Sourcing miniatures for your Nightmares

With ‘Nightmares’ releasing soon – March in the UK, April in the US – I figured it would be appropriate to discuss ways to populate your supernatural horror investigations. After all, WNC is a table top wargame, so cool miniatures are essential.

Modern toy soldiers tend to be, well, soldiers. Which is great, and I have plenty of them. Thing is, the monster hunters in When Nightmares Come are civilians. They are vigilante investigators who operate without official sanction, without access to mil-spec gear, and who definitely need to stay under the radar of local law enforcement. (Crazy is bad; up-gunned crazy is worse.)

You may choose to set your Nightmares in a different time period or a certain mythos that has an existing range of figures. You’re a step ahead, in that case. For example, there are some genuinely excellent Pulp miniatures if you plan to visit remote, early 20th century, seaside towns in New England.

However, those of you who reference more contemporary settings, the challenge becomes locating suitable miniatures to represent the game’s three main character classes: the ranged or melee oriented Warden, the spell slinging Weaver, and the support specialist Wright.

I confess I get a charge out of hunting down, mixing, matching, and modifying figs from different companies. And I’ll keep at it until someone comes up with a dedicated range of modern, lightly armed paranormal investigators. But that takes time and effort, and not everyone can do that. So here’s an assortment of ready-to-go minis I’ve found from various sellers on eBay.

L-> R: RAFM USX, RAFM USX, Reaper Chronoscope, Reaper Chronoscope
L-> R: Reaper Chronoscope, Hasslefree, RAFM USX, Reaper Chronoscope.
L-> R: RAFM USX, HeroClix,(rebased, repainted) and Reaper Chronoscope.

DARK SPAWN

Those of you familiar with my games know the adversaries come in three tiers, or castes, each more dangerous than the other. Depending on the type of enemy you want – ghosts? eldritch horrors? werewolves? vampires? demons? – the models for each type will vary according to theme.

Rats, dogs, wolves, even bat swarms are easy enough to swap over from standard fantasy games. Want zombies? Another easy fix, especially if you own a certain board game and it’s myriad expansions. Demonic, hell gate types are simple enough too. Those miniatures tend to have a timeless malevolence that can fit in most modern settings.

But what about other kinds?

I’ve had good luck with board game miniatures, particularly Deep Madness, Bloodborne, and The Others. That’s not to detract from those games: I’m simply saying the monster miniatures are extremely useful for other things too.

Then there are WizKids D&D prepaints. Search out the generic creatures, re-base, touch up, and you’ve got a conga line of phantoms, gribblies, and ghouls ready to spawn out of the nearest portal and devour your investigators.

In both cases, eBay is a great source for inexpensive duplicates of various miniatures and board game parts.

That’s all for now. Drop a comment if you’ve got other sources or ideas. Or if you have specific questions about WNC.

Thanks and good hunting.

Interested in Stalker7 Games and Stories?

Sign up for the S7 quarterly newsletter and receive special scenarios, exclusive content, and information on upcoming releases.

Thanks and Good Hunting.

15 responses to “Sourcing miniatures for your Nightmares”

  1. Copplestone Castings have some future warriors figures that might fit the bill.

    1. I do love Copplestone miniatures. Very easy to paint. I’ll have to investigate their more civilian figs now. Thanks.

  2. Why not use Anvil Miniatures. They make a line of militia that can be used as civilians

    1. Happy to use Anvil. Great company, great miniatures. That said, I want figs that look and feel more “civilian” in appearance, weapons, and accessories. Their militia is a bit too *soldierly* for what I want at this point.
      But who knows… perhaps Anvil will work up a line of modular, civilian character minis just for Nightmares?

  3. Check out the apex investigators from Fenris games UK. Right up your street

    1. Nice. Thank you.
      I didn’t know Fenris Games was still in business. I’ll go there now, tho.

  4. Looking forward to play the game. How many minis per tier in average we need?

    1. Hi Fernando. Thanks for stopping by.
      If you want to play a full Case (6 games) I recommend a total of 36 miniatures.
      Ideally, your monster models would reflect a common theme: vampires, werewolves, eldritch, demonic, etc. You need 10 of each minion caste, Vermin, Horde, and Terror.
      Of course you need an Atrocity, the Big Bad Boss. So that’s 31 baddies, total.
      That leaves 5 minis for Hunters. (player characters, of which there are three different classes.)
      Alternately, you could swap out one of the Hunters for an Alpha minion. (a Horde or Terror level mini-boss)
      Then again, you can up the model count and have an Alpha for each caste, plus some spare Hunters. So if you went crazy, you could run a campaign with 40 miniatures total.
      Hope that answers your question. Have a good day.

      1. Fernando Arteaga Avatar
        Fernando Arteaga

        Thank you! I think I will go with Plant Apocalypse as the theme. I have a couple of monster plants from crooked dice that I’m eager to use in a game. I’ll need more, of course. I’ll have Swamp Thing as the atrocity. Now I need to think about the hunters, something like the scobby doo gang perhaps. In any case, thank you. I’m excited for the game.

      2. Whoa. Thanks for commenting.
        Great idea there – and perfect for Scooby Doo. I wager those little Reaper Mushroom men would work for different levels of Dark Spawn goons too.
        Please share photos of your minis and games when they’re done.
        Have a good one.

  5. Bunch of 3D print options these days, including modern and sci fi civilians sets from Wargames Atlantic, “protestors” from Anvil Digital, and lots of “survivor”-type figs from folks like Vaultz.

    1. All good options too.
      3D printing has exploded, so much so I can’t keep up with all the boutique designers.
      I’ll take another look at Anvil’s protestors again.
      Have a good one.

      1. Another good option is to have a look at Spectre miniatures’ “Agents Crisis Response Squad”.
        And you say they’re civilians but I mean, in the good ol’ USA… a lot of us veterans still keep an “Oh sh!t kit” around. Maybe not full-blown uniforms, but at least a bug-out bag, some tactical gear, and of course that gas-operated, magazine fed, shoulder-fired wireless hole puncher.

  6. “Crazy is bad, up-gunned crazy is worse”
    My brother in Christ I take that as a personal insult, and I will have you know if I was hunting monsters I’d…
    …probably end up in handcuffs explaining where i got all the body armor and tactical gear.
    The weapons would totally be legal, though.
    MURICA

    1. Hey man. Good to hear from you. Hope you’re well.
      I really leaned into the old ‘Kolchak the Night Stalker’ vibe; the ‘intrepid civilian in a skeptical society’ concept where not only do you have to avoid getting your blood drained/soul stolen/face eaten/mind broken, but steer clear of potential jail time or mandatory psych-eval in a secured ward. So tactical gear and surplus Interceptor vests were a no-no. I liked the extra dramatic tension it offered.
      That said, up-gun your nut jobs all you want. Your Hunt – Your Call.
      Take Care.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from STALKER7

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

×