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German East Africa

German East Africa

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Choosing the miniatures

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As there is currently no official Blood and Valor range for the German East Africa force, I had to pick and choose from a couple of different ranges. The three I looked most closely at were Askari Miniatures, Brigade Games and Pulp Figures, all in 28mm.

Left to right, Askari Miniatures, Brigade Games and Pulp Figures. All are in 28mm. Left to right, Askari Miniatures, Brigade Games and Pulp Figures. All are in 28mm.

Blood and Valor uses a fairly straight forward unit organization. There’s a HQ consisting of an officer with a pistol and two riflemen. The rifle squads are the core of the force and the three rifle squads are Schutztruppe, Askari and Sailors. Schutztruppe and Salior squads can have a single light machine gun attached. You can add heavy machine gun teams consisting of three men or single snipers and a specialist close combat squad.   That’s it. Nothing super difficult to find. Except …

No one makes a light machine gun for German East Africa  Now, some people will say they weren’t used and it’s true, the Germans had none at the start of the war. But more on this later.

All three ranges can give you the Schutztruppe HQ and heavy machine gun teams. However Pulp Figures has no Askari or German sailors. They do have Seebattalion but those are specialist Marine equivalents and there was no large formation present in East Africa. Now, I do fudge things a bit and include a few individuals, but no formations. The Pulp Figures Schutztruppe all wear high leather boots which were worn but were not that common.

Brigade Games can cover all the core units and has several uniform variations so you can have some variety. One of the best things they have is a Schutztruppe MG team, an Askari MG team and a Naval MG team. You could buy all three and mix and match your teams. All figures are in the low cut boots and putees  common to the period.

Askari Miniatures has all of the above plus light field guns, cavalry and camels!  Cavalry wasn’t present in large numbers in East Africa but Southwest Africa had a large cavalry force and some troops mounted on imported camels. There were a small number of mounted troops in East Africa but not a lot and mostly only played a mounted infantry role in the early part of the campaign.

The big difference between the ranges is the scale. All three advertise themselves as 28mm. And they are.

But it depends on how you measure them.

Brigade Games and Pulp Figures measure 28mm from foot to eye. Askari miniatures measures 25mm foot to eye. If you measure to top of head, then you get 28mm.  You could make an argument that the difference is minimal and just reflects normal human variations but everything is scaled to the figure so weapons, canteens, bread bags, etc look smaller compared to figures from the other two ranges.

Ulitmately I limited myself to Brigade Games and Pulp Figures

 

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