play the game until I have the models. Then I started to build a Daemons of Chaos army, with a couple models from a different manufacturer. If the models from that company are part of the game, why is this ok?

The daemons I think can be explained away with intention – my intention is to use those models as Beasts of Nurgle (you’ll see), so that makes it ok. Whereas using Orks as Gen1 Plague models for DZ is “cheating”. The former is a plan with a lot of hobby behind it, the latter is one step removed from cutting up cereal boxes and writing “Ork unit” on one side.

But the rest of it, I’m thinking has to do with talismans.

Our world is increasingly technologized (I made that word up). Smartphones, tablets, computer games, Facebook, this blog post. So when we play with cards and dice and models, we’re breaking free of the screens that we use all day, every day. We’re choosing to interact with a person, and objects, instead of a display and text. If a game is a miniature abstract reflection of reality, with a system of rules trying to mirror our world, then the tools we use to manipulate that system are important. These objects have power, they are talismans.

Have you ever opened up a brand new game and held the pieces of it? Run your thumb over the smooth plastic of the tokens? Savored popping the little card tokens out of the cardboard? It’s a bit like popping bubble-wrap! Board games are rated by the quality of their components, wargames by the design of their sculpts and the technique the painter used to apply pigment to the models – why does any of this matter?

Another side of that idea – why do gamers buy specially inscribed dice? Templates with designs on them? Dice towers? None of these things have anything to do with the game. I believe that it is a similar reason, that we fetishize the physical objects that go into the game.

Taking that to the idea of model-less rules – playing these games without their appropriate models would be sacrilege! Enough to warrant excommunication from the Holy Ordo of the Emperor, or which ever gaming God you pray to.

Thanks for reading. Amen.

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4 Comments

  • Duke
    September 4, 2013 at 10:24 am

    First off, awesome post.

    I’m fairly similar, in that I will refuse to play a game unless I’ve got paint on my models. Just as pragmatically proxying offends your sense of hobby rightness, playing with unfinished models for is is one step removed from playing with bare plastic (which, I suppose, is one step from the cardboard box with Ork written on it. It cheapens the experience.

    On the flip side of things, what we cling to as hobby rightness can just as easily be called “hobby snobness”. I must have paint on my models or I won’t play. Why not? Why can’t I enjoy a game with bare plastic? It’s got the same mental and social aspects as it would if I got you to paint my army (speaking of which, I need to ask a favour….). All it lacks is the hobby aspect. I agree that, for peole like us, that’s a significant part of the enjoyment and immersion, but is it necessary?

    Maybe it is. But then again, maybe I can afford to relax my standards a bit, if it gives me the oppoetunity to derive more enjoyment by trying new games and new experiences.

  • Craig Fleming
    September 5, 2013 at 12:40 pm

    Thanks! I was worried that a little bit of commentary might not be welcomed, so I appreciate you saying so!

    You’ve reminded me that I also have a Warmahordes army, of which I only painted a single model just to prove that I could and the rest is bare metal. I’m perfectly happy playing with that from time to time.

    Maybe it is a certain amount of snobbyness. When I play Warhammer, I will play with unpainted models but I wouldn’t dream of leaving models unpainted for any period of time. Does Warhammer then merit a higher standard of image than Warmahordes? It doesn’t, in general. But it could be that it does in my mind.

    I think that my Escalation League is another good point in “relaxing standards”. I don’t think I will ever play an EL game with an army that is “complete”. I will have 3 colours on every model, and I’m working towards building a 1200pt Adepticon army, but the EL is a means to an end – a method of driving that 1200pts, and so it’s ok for me to have 3/4s finished models, or even models that aren’t my best work (if they don’t end up in the 1200pts).

  • Quirkworthy
    September 28, 2013 at 2:17 am

    Nice post. Just thought I’d point out that the Season 3 teams for DreadBall are shipping now. Mantic’s latest newsletter arrived yesterday and included photos of the stacks of boxes that were being sent out. Teratons included 🙂

  • Craig Fleming
    September 28, 2013 at 11:26 am

    Hey, thanks Quirkworthy! I saw the photos of boxes and I’m super excited, in particular about Dreadball Ultimate and playing this crazy game with 3-6 of my friends at once! Something I’ve always lamented about wargames is that it’s generally very difficult or time consuming to play with more than just 2 people, so being able to pull out my DB teams (4 of them now…) and demand people play it with me is going to be amazing! 🙂

    May I ask where you saw the link to my blog? I squee’d a bit when I saw one of my hobby heroes posting this morning and my second thought after I regained my composure was to wonder where I’d been linked from!

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