![]() Many rolls are contested, for example, when shooting, if a weapon has 4D, that means it rolls 4 dice to shoot, the enemy then rolls a dice and adds their agility. It's a turn-by-turn style game, just like all GW games, though some things do interrupt that (equivalent of going into Overwatch in 2nd Edition 40k/Necromunda) and instead of rolling D6's, you roll D10's. The RulesĪt first glance, this game seemed fairly simple, though with a ton of similarities with Necromunda. The judges were all quite nicely sculpted, though I may change the angle of the wrist on the riot judge with club and shield. ![]() Unlike GW minis, these are not inundated with skulls, trophies and random meaningless detail, instead the guy in a biker jacket and jeans (and a cod pieces) pretty much just looked like that. They were mostly single piece models, and at first glance, quite plain. Coming from playing GW games for the better part of two decades, I'm quite familiar with dealing in pewter and these were pretty near top notch! Very little flash, no misaligned molds, none of that oddly textured stuff that appears in GW casts, just some very nicely cast miniatures. The Miniaturesįirst up, I ripped open my box of new toys and found a lovely collection of 18 pewter miniatures. I purchased the Judge Dredd Starter Set, which seemed like a good place to start. ![]() This game drew me because I'm a fan of the comic series, then after seeing the newer Dredd movie, and the awesome miniatures by Warlord Games, I just couldn't resist. That's right kids, I've picked up a totally new game, Judge Dredd! For those of you who are not familiar, this game is based on a comic that's been running for about 30 years and has had two films made of it (the Stallone version is TERRIBLE), I highly recommend watching Dredd (2012), and if you haven't, you're a bad person.
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