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Trevor A. Dixon, a sculptor with Hinchcliffe Miniatures, left in 1976 to form his own company, Dixon Miniatures. [1] His first products were 54 mm miniatures for use with Napoleonic wargames. The company then started producing 28 mm figures, including a line of Mongols and historical Japanese figures such as samurai, ashigaru, and ninja. [2]
This is a list of companies that have produced miniature models for tabletop games.. Alternative Armies - Scottish company; Archive Miniatures & Game Systems - Early producer of miniatures for role-playing games [1]
Wargames Factory was an American plastic miniature manufacturer that opened in 2007. It specialized in highly detailed, multi-part models in hard plastic for wargaming . Wargames Factory produced models mostly in the 28 millimetres (1.1 in) range, but did other scales as well.
Rulettes for 16th Century Naval Warfare (Wargames Research Group, 1978) Samurai Warfare (Adams & Clarke, ~1979) Sword And Pistol (Tabletop Games, 1985) The Road To Osaka (Daisho Publications, 1995) The Universal Soldier (RAFM Company, 1977) Wargames Rules - Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century (1490–1660) (George Gush, Wargames Research ...
Older figures from the 60s and tend to be thinner / shorter than new metal ones. Close to O scale model railroads. 54 mm: 9.6 mm: 1:35 –1:32: Traditional "toy soldier" scale. Popular for display (non-wargaming) and collectible figures. Historically, these were considered to be 1:32 or 3/8" to the foot models similar to Gauge 1 toy and model ...
[57] [63] The move was made well after Citadel Miniatures' successful introduction of plastic and part-plastic figures, but the figures were not popular with Ral Partha's older customer base. In 1993 Dennis Mize designed the "Titans of Terror" series which invoked the heroes and monsters of the horror films. [ 64 ]