Monday, 6 February 2012

Warlord/Empress plastic Zulu Warrior




I bought a box of Warlord Games new plastic Zulus last week and managed to get one painted over the weekend.  I will review the contents of the box another time but now I will just give my initial impressions.


Empress metal and Warlord/Empress plastic

Firstly, how compatible are they with my existing figures?  Most of my Zulus are Empress Minatures metals sculpted by Paul Hicks. Frankly, the latter are my least favourite of the four manufacturers  I own, although they are the most historically accurate as regards clothing; including, for example, the clay pipes that Zulu warriors often carried about their heads.  The anatomy of the Empress metals is rather odd but my real problem with them is their size: they just aren't big enough to be Zulus (European eyewitness accounts constantly refer to the large size of the Zulus).  The new plastics are much more imposing, however.


Wargames Factory and Warlord/Empress plastics


In size they are much closer to the Wargames Factory plastics but look less ungainly as Warlord have included the top half of the arm with the legs and torso sculpt.  The Wargames factory ones suffer from plastic figure zombie arms.  However, in order to achive a seamless fit of the forearms (which often include moulded on weapons and shields), they have added an armband on the figures.  These plain armbands do not appear on any pictures of Zulus I have ever seen and so historical accuracy has been sacrificed in favour of ease of construction.


L to R: Warlord/Empress plastic, Wargames Factory plastic, Empress metal, Foundry metal


The Foundry Zulus are based on Mark Copplestone's Darkest Africa sculpts and are the biggest of the four manufacturers figures but I think they have the micest anatomy and easily the most natural looking poses.

The Warlord figure was easy to paint although the armband on one arm didn't line up underneath.  I'm not sure about the textured shields either and I think I prefer the Wargames Factory ones which are also thinner.  The Warlord shields are as thick as a metal one.  I also found it difficult to position the shield in a way that the poor Zulu could actually see where he was going.  Also the bases are very wide which meant I had to place this first one diagonally across my 20mm square base.  Next time I will trim the base first.  The weapons for the Warlord figures are much better with the binding on the spears being modelled accurately (and uniquely for any of the figures I have).




I bought the married regiment with their headrings.  The unmarried figures are modelled in full dress which would have been most unusual for a group of warriors taking the field.  In their leaflet inside the box Warlord claim that younger warriors were more inclined to wear full regalia in action.  Frankly, this is nonsense and is typical of the GW-style marketing speak that we get from this otherwise estimable company.

I will try to get some more figures painted up and look at the full content of the box shortly.  All in all though, my response if favourable without them being, as I had hoped, perfect. Surprisingly I don't see myself abandoning the Wargames Factory ones I have (as I thought I would) but I won't be buying any more Empress metals, except for leaders and characters. 

Now all I have to do is decide which regiment this new figure is going to be the first of!

8 comments:

  1. Judging by other opinions I would suggest this is a more than fair review. I've yet to pick up a box but know that it makes sound economic sense, especially given their reasonable scale and sculpt.

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  2. Thanks for the review. I would like to add some of these guys to my Zulu army.

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  3. Thanks for the very informative review. Glad to see your blog is back in action.

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  4. Thanks, haven't got a box yet, but shall. Have you got a box of the british yet? I've just put together several figures, there's a nice variety of realistic poses and the detail is very good. makes the wargames factory British redundant I think.

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  5. I'm not planning to get any British as I think the metals are so good. Can you tell me whether the plastic helmets have four panels (as the metals erroneously do) or six (as they should have? Warlord told me the new plastics would have four panels but I can't tell from any pictures I have seen.

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  6. the foundry zulu war stuff is far older than the copplestone darkest africa. .the figures you are looking at are CASTING ROOM figures, its a small part of foundry.

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    1. The Casting Room name hadn't been invented when I bought them. They were still called Foundry. These later ones were based on the Copplestone masters (according to a frien d who knnows the Perrys)

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