Paint Your Digital Miniatures With Might & Magic: Showdown
January 20, 2017 by crew
I've always had a fascination and love for tabletop miniatures; the intricate details, the vast array of choice and variety, the ability to customise them any way you wanted. The only problem for me, though, was that I wasn't very talented when it came to painting so my beginning miniatures looked as if a three-year-old had dipped them into a tin of acrylic paint and just left them.
They were the kind of paint jobs that parents would take with fake smiles, pin on their fridge and then slowly slip into the bin a few days later.
Not only that but the miniature's hobby can be pretty expensive and sure video games have tried to emulate the feeling of a tabletop miniature game before but they've always been missing something...
The actual painting of the miniatures.
Enter Might & Magic Showdown, a competitive PvP strategy game that mixes pre-combat tactics with real-time action from Ubisoft Montreal's FunHouse division. The game is currently available on Stream via Early Access for £15.99 but you can access one aspect of the game already for free, the paint workshop.
Here you can access five miniatures to paint and customise as you see fit before taking them into battle in the full game, but you should be aware that this painting aspect of the game will only be free for the first month of the early access process.
The full game doesn't yet have a confirmed date where the team hope to leave Early Access because, according to the game's producer Philippe Ducharme, they want to use Early Access to collect requests from fans and make sure they're implemented. As Ducharme puts it, he wants the community to 'decide the right priorities for the game.'
I managed to catch the announcement stream from Ubisoft where they showed off the game mechanics and equally played a couple of matches against the AI and I have to say, I was impressed. Not only does the game capture the feeling of playing a tabletop game but it equally looks stunning graphically.
In the meantime, I'm going to be spending my evenings painting the heroes that are available at the moment, so if you'd like to see a fridge-worthy artiste try their hand at miniature painting you can see find my first video above where I paint the Demon Lord Veyer.
Before I go, though, what are your initial thoughts on the game? Are you a Might & Magic fan? As a tabletop gamer would this sort of title interest you enough to buy it? Let me know in the comments!
By MrStainless001 (follow him on Youtube for more videos!)
Until next time though folks, have a great week and I'll speak to you all soon.
"I've always had a fascination and love for tabletop miniatures; the intricate details, the vast array of choice and variety, the ability to customise them any way you wanted. The only problem for me, though, was that I wasn't very talented when it came to painting..."
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Looks good, I prefer playing my electronic games straight up and painting minis in real live.
If not I would constantly be painting and not gaming.
I thought the exact same, if the game was just painting mini’s….I’d still buy it 🙂
I am still in doubt, to many games already and other good ones are coming up.
I don’t know if this mentioned but is it possible to exchange minis with other people in this game.
This is true, there are a lot of great games on my ‘must-buy-this’ radar. I’m not sure if it’s been announced that you can trade mini’s, if anything Id love to see the possibility to download other people’s paint-jobs on the Steam Workshop
It seems they are trying to do something else other then Heroes of Might and Magic after their last games…issues.
That’s awesome. I love it
Won’t the paint damage my screen?? I mean I know it’s acrylic …oh it’s virtual paint …*blushes
…. Actually I like the look of this, and I am still happily play Heroes of Might and Magic VII and III on my computer when I can (VI on the other hand is no longer compatible with my video card grrrrr)
Actually when we can use a tool like this and 3D print the miniature out in home , that will be the day I don’t object (personally .. others can do as they like) to pre painted miniatures
By the way- it isn’t as hard as you think to learn to paint minis well. I’ve sat down with folks for an afternoon and can get them up to a pretty decent standard on their first minis. Some of it is about honing your skill with a brush, but most of it is about knowing the techniques to use. I learned to paint before the days of youtube tutorials, so I really struggled to figure everything out on my own. But I’d rather not see others suffer that way, so I’ll sit down with anyone and give them lessons… Read more »
that looked good and better than the paint settings for dawn of war.