Star Players from the Citadel Mail Order Catalogue Jervis later admitted this whole aim of alignment was a mistake, and when the fourth edition arrived, Blood Bowl miniatures slowly returned to their more distinctive and fantastic roots. My personal opinion is that many of these minis represent a low point for Blood Bowl, looking uncannily like de-weaponised Fantasy Battle infantry, with mostly identical raised-fist poses that suggest little to do with sports. Dwarves gained Troll Slayers, Skaven Blitzers became Stormvermin) to their counterparts in the mainstream Warhammer World.Īlleged Blood Bowl Players, just missing their axes and shields Many of the teams, players, and corresponding models were explicitly brought closer both aesthetically and in terms of positional naming (e.g. The game however was suffering a bit of an identity crisis. The third edition of Blood Bowl, released in 1994, once again released with plastic Human and Orc teams in the box, this time in a full range of positionals and poses. Ninjas, chainsaws, bazooka-wielding Dwarves, cyborg Orcs (?!) yes, GW went absolutely nuts with this lot, but somehow it all made sense in the wacky world of Blood Bowl, and many of these Stars remain firmly in the game to this day. This edition also saw the arrival of Star Players, and a plethora of unique sculpts were released for them. Jes also sculpted one of the other standout teams from this edition, the Skaven, currently being played by your humble author in London’s Dragon Bowl League.īlood Bowl Star Players as advertised in White Dwarf #108 Sculpted by Jes Goodwin, they had strong echoes of the same redefinition of the Eldar aesthetic (particularly through Harlequins) that Jes was doing for 40k at the same time.īlood Bowl Second Edition Skaven by King_Ghidra Certainly one of the most iconic sets of BB minis ever released, the hockey mask and extravagant mohawk hair do’s were probably the pinnacle of the ‘cyber-fantasy’ aesthetic that BB’s creator Jervis Johnson envisioned for the world of Blood Bowl. But the metal miniature support was ramped up significantly, with the vast majority of races getting full teams of varied poses to represent the new positional variety of the squads.īlood Bowl Elves as advertised in White Dwarf #101 The boxed release actually included the first plastic miniatures, albeit containing fifteen copies of a single monopose figure for the Humans and Orcs each (the later Dungeonbowl release introduced a similar set for Elves and Dwarves). From it’s absurdly-spiked shoulderpad, to its mohawk haircut, and topped with a mean-as-hell expression, this is a mini that perfectly encapsulates the kind of guy you would not be want to be lining up against on a Blood Bowl field.īlood Bowl’s Second Edition followed hard on the original’s heels in 1988, and saw a heavy rework of the rules, which had originally been largely based on the Warhammer Fantasy Battle game. The Skaven is quite notable as they had been introduced to the world of Warhammer only months before, and the Skaven Blood Bowl team and its accompanying lore, included in White Dwarf #86, was one of their first major appearances in any GW product.įirst Edition Blood Bowl Ogre, by King_Ghidraīut it is the Ogre who really stands out as one of the definitive BB minis. An almost-American Football look, with some more fantastic and lethal touches (i.e. These minis certainly embodied the aesthetic that the rest of the game art had established. The game was simpler then, and the range of positionals that we all take for granted now was just a distant dream, so having one or two minis for each race was not quite as limiting as it sounds. Then there were two Orcs, two Humans, two Elves, a Dwarf, Skeleton, Zombie, and Skaven. The Ogre, who was the cover star of the game box (illustrated brilliantly by Brett Blevins), was the only big guy. But GW supported the release with a range of eleven metal minis. ![]() ![]() It came with a bunch of (very cool) cardboard standees. When Blood Bowl first released there were no miniatures in the game box. In this article we’re going to take a little trip back through time to look at some of those early figures and the stories around them. In those early editions of the game before its 2016 revival, there were a wealth of miniatures released in both metal and plastic, and they include some of the most iconic miniatures that have defined the aesthetic of the game ever since. Blood Bowl’s first edition was released all the way back in 1987, which means we are creeping up on the forty-year mark for one of GW’s most enduring and popular specialist games.
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