Zombicide Aliens - The Beginning

02.06.2022

Now that the ground floor of the Potham Mall is open for business, it was time to do something completely different.

A few months ago I ran across some pics from Zombicide Invader when Amazon decided one of the expansions would suddenly be 80% off. The original Zombicide was one of those games I really wanted to like, but the primary game mechanic seemed to be "run as fast as you can before the zombies that spawn every turn overwhelm you." In the umpteen variations that have been released since then, that game mechanic doesn't seem to be as prevalent in the rules any more and actually seemed like it might be worth trying out on a game night with Keith and Jer.

Of course, I've discovered the game a couple of years after its release during the supply chain issues of Uncertain Times. Even worse, the completionist in me wanted to track down the expansions. That 80% off expansion caught my eye enough to see how the market for the base game and expansions was, and it wasn't too bad.

While it was the pics of some painted alien zombies, or xenomorphs as the rules like to call them, they weren't paint jobs I thought I could pull off as most featured lots of blending. But that was ok, as I was thinking of trying more (1979) movie Alien inspired. Plus, I'd also gotten a lot of minis for the Alien game from GF9 so that in my Expanded Gaming Universe, maybe all of these aliens are related?

With the base set and expansions, there are at least 130 variations of alien zombie to paint. I've never really given speed painting a shot. I'm also not too good at non-human figures. With that in mind, I found a YouTube series that showed some good speed painting basics on the Invader minis and decided to try out that route.

I didn't know how far out of my comfort zone I was going to get when I started. Step 1 was not using my normal, go-to primer of Tamiya Extra Fine White Primer and instead went with the Citadel Wraith Bone that the speed painting videos used. I'm not sure how much I can blame whatever the humidity was, but the Citadel primer went on thicker, which didn't stick as well and seemed to run a little. Maybe I wasn't holding the can far enough away? I got better at priming after the first 10 I started on, but I never got to the point where I felt like I really knew what I was doing.

The next step was adding contrast paint on top of the Wraith Bone primer. First thing I learned here is that Wraith Bone isn't white, or at least it's not Tamiya Extra Fine White. Going back to the speed painting video, they were using Contrast Fireslayer Flesh for flesh color, which I've also been doing for people minis over the past year. The biggest mini is a Spoiler Abomination, which the video painted with flesh and guts. My flesh (Firelayer Flech atop Wraith Bone) looked more like dirty rocks than flesh. I went this route with a couple of other flesh-oriented minis (Hunters and Tanks) and got the same results. The generic, rank and file alien zombies were just going to get a dark grey contrast color, the brand name of which I can't remember. Here's where I run into a long time problem with how contrast paints work for me - they don't go on evenly. I know, somehow, I've got too much on the brush or I'm smearing around too much, but I always end up with a little more paint in recesses. While normally this works well to give an air of shading, it was making my alien zombies look blotchy.

Post contrast paint base color, everything was looking like crap.
Crap continued as I started painting tentacles. Everything's got tentacles, and nothing in the speed painting videos used colors I liked. Tentacles should be meaty (I guess), so I went with too-dark a red. Now everything had crappy tentacles to go along with crappy contrast base color. This speed painting excursion wasn't going well. I had primed 10 rank and file alien zombies, a bit Abomination, and 2 each of the Tanks and Workers. There were plenty more to paint, but I really needed to figure out something that was going to work for my abilities.

For the rank and file, I wanted them to be more uniform in color instead of splotchy. I went back with some German Grey and essentially heavy-drybrushed them. That got more of the color I wanted, and a Nuln Oil wash gave the mini a little depth. Faces were Fireslayer Flesh, so the normal Earthshade wash on top of that helped lessen the rockiness. That wash went on everything else that was supposed to be flesh colored. I tried some different color washes on the tentacles to try and lighten them up, and while some worked better then others none really yelled "use me, I'm the one you want". I'm going to have to go track down a good tentacle color on the internet, which is what I should have done to begin with.

Everything got some small details accentuated from this point, which was very not-speed-painting. Each of the beasts looks to have pockmarked sores, so I picked some different colors to fill them in/highlight and give them a more alien feel. For the 2 Runners, instead of sticking to Earthshade washes, I gave one an Orange-based wash while the other got Purple. Both colors came out nicely subdued. I don't know the logic for orange and purple skinned baddies, but with another dozen-ish of these to paint an excuse to add a little color doesn't really have to make sense.

Over the course of the past month I got 37 of these critters painted. While I don't think that qualifies as speed painting, I know I spent half the time trying to figure out what color/how much to use, which was promptly followed by disappointment. Honestly, I wasn't satisfied (that halfway point between happy and disappointed) until I had added some texture to the bases and drybrushed highlights on.

There's another 24 alien zombies in the core set. I've got a better idea of how to handle overall painting them, although I've still got to figure out the tentacle color. I think I may slip in some generic town scenery while painting these, just to give me something easy that I don't have to think about too hard.


gaming miniatures Zombicide Invader

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