Greetings Lead-adventure!
I haven't posted overly much on this site, but a friend of mine who goes by the name of CaptainHaddonCollider here, has been posting battlereports (Links:
1,
2,
3) from some of our Lion Rampant games in an ongoing, if currently paused, campaign, and I felt that a log here about my newest project might work both to let us keep track of it and maybe even shamelessly pilfer inspiration from the other members of the board.
CHC has a peculiar ability to get me to start projects, and he's gotten me into a number of games over the years. LR turned out to be tremendous fun, not least because he'd done an absolutely amazing job with the terrain and setting, and over the summer I decided to see if there wasn't a way to return that. Then, after we'd played our last LR game, Ronin reared it's head. Small armies, fairly cheap to get into, looks well-written and fun, plus we've got another friend who should be easy to persuade as long as he gets to play with samurai models and put on a fake accent - what's not to love?
I decided on finding a background that'd let me pit three armies against each other, since the overarching narrative of the LR campaign made that so much better, and found it in the Sengoku era. Here's the intro text I sent to CHC and the other chap, Tim:
In 1573, Ashikaga Yoshiaki, last Ashikaga-shogun, have managed to alienate his patron, the Daimyô Oda Nobunaga, by refusing to leave politics to him. After the shogun contacts Takeda Shingen, Daimyô of Kai, to aid him in destroying Nobunaga, Nobunaga promptly imprisons the shogun and makes war on Shingen, one of the most wealthy Daimyô in Japan. In the meantime, the Daimyô Uesugi Kenshin have little love for either commander, and would dearly love to see them both dead, furthering his own ambitions. A former Buddhist monk, he is partly inspired by the rise of the Ikko-Ikki to purify the land of the rising sun.
The lines are drawn, with Oda Nobunaga, Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin sending out raiding parties ahead of their main forces to control strategically placed villages and roads, burn or recover crops, and assassinate opposing commanders.
(Historically, Shingen dies in 1573 trying to storm a castle commanded by Tokugawa Ieyasu, one of Nobunagas most valued field commanders. Nobunaga, fighting the Ikko-Ikki, rejoices and puts them to the sword. After this, he utterly destroys the Takeda army under Shingens son by massed Teppo-fire, which also makes a point to the samurai on both sides - the nobility of the Kai province has been destroyed by Ashigaru, commoner infantry, with firearms.)
Of course, there's much more to the period than this, but I feel it should suffice as a setting for a few games.
With this established, I borrowed CHC's Ronin rulebook and made 3 army lists.
Defenders of the Ashikaga Shogun, Buntai of Daimyô Takeda Shingen 3 Samurai
4 Ashigaru with Yumi (bows)
1 Ashigaru-Gashina with a banner
1 Ashigaru-Gashira with Yari (spears)
Raiders of the Monk-Daimyô, Uesugi Kenshin 2 Samurai
1 Hatamoto
2 Ashigaru with Yumi
1 Ashigaru with a banner
3 Ashigaru-Gashira with Yari
(I've actually got a second WiP list for this army that I'll use if time permits - it just requires me to paint some monks that I haven't got yet, so for now I'll be aiming for this, and if I have time I'll swap in a different list. )
Advance guard of the new Shogun, Oda Nobunaga 1 Bushou with Nodachi and warhorse
1 Hatamoto with Yari and warhorse
3 Samurai
I'll admit that I'm worried about the last one being either insanely overpowered or utterly feeble, but it ought to be fun, and that's the main objective.
I've bought everything needed from the Perry brothers, and their metals are - as always - a pleasure to work with.
I picked a Ashigaru with a bow from the Takeda force as my test model:

I've since realised that I need to paint some stripes on his bow, but other than that, this'll be the standard I'll aim for.
Terrain-wise I've built a few houses, the concept shamelessly stolen from Juxt's great samurai log over on warseer:
Link
And for scale:

They're not the prettiest things in the universe, but I think they'll do for peasant housing. I'm hoping to complete either a manor or a small temple in the same style before we play.
If you've made it through that wall of text, congratulations! I know I went on a bit, but I felt this should be introduced proper-like. All comments and criticism is more than welcome on this!