The Madaxeman
Madaxeman.com's Home Page
  • Home
  • Latest Posts
  • Links Page
  • Battle Reports
  • ADLG Index
  • ADLG Wiki
  • Malifaux
  • C London Club
  • 15mm Gallery
  • 15mm Suppliers
  • Facebook
  • The Podcast
  • 10mm
  • Consent Preferences
 RSS Feed

This is Madaxeman.com.

This page has all the latest content from Madaxeman.com. You can also here. You can use the Links button in the menu above to navigate the full site, however some of the most popular pages are listed here


  • You can navigate this site on Blogger giving you loads of new ways to find stuff on this site and to link to it from your own Blogger site;

  • Search this site with Google:


  • 15mm Ancients Manufacturer Directory, with pictures, or without: full details of each manufacturer, interactive voting in a quality rating system.

  • The ADLG Index & Wiki - Match reports, painting guides, tactical tips and army lists for ADLG.

  • Full 15mm Renaissance Manufacturers listing: details of ranges, links to sites, ordering info and a chance to vote on which you think is best.

  • ADLG Renaissance The basic mechanics in a set of intro videos hosted on my YouTube Channel

  • 28mm Renaissance Suppliers Directory: From the end of Medieval warfare to the WSS, in big boys toys scale

  • 15mm Napoleonic Suppliers Directory: Buy enough troops to become the new Napoleon!

  • Malifaux on Madaxeman.com: Painting, game reports, auction listings.

  • Hannibal thinks you'll like this page too:

    Wargamers Island : Some famous, and not-so-famous gamers recommend their 10 favourite books and talk about how they got into the hobby.

    (A classic random link from Madaxeman.com)


  • Museums and Shows - tanks, aircraft and military vehicles from museums around the globe.

  • 28mm ECW Figures - lots of pictures of Warlord Games and other 28mm figures, all done with ArmyPainter Quickshade;

  • 1/300th Moderns for Cold War Commander - dozens of tank and AFVs, with a painting and basing guides

  • 10mm WW2 - Massive Web Resource for 10mm WW2 tanks & figures including a 1000+ picture directory covering every manufacturer. Also loads of pic's of real tanks from military museums.


  • Madaxeman's Wargames Blog

    I Sea Peoples...

     Back in the mists of time a strange unknowable group landed on the shores of a far away land, ready and eager for war... 

    ..but enough of the players at the last edition of the Devonian Classic ADLG event in Brixham, Devon - instead it's now long overdue for me to share some photos and super-abridged battle reports of how my Sea Peoples army did in their 4 battles on the shores of Torbay back at the beginning of last December!  


    The reports are pretty sketchy I'm afraid, partly as I didn't take many photos, but mainly as a load of real-world stuff happened right after the event finished which prevented me from cracking on with the reports whilst they were still reasonably fresh in my memory.

    But anyways, there are some decent photos of Biblical-era troops in battle for you to have a gander at, as well as the army list for my partially-successful Sea Peoples Horde as well, so certainly worth sharing anyways in this post that appears on my website now. 


    The Sea Peoples' Leader can Sea You Now ! 

     

     


    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 27 March 2026 | 7:13 pm


    Red Copper Camels Part 3 - How big are they again..?

     The Red Copper 3D printed camels were printed out for me by "In the Navy" Harry at "100%" in the "15mm" scale format they are supplied in - but they do look a tad on the large side, and he has also done some at 90% for me too which are still on the painting table. 

    I've therefore taken a few shots of them stood next to other 15mm camels I own so you can see whether they look "too big" or not. 

    In all of these shots there is a caveat that the Red Copper ones are based on MDF + magnabase + a steel  base, which I did to give them extra heft and weight. 

    The other camels will be on either MDF + magnabase, or sometimes even cardboard + magnabase, so will be a smidge lower due to having thinner bases. 

    Forged in Battle Camelphracts + Red Copper Camelry @ 100% of the 15mm print size


    Red Copper and the (venerable) Essex Successor baggage guarding camelry.


    This is quite a difference - in height, but also stylistically too.

    Red Copper and the newish Museum Baggage Guard camels from their Z range. 



    Height wise the difference is not too much, but the width and overall style of the figures is very different - but viewed from a tabletop commander's standpoint, perhaps not so obvious really.

     

    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 18 March 2026 | 4:42 pm


    Red Copper Camels Part 2

    The main body of Red Copper camels are these chaps - 3 to a base, hard-charging Arab camelry


    As you  will see I was even bold enough to try and do some chequered headdresses - although they are not actually "checks", they are just a cross pattern that looks checked at tabletop distances. 


    As before, the main clothing of the riders is layered duns and creams - Burnt Turf/Barren Dune, Paratrooper Tan/Common Khaki, Urban Buff/Pale Sand, Ivory/White and my trusty Holy White Speedpaint topped off with standard white. 


    These guys are also glued together into lumps of 3 on each base for extra resilience and integrity, to stop them breaking off at the ankles. It's more visible from the back here, but still hard to spot unless yo uknow you are looking for it 


    With no obvious Commander in the range I opted for the "He's the one with the blue flowers on his base" approach if one is needed. 


    The spears are very, very brittle, but fortunatelymost are cast (designed? printed?) very close to the bodies of the riders so its only the sticky-upppy bits that tend to break off (if you so much as look at them in the wrong way) 


    I have an inkling that my almost-unavoidable desire to use blue as the dominant "non tan" colour comes from the cover of the 1970's edition of Frank Herbert's Dune.


    Because of the complexity of the figures, and my ill-informed decision to adopt a multi-later layering paint style on these models they took absolutely ages to finish, and seemed to be a long way from being done for 99% of that time - but in the end, now the epic painting quest is behind me, I'm actually very pleased with the end result. 


    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 12 March 2026 | 11:00 am


    Red Copper Camels

     In my occasional dabbling with 3D printed figures, I've had something of a mixed bag results-wise so far. 

    There have been the "upscaled too far - but still cute" Etruscans, the "fairly fugly" medieval Knights and the "great but too brittle" Numidians.

    Next up on this route march to the future are some Red Copper Arab camels - replacing some very old, and very grim Lancashire Games Mahdist camelry that I've had far, far too long. 

    These Red Copper figures are really exceptional designs, with a huge amount of detail - the sheer amount of which only really becomes fully apparent when you start to try and paint them and begin to find extra straps, layers, details and bolt-on weaponry that you'd not really spotted in the unpainted prints. 

    That did mean that my decision to go for a "layering" approach with the paint for the riders (with the camels themselves being done with GW Contrasts) ended up being rather more of a labour of love than I intended - some of these camels have at least 24 different paints applied to them ! 

    Anyways, first up are some Light Camels and Generals, 2 to a base:


    I've gone for a fairly muted palette on the robes of the riders, with whites and duns but then adding a splash of colour with the banners, sashes and headgear - and of course the rugs on which the riders all sit. 



    If you look closely here you will see that every base has the pair of camels connected at some point - or not to put too fine a point on it I made sure to glue their buts together.

    This was to make them more resilient, as the camels do have long, spindly legs and the risk of them snapping off seemed that it would be significant - gluing each pair of models together creates one "thing" with 8 legs not 4, in a fairly wide and stable stance that won't bend (and snap) when you pick it up carelessly and squeeze the two individual camels together in the process. 

    There's about half a dozen poses in the set - no obvious "Commanders" as such, but more than enough to generate variety. 


    All of the bases are MDF and magnabase with an added layer of steel base sandwiched between the two - this gives them a bit of extra heft which isn't just me being old school, it makes them easier to pick up   as they are that little bit heavier, and actually weigh about as much as you expect.

    I'll drop some more photos of the main bunch of camels in a few days. 


    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 7 March 2026 | 9:00 am


    15mm Avar / Sarmatian cavalry being sold on eBay

    I'm selling 41 nicely painted and presented Khurasan Miniatures 15mm Avar cavalry armed with a mix of bows and lances, with 4 more Light Horse archers (which I think are Minifigs?) too. 

    They are listed on eBay with Global Shipping enabled too so you can buy them from anywhere in the world and eBay will ship them to you. 

    They are all painted, and based up on DBx-standard 40x30mm bases with magnabase on all of them for safe storage in any metal tin or toolbox. 

    These 41 figures would allow you to make up the DBA army III/13a Avars 553-557AD & 642-826AD, or  II/26 Sciracae, Iazyges & Later Rhoxolani Sarmatian 310-375BC , or form the core of a very handy ADLG or DBM army / allied contingent -  I think you could also use them as Goths, Huns or any sort of Steppe Nomad types and no-one would blink an eye.

    They are based up with a mix of 2, 1 or zero "barded" horses on each base allowing you to easily differentiate between different grades of cavalry in your army list even without even needing to set off down the "different coloured flowered grass tufts" route. 

    Looking more closely I think a couple of spears have broken off in the many years since I bought and painted these - which isn't too bad out of 37 lancers who've seen reasonable tabletop usage, and I'm sure you can reasily replace them of just hide the pair of guilty geezers in this mass of hard-charging lancers anyway.

    These are being sold to make space in my Bisley cabinets as part of my grudging "one-in-one-out" resolution to try and keep a lid on the number of figures that I actually own. 

    EBay Link is https://ebay.us/m/tZ1aG6

    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 26 February 2026 | 12:28 pm


    15mm Arab Light Horsemen

     My 15mm Arab armies have been chugging along for many years, making do with some Lancashire Games Light Horse Javelinmen from their Sudan / Mahdist range. 

    They have done sterling service but are not the best figures out there, and also suffer from rather spindly spears and swords, so I have finally decided to replace them with some Forged in Battle Arab cavalry. 

    These are pretty straightforward figures, typical FiB which take contrast paints very well - especially on the horses - and have robust metal spears (aka arguably a bit too thick but they are very unlikely to break in action)

    The pack of 12 (old sizes pre Dec 2025!) had a mix of 6 short spears, 3 commanders and 5 long spear riders plus 12 horses. These are the short spear guys.


    And these are the "lancers" with a commander figure too.

    I've done most of them with a simple paint job, using contrast paints on the horses, ArmyPainter Leather Speedpaint on the reins (as I find it both works and sort of self-blacklines too).

    The white is a white base coat, a layer of Army Painter Holy White, and then normal white paint that leaves bits ofthe Holy White (aka grey wash) visible in places underneath that are folds in the cloth. 

    All in all an upgrade on my old horsemen, and a simple but effective set of figures for tabletop use.

      

    Read more on The Madaxeman Blog

    First posted on 23 February 2026 | 1:31 pm



    This front page has regular updates via RSS

    About Us, Copyright and Privacy Information


    2026 Events from Madaxeman.com

    Buy tickets for The 3rd Kegworth Codgers ADLG Competition, 6th & 7th October


    Buy tickets for The 5th Devonian Classic ADLG Competition, 5th & 6th December


    Madaxeman is also on;

    Youtube Logo
    Blogger Logo
    Facebook Logo
    Podbean Logo
    Instagram Logo
    BlueSky Logo
    Twitter Logo
    Mastodon Logo
    Threads Logo
    Spotify Logo
    Pinterest Logo
    iTunes Logo
    Tune In Logo

    Want to know the history of Madaxeman.com?

    It all gets explained in my appearance on the Gods Own Scale Podcast


    Intrigued to know my wargaming history?

    Watch my appearance on the PCP Podcast


    Podcasts to download from Madaxeman.com

    (Also available on Podbean, iTunes and Spotify)

    Podcast Links

    Madaxeman.com Podcasts on building and using specific armies under ADLG all in one place


    The first 20 weeks of the Madaxeman Podcast over the 2020 UK Summer Lockdown. Painting tips, a Napoleonic history lesson, Andy's Quiz, and plenty of army-specific content as well.



    Become a fan of Madaxeman.com on Facebook

    Madaxeman.com