Showing posts with label Ngála. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ngála. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2020

The Tower of the Arch-Mage: Exploring Ngála - Part 2


The Wizard of Zao,
One of my favourite novels...

Often when I visit the local dollar stores I am looking for stuff I can turn into other stuff. Equally often, however, I never get the time to actually execute those plans. Today was one of those rare instances!
I had spotted a Christmas decoration in the remnants of the Xmas section. It was a cone shaped wire thingie covered in gold glitter and a few coloured beads. I guess it is supposed to be a Christmas tree?
I decided it would make a nice frame to build a tower roof around so I bought it. Afterwards I decided I should have three but now all the Xmas stuff seems to be cleared away. Moral: buy it when you see it, don't dither.
So I had decided to make the roof of a tower. The tower of what? For what? For whom? I didn't know. I still don't know! 
For purposes of this blog post I am going with the working title: "The Tower of the Arch-Mage". 
Who is that, you ask? I don't know that either, but my first guess is the Wizard of Zao, that being a favourite Lin Carter book of mine. Not sure if he will have green skin though...
Actually, a thought: perhaps this is the guy with the walking palanquin from my last Ngála post (Part 1 - see previous).
So, some dollar store crafting: a Christmas decoration, some packing material from something I bought online, some duct tape and a few staples... 

1) First I covered the cone with duct tape.

2) I discovered some packing material that was flexible and easy to cut...and not
too thick. Suitable material for tiles?


2) I tried stapling on the first few strips, but quickly switched to duct tape.

3) Somewhat belatedly I realized that I should be cutting the strips into curves!
4) The last step is to cut into the edges of the strips to make the individual
tiles.

Compared to a 28mm figure they are quite large! Which is why they have lasted so many millenia!

5) Finishing? A coat of Gesso, maybe?
Cost so far:
Christmas decoration: $1.50
Packing material: free (somebody sent it to me).
Duct Tape: $4 for the roll. I used about 3' maybe. Maybe 5% of the roll.
Staples: about a dozen (from "stock").
Time? a little over 2 hours, including time to take pictures and compose email.

A Note About Ngála

When I went to put Part 1 of this series up on other forums, such as the Lead Adventure Forum, or The Miniature Page, I realized that nobody would have any idea what I was rambling on about. Or, at least, many people wouldn't. So I wrote a bit of a blurb as a sort of intro. But then I realized that I should have included that in my original post. I never got around to editing that, so here is the blurb, belatedly, for your enlightenment and enjoyment. ;-)
Ngála
An ancient city on Tékumel. I tried counting how old it is. The current empire, the Empire of the Petal Throne or Tsolyánu, is also known as the 2nd Imperium and is over 2000 years old; the empire previous to that was Éngsvan hla Gánga, "the Mighty and Powerful Empire" - the Empire of the Priest-Kings, which lasted 3000 years, give or take. Before that was the 1st Imperium, Nayári's Empire. That went on for 10,000 years after her death and Ngála was old even before Nayári founded her empire.
You can see it up at the left edge of this map...

Of course, after 15,000 plus years nothing could possibly be still extant above ground, right? Yes, well, sure, if one were talking about an ordinary city. But Ngála was no ordinary city, and now is no ordinary ruins. We know the Temple of Hriháyel, the Dancing Maiden of Temptation, uses at least parts of the site for summoning demons so it is not a great leap to think the city as a whole is special.
Furthermore, there are probably multiple iterations of the city, possibly some distance apart as the city developed historically. My "take" is that there is 
1) Ngála, the ruins where the Hriháyel priestesses carry out their rituals. This is on the Nyelmáyel river, the River of Dreams. At least in My Tekumel, it is! Your mileage may vary, as they say. I see it as a sort of Tékumel version of Deadwood, or Bartertown, or the Five Points area on NYC in the 1800's.
2) Then there is Pála Ngála, literally "Old Ngála", which sprawls further to the West and comprises many of the older incarnations of the city spread over a large area.
3) Finally there is "Greater Ngála" - I still need to look up this would be in Tsolyáni.  ;)   Greater Ngála exists beyond this realm, in the realm of sleep: the Dreamlands. Greater Ngála exists as it was at its height, or as some version of it at its height, or possibly all versions; the priesthoods are still debating these points.

Saturday, December 7, 2019

Exploring Ngála - Part 1


An almost bare table...


My usual ground cloth...


Some strips of old roads; a lucky a flea market find...


A broken old Chess set...


Hecho en México! 
These are, I think, quite common in 
tourist traps down in Cancun or Acapulco...


I found on mine ebay. Most versions were close to 
$200 US but this one was damaged, and with an 
incomplete set of figures, so I got it for a good price...


When it arrived the board practically fell apart in my hands!
Which was a good thing! I might not have wanted to do anything to 
it if it had been undamaged...


I could use it with the chess board upright, but I think reversed, 
as a platform is more useful...


Here is my test layout with bits from a variety of sources: 
Aztec-themed Terrarium ornaments, SE Asia statuettes, 
and unpainted resin bits from Acheson Creations.


Other bits are from Stone Mountain(L) and Fenris Games(R). 
The lanterns and statue are from Petsmart. 
The chess men are from yet another Aztec-themed 
chess set I own. One of three!


I think the city-scape should be cluttered. 
A mixture of Acheson Creations, 
Flea Market finds and Pet store products.


And it should be all overgrown. Still need to do that bit...


The strange contraption with legs is actually a
candlestick I bought in some tacky knick-knack shop. 
In my game it belongs to some Lord: his walking palanquin!


Chess men arrayed "terracotta soldier" style...


I need either taller platforms or buildings to put on the pyramid base.


And stairs leading up onto the platform...


And there should be lots of different levels. 
Ground level should not be so flat!


At left, I have added a Sarku-style crest to my Petsmart Buddha...


The platform at left is a Petsmart offering from a few years ago. 
I can't believe I only bought one! 
Why wouldn't I buy two so I could put them back-to-back?
Must have fumbled my "Bargain Hunter" check...


Note that the statue has undergone a bit of facial surgery. 
Gone are Buddha's serene features, 
replaced with a head from what is I believe a Gulper Eel 
from the Safari Ltd, "Deep Sea Creatures" Toob.
I call him "Prince Caspian"...


Lots of work to do...
Platforms to make!
Columns to make!
Sets of stairs to make!
Chess figures to convert into statues!
etc.
etc.
etc.

(And I haven't even used any of the Zombie Quadrille stuff yet!)

Friday, June 29, 2018

Lost, Bitten & Mutilated



Art by Tony Yates

First off, apologies to Zak Smith (and Lamentations of the Flame Princess) for my shameless "hack", as it were, of the title of Zac's inspired "Frostbitten & Mutilated" book. I just picked a copy up at my local and have been ravenously devouring it last night and today. Living in Canada I get quite enough of the cold in real life so the sub-zero setting of his books appeals to me less than it might to some. 

It occurred to me that it need not be set in a frigid northern climate at all. Why not use it for inspiration for my Ngála game? Why not, indeed! With that in mind, I am stripping away the freezing cold and bringing on the sweltering heat and monsoon rains, transporting the setting to Southern Tsolyánu... 

"Lost, Bitten & Mutilated" is my Indian takeaway, as it were. :-)

(to be continued...)


Saturday, December 16, 2017

The Zombie Quadrille


A selection of Cthulhu statuettes 
from the Zombie Quadrille.

Here is the first selection - purchased a few months ago now - of resin statuettes sculpted by Joe Broers of the Zombie Quadrille. As you might have guessed from the figure posed at the base of the R'yleh Tower, I do not intend to use these works of art for their original purpose. Instead they will populate a ruined cityscape, specifically the ruins of Ngála. I've already placed another order for more. A rather lot more...

Muhahaha!!!