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David & Warstorm Games

Nov 11, 202458 minSeason 1Ep. 168
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David from Warstorm Games joins me for this intervoew chat today.

Please check out his webstore and pop in next time your in Japan:

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Transcript

Look, Dave, thank you so much again mate for coming on to the Chronicling podcast. I really appreciate you taking the time out of your day to come and talk to us. No worries, it's actually really nice to be and nice to actually see because we've spoken a bit online, but you have a face there. I do. I know it's scary, but it's it's even more beautiful now because I've got the filters on. Yeah. Unfiltered It's it's, it's Heimlich Kemler cosplay.

Basically my age, age and working and teaching, as you all know, has not, has not fared me well in terms of physical appearance. I tell you what, it's it's like, it's like a vampire just draining every every part of you out of your body. Teaching is wonderful. How long have you been doing it for? Like 8 years now. Oh yeah. I've got nine years, mate, to 10 years total and that was it. Now that I'm still teaching, I'll teach online, which is

wonderful. I don't. Yeah, I'm talking about like teaching in in Kiowa. Now, I don't know where you teach, but. I'm. Doing a Kiowa too, yeah. So it's not so bad. Yeah, it depends. It depends. Like I had a great, you know, I, I still work for the same company. Great people, you know, mostly great students, love the kids, all that kind of stuff. That was no issue at all.

I think it was just like that burnout, you know, 1010 years from 1:00 till 10 and like, and there's travel time, 2 hours commuting every day. Then the travel on top of that going companies and all that kind of stuff. I think it just, it just took its toll and I just had to had to make some life changes. So I still work there part time. I do my online lessons, which I love doing for the guys there. So yeah, got 1 foot in, one foot out basically, yeah.

Yeah. Because I discovered you through War Storm games, so this is a wonderful adventure you're on mate. Some for some people, their dream job. Yeah, I think so. I mean, it's, yeah, it's one of those weird things where, you know, it's not like what I would say is my original dream job, but it's definitely Erin, like the list of things I enjoy

doing. Before coming to Japan, I was working for Firestorm Games. So I've been and then before that I worked for Rules of Play and before that I worked for Games Workshop. So I've got a long, long sort of work history with this. So it's definitely always been something I'm interested, I've been interested in and working in, but for for a while and I still do it. It's actually, again, bit of a part time thing. Writing was actually like my main focus.

So I've written a few novels still, still writing novels as well, but again, just the market for that doesn't really work out super great. So I was looking for another alternative to teaching and since this was something I already knew rather well, had a fair amount of contacts already in the industry is like, this is a pretty logical next step.

Again, given how little there is in Japan that's not Games Workshop. So yeah, that was sort of the the jump in point for me. Was it April this year? Yeah, it wasn't that long ago mate, I don't think. No, really. Not that long ago. Feels like it was ages ago, but literally April. So what's that, 66? Yeah, just just over six months. Yep, and it's been a bit of a success story as I hear right. Oh yeah. I'm genuinely surprised how well it's already going. I mean, it's by no means the one

it's GameStop in the world yet. But yeah, I mean, when I was doing my business plans, you know, I went with a very, very conservative first year, as is I think generally sensible. And then I sort of blew past that number in the first month and 1/2. So yeah, that was like a lot, a lot of support both from the Japanese local community and not so local community recently. And then also a lot of the foreign games as well from the the games in was it board games

in Japan, Facebook groups. So there's a lot of you were dropping with me, which is really nice. Oh, that's great. I started sponsoring one of the events in the yes, the Xama Xama base. Yep, so I can miss giving price support over there to the the American guys. And again, obviously then they're they're shopping with me as well. So that that's quite nice of the mutually beneficial. Actually we're, we're looking, we were looking for sponsors for our Wahama Renaissance events here in Japan.

Well, maybe we should talk about that, mate. Yeah, we should. And in turn have them purchase their Vallejo paints because I said, you know, if you've got Vallejo paints, that's great. You've got the Army Painter paints and products there, which is great. So if if the guys aren't particularly well, some of them do play Old World, they do play other games which up systems or they might be interested in the, you know, the historical stuff with the bold action, you know, miniatures.

You sell yourself a bit of Perry stuff there, which can be easily converted for various different systems. So yeah, you might have a a mutual, yeah, I mean customer base there with us as well. So that is good thinking. That would be rather nice. I mean, even if not, I'm generally just happy to support more events happening because more people playing games is always a good thing. Absolutely. Yep, that's good. But yeah, awesome. Yeah. OK, nice. We can do something with that

then. Yeah, and I'm a happy customer for the first time this morning. I did pick up some my poor Sawyer sort of miniature to support him financially during his, his his health problems at the moment, which is really not, not nice to hear that Paul's undergoing such a enormous, like life changing life ending kind of situation now that he's just enjoying whatever time he has left within with his family. So I was, I was very happy to pick up the very last copy of

that. And I'm definitely going to paint it up and give that away to probably one of my patrons or maybe for through the Crown of command or something like that as a commemorative piece in December, maybe as a Christmas present or something like that, I think. So that's a nice idea, yeah. Yeah, I think that'd be nice, mate. Nice way to honour Paul for all these hard work and enormous amount of yeah, enormous amount of time and dedication is given to our hobby.

So, yeah. So the, the main reason I really wanted to get you on David, this is talk about a, you know, how you got into war gaming. How did, how does this all started? You've sort of rattled off a few names with people and places and companies you work for, but, and I can tell by the accent mate, you're not from these shores. So how did it all start? No, I'm a well, actually, my accent doesn't really give away where I'm from precisely if if you're local, but I'm I'm a London boy all.

Right. So yeah, technically I'm from Hendon, which is, I was getting confused. I only lived there for like two or three years, so I think South London, but I'm sure everyone who's in London will tell me I'm wrong. So but yeah, no, originally from Hendon and then I lived in Watford for most of my childhood before moving to Wales and then Japan.

But for the getting started, it was the Watford location that actually was my my first thing because they had the Games Workshop in the shopping centre there with the the traditional massive glass windows that they always had in their stores back then. This is like, I know, late 90s I guess. So I used to walk past it all the time and I'd see all the brightly coloured fantasy miniatures. And I used to love reading

fantasy books back then as well. I call sort of the Pratchett stuff and Red Wall and things like that. So I was always at my parents being like, I want to try this, I want to play this. And then my parents, being quite Christian, were very like, oh, we don't know about that. So ultimately I went behind their backs a little bit and bought a wood elf army of a guy at school for I think it's like 10 lbs at the time. Wow.

So it, I mean, it was mostly like the Super chunky plastic Archers. So I don't know how much of it they'd gotten for free from someone from around places, but yeah, yeah, I bought that and I talked to my parents around. It's like, oh, it's OK. There's no like, weird demons and stuff in this. It's all good. Don't worry about it. It's kind of escalated from there. So they obviously they've come around to it now. This isn't like a whole big, big

secret thing, you know? They're very supportive and I think they understand I've not become a zealous cultist of chaos or anything. Yeah, well, I think my parents had the same concern. I think that was the, it wasn't Warhammer, was it? I think Warhammer Fantasy Role Play first edition, it had some pretty deep dark shit in there. I can tell you. It's like pentagrams and everything, you know? It was like the source book for demonology, you know, It was pretty dark in those days.

I'll be pretty concerned about it. I remember, I mean, Dungeon and Dragons was my first role play game. I did a bit of Warhammer Fantasy afterwards. But yeah, I remember someone, one of my friends bought the, oh, what's the name of it? Like it's like the Demonomicon but not. And again, it's just like full of weird sex stuff and demons to the point where the book had like a warning adult content on its sticker. I can't imagine Wizards

releasing anything like that. But yeah, that that was a thing, an official Dungeons and Dragons product. But it's changed. It's definitely become a lot more family friendly. I mean, even Jane's Workshop now with demonettes have sort of toned it down a little bit. Yeah, it's funny, isn't it? Because even like something come up by feed on YouTube with the the Satanic rites of Dracula 1976 or something like that. Oh God, yeah. What's his name again, Sir? Guy from Lord of the Rings.

Oh, Ian Mccullen. No, not Ian Mccullen, the other that he recently passed away. Yes. Yeah, Oh my goodness. Yeah, I've had two. Copies already. And yeah, you know how I mean, you know, everyone knows what I'm talking about, but. Another thing for people to complain about, I'm mislabeling where I'm from. The name of Chris. Yeah, Christopher Lee. Christopher Lee. That's it. I knew Chris was in there somewhere. Chris. You got it. Yeah. You helped me there when you said Christopher.

Yes, Christopher Lee. Teamwork. I know I watched some horrific shit when I was a kid, like in the local library, you know, in Southport, went to library and you could and I was, I don't know, 10/11/12 or something. You could just get anything off the videos like like that videotapes, bank VHS then mate, the most horrific like in terms of like, you know, I was picking up horror movies or anything that I felt would be cool to watch.

Yeah, Satanical kind of rituals. Everything, everything, anything was a go back then. You know that's it's weird, eh? You'll pack. Yeah, I mean, I guess now it's all the Internet stuff, isn't it? Everyone's just yeah, right about Googling whatever they want to Google. Yeah, Donkey, donkeydicks.com. That's probably. One of the as AS is sponsoring this episode. No, they wish. Yeah, right. They couldn't afford us. No mate, but I think we're a bit too good for them.

Yeah, we we go for. A Think of those donkeys mate, what they must go through and what they have to endure. This This feels a lot like it's becoming a a clerk's movie now. I do miss those too, actually. Yeah, Yeah. But but anyhow, let's, let's let's get back on track. So, yeah, yeah. You said you're from from the UK and you sort of grew up mostly in Watford, but then you talked about discovering the hobby in that city. Was it some kind of war games club or something?

Was it me? Oh no, it was an actual Games Workshop originally. Oh, Games Workshop. That's right, Yeah. Well, I, I had one other friend at school who played, so we would occasionally meet up and then, yeah, again, it still just builds up from there. So, you know, we then discovered that there, there is actually a war games club in Watford, or at least there was at the time. So his mum offered to drive us there.

I think we went two or three times we did that, although again, being so new to it, like this was fantasy second edition, 3rd edition maybe, I think probably second edition. So he was playing with undead and he had all of his like magical spells that came in the the army book back then. And I think I'd do dwarfs by that point, but neither of us had like the the winds of magic supplements so I had no idea about like using rune priests counter spells and stuff.

So he'd like just stomp all over me. 9 times out of 10 he's like and then I do this spell and charge you with my massive skeletons now and all of your long beards are dead because I did the curse of ages on them. It's like OK. Nothing much has changed then. No, no, no. Except now I know how how anvils of doom work and things like that. One one small advantage. And then you do what I did and just roll 2 ones or what it was and just it blows up and kills everything around it anyway.

Yeah, well, actually that was my my first game of the old world. We did a dwarfs versus ogres. So again, I'm back into the dwarves. I got got a big old arm again. You got a beard. You got a beard to suit it. I can't grow. A beard sometimes. I plan this sometime just to really get into the the theme of it. Yeah, I why not? Be the wolf king of Japan one day. Well, you do live near a mountain. A pretty big mountain. I live very, very near a very big mountain, so I'm I'm in for it.

It's going to get like a big old axe and a crown and then then I'm good. The chronic command maybe exactly classic classic magic item like I never remember it being that good in the games like like the name like sticks with you but. Oh, the chronic command. Well, the doors didn't really need it. I think it but it was very good in that it was like an unmodified 10 and right for the unit that is leading, but it it also if it's if it's on your general, it goes out 12 inches,

but it's not unmodified though. So for goblins for me, been playing night goblins. Yeah, it was like an essential auto include mandatory choice. That 50 points is definitely on your warlord because it was just it was the the backbone that kept everything going and everything together. Otherwise in the old world, I would assume that. Sorry, what's that? Goblins like leadership. Sixth base, Weren't they? Five base five. OK, yeah. So that that 10 is a winner.

Yep, Yep. So you really needed that to to just make them any, you know, like a viable choice. But I think from 6th edition onwards, they got rid of it. I think Taurus, Thomas Pirin and even said that it was it was a really broken broken. So I think that was the first thing he did, just got rid of that. Well, fair enough. I guess it makes sense if it's changing the entire theme of the Army to goblins low leadership except when you got this crown then then you get.

Yeah, kill the kill the leader. Yeah, that's it. That's what it came to, yeah. Just kill the leader. Yeah, no, for my so you've seen the explosion. So my my first game of Old World with dwarfs I tried a sort of an artillery line plus some troops against ogres and pretty much all of my artillery killed itself within two turns. I think my cannon fired once and never got to use the stone thrower and then yeah everything else just been boom.

So luckily the rest of the army performed, but that was quite amusing just watching 1 artillery piece explode after another. So that they don't use artillery dice anymore, do they? No, they do. In the old World, they're back. Oh, they're back. Are they OK? Yeah, so the, the only thing they've really removed is the guest ranges on Canon. So you you just choose the point where you want to go now.

So you, so whatever, like it, however far in front of the unit you're shooting at, you're like, OK, let's go in there. And then you roll your artillery dice and you scatter dice as normal, which I like. I mean, obviously I I being an old school player, I always have a fondness for Guess Rangers, and it's one of the reasons I'm still quite good. I'm guessing you're probably the same. I like eyeballing how far a meter is, you know, it's one of those sort of lifelong, weirdly useless skills.

But yeah, all because I worked out by basilisks and cannons. Well, yeah, like at school we did like technical drawing and, you know, we did like trade skill type stuff. I work my dad, you know, in factories, various factories over the years, that kind of stuff. So, yeah, we always had, you know, we're always like cutting, measuring and all that kind of stuff.

I don't know how much they do nowadays, but yeah, I think that was my biggest gripe about, apart from the magic system, that the biggest gripe about 8th edition for me is that they got rid of that and it just became this kind of, OK, well, I'm going to shoot this particular war machine and, and the guy I was playing with had like a template.

Cut out on a a four piece of paper and he actually drawn out all the base sizes like 20 mil, 25 mil and he just plonked it straight on top of the unit and you can see exactly how many he would hit. And yeah, it just no, it just left a bad sort of taste in my mouth or my beer. So from that point onwards, but I can see for the simplicity and for time, yeah, I can see that that being definitely a factor. And it also, it also results in like, OK, well it deviates.

You can roll the scatter dice this how many inches? And then, you know, determining exactly the point where it lands and you know, using your tape measure to line up exactly where it goes. I can see where it it creates a lot of arguments sometimes, maybe for younger, younger players. Yeah, I don't think I've ever seen anyone agree on the true direction of a scatter dye. Yeah, yeah. I've I've had it, we always try and like roll it this, you know, Gainsby before, roll it next to

the unit. So it's like you, you don't have very far to go. But even then, you know, it always just looks a little bit off someone's hands, a little bit unsteady. I mean, it's fine. It is. It's not not the end of the world thing. But yeah, if you're a bit more competitive minded or taking a lot more seriously than I can imagine, that gets quite frustrating for people on either side of the table. Yeah, for sure.

But at the same time, I, I agree with you, it's it's really annoying when whoever's using whatever mega weapon is like, well, as long as I don't roll A1, that unit's dead. Like you know there should be a little bit more variable in play is nice. Yeah, for sure mate, for sure. I'm actually painting a dwarf now. Actually right now. It's all easy. It could be your your your soul has been entered into this through your voice and through the microphone at this very

dwarf. Well, as long as we look after it, it's OK. I I will. Well, it's not it's not actually mine. It's it's a customers one. It's it's the it's the new Talisman version from Hasbro Games. Oh nice. And surprisingly the miniatures are actually quite good. So I mean the the dwarf is pretty static. I mean, 2 headed axe, you know, you know, he's walking across his chest. It's it's kind of a classic dwarf pose.

But yeah, I mean, compared to some of the atrocities of of the soft plastic, PVC plastic of of yesteryear of other games that I've played. And these are not too bad at all. So they're actually quite nice to paint. I think the the worst one I saw those was the Dungeons and Dragons attempt at replicating X Wing, the dog fighting game. OK, then give us all those.

So we, we obviously went this as well as working at Firestorm and we got a pretty big stock load in because obviously it's Dungeons and Dragons that's popular. X Wing was pretty much at its height of popularity at that point. Everyone was playing it. So like, yeah, let's jump on to that. And they released the most half assed pre painted molten thingies I've ever seen in my life.

You've probably seen like the classic Scout Marine pose where they they've painted the eyes on it just like white splotches with little blue dots in it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. In fact. They made that good. Oh geez, it was. It was like appalling. The Dragons were OK, like if you wanted a dragon for whatever game you're playing, if you stripped it down and repainted it. The dragon models were fine but the infantry like you had like all the Spears like weird wobbly

sticks on them. Yeah, it. Was it was not good? So funnily enough that game did not sell super well and I think it died on wave 2. Right, yeah, I think the fancy Flight 1 as well had some shocking shockers, real shockers in there, PVC plastic miniatures. This is going back quite, quite a number of years now when they had the license, but yeah, they were just shocking. And so it's good to see that

now. I would presume that most, the most of the modern PVC plastics that are getting made out of China or whatever they're getting made out of are all 3D designed and they're using plastics that don't warp or bend OR give you the wonky swords and you know, all that kind of stuff now, which is good. So which is nice. It gets people into miniatures, you know, it gets gets your board gamers into miniatures, you know, So I think that's

nice. I mean, kick Kickstarter now like so much emphasis is based on how cool are the models in the board game you're buying. So it's it's definitely a huge crossover there now. Yeah, I think, I think C1 sort of set the set the standards there, the benchmark and then everyone's just trying to catch up with them I think. And I think 3D design is yet has taken off massively.

And that's that has helped a lot to bridge that gap, you know, between, you know, tradition, even though a lot of stuff is traditionally sculpted. I think they're what's it called dungeon massive, massive darkness. I think it's called like the dungeon crawl. Oh yeah. Yeah, that's really interesting. I really would love to play that at some stage. But all of those miniatures are hand designed, all hand sculpted from the French masters from the Rackham era.

You know, all those guys, they started that guillotine games and yeah, all that's done by hand. And they then they make the moulds in, in Taiwan or China here and, and then make the PVC models out of those. And they look really, really nice. You know, they look fantastic. Loads of character to them. So yeah, it's, it's a good, good cross blend between the two, the traditional meets, you know, technology kind of thing.

And I've even seen now another Belgian guy that I follow, Dennis Cornella, he's actually sculpting them, sculpting his miniatures by hand traditionally, then scanning them, making STL files of the scans, which is another sort of step, which I think is another great way.

You know, you can buy the physical copies or you can buy the STL copies of the miniatures, which is a great way of doing it. Anyhow, we're sort of running out of time for this very first part and a half of our discussion today, David. So I'm going to take a quick little break here and then we'll be come back. We'll talk more about, yeah, your early days of gaming and how that's evolved into Warstorm games now. So we'll be back in just a moment. Crippling gaming addiction? Yeah.

Warstorm games, yes. OK, back in a second. I'm excited to announce the return of the Hirohammer Fanzine Issue 4, which is due in March of 2025. If you have never heard of the Hirahama fanzine, then please visit hirahamahyphenfanzine.com to download your free copy of the first three issues today. And thank you to all the people that have reached out to help contribute to our hobby magazine. Now let's get back to the show. But but anyhow, mate, let's talk about hobby now.

You you discussed before about buying a 10 LB army, which is amazing. That's that's a super saving deal, that one with the wood elves. So wood elves were your first army, I take it? Yeah. Yeah, they were my first Warhammer army, so trying to remember the order of events. Yes no, yeah, it's the Wood Elves say army. I I think it was like the the gateway into it. I don't think I had enough stuff from that to really call it an army at the time. It's like it's my what else

army. So yeah, it may be like 20 of those plastic Archers. And it was like from the starter set of the game, I think. So there wasn't like a a bunch of infantry or cavalry? I think it was mostly just those Archers and possibly some war dancers if I remember correctly. I'm. Trying to think that like, what would they've actually got that from? And I can't for the life of me work out how they had those

random assortments. I guess maybe someone Christmas presents and stuff they just didn't want anymore. But yeah, yeah. So I saw Elves and that was like my introduction and sort of painting because once I had the models and I was like telling my parents like, hey, I've got these now, so can I buy some paints to paint them? We went into that, but then actually the first game I started properly playing was Epic.

Oh good man. So again, the friend of mine from school, yeah, it's a wonderful game. And I keep looking at the the new version, what's it called? The adapters Imperialis. And I keep being slightly tempted by it, but there's no one here who plays it. So it would be me painting tiny models for the sake of painting tiny models. But yeah, no, my friend from school, that was like the game he wanted to play before we both eventually ended up back into Warhammer and I got my dwarfs.

So yeah, I think I had an orc, orc epic army and he had a space Marine epic army. So that that was like our first first kind of proper gaming experience and my my first tabletop gaming experience, which is a hell of a game to start off with, I think. It's a beautiful game to start off with. That's how, that's how what we did me and Chris, because, yeah, because Warhammer was just way too expensive to get into. He he didn't particularly like it either. And Rogue Trader was out at that

stage. And I think it was the same kind of, you know, financial limitations and getting the miniatures and all that kind of stuff. So yeah, this we just went in on. I just took a punt on Space Marine Second Edition. And that was it for us that we just absolutely loved and adored that, that the whole system, the whole game. So we spent many, many weekends playing that on the floor, on the carpet. Right. Yeah. Which was at Battlefield then,

yeah. Yeah, when I, when I finally got into 40K, actually that would have been I think 3rd edition again, a different friend of mine, he got a Blood Angels army and I think I had Elder first for that. And yeah, that again was like on on the floor, shoe boxes for terrain and random bits of cardboard. Yeah, yeah, that's good, good times. That was like, I must spend 1213 at the time I guess. Yeah, well, a while back anyway. Yeah. Good days, mate. Good days.

Yeah. Yeah, I cherished those moments, even. Yeah, because I was thinking about terrain, because we didn't have any terrain. I didn't have trees or anything like that. Maybe I had, yeah, Maybe I had some stuff left over from my train set because that was the first thing I got. My dad got me into, you know, building train sets and the terrain, the paper mesh shape, hills and tunnels and stuff like

that. Maybe I had some bits and pieces leftover from that to use as trees and what have you. But I remember like getting lichen bags of lichen. That was a that was a, a God save, God saving thing. That was because you just needed a bag of that and you got like shrubs and instant kind of, you know, vegetation on the tabletop. But again, we didn't have a table. We just had the floor, which evolved into a table tennis table because that was the craze

back then. All the game, all the guys in a gaming group would go out and try to find a table tennis table in the newspaper for like 50 bucks or something like that, you know, second hand. And that gave us the instant green, you know, table for us to play on. It was great. And I still have a memory of whatever's left of my memory back in those days of me, Marcus, Brad and I think another guy playing epic Space Marine in the 90s on that, on that table tennis table.

Yeah, I'll make good times. That's what we're missing. Just exactly right. That's the vital in green. Green. I think someone put posts up in on Facebook in the second edition 40K group about that, you know, what was people, what were people eating when they're playing second edition in the 90s? And I think strangely enough, I think I was the only person who put McDonald's down. I thought was very, I thought

that was unbelievable. I thought most people eating McDonald's, most it was pizza and God knows what other combination of culinary desert delights they could come up with. But yeah. You. Know. Kind of, you know. No, we we didn't really have much of that where I was. We were kind of like on the outskirts of the city. Well, I'm sure your stomach will thank thank you for that wholeheartedly. You'll live a few years longer than than me mate, that's for sure. I was at some point.

There's a few years when you're when you're 90, isn't it? You know when you're in, you're in bed and you can't walk properly and everything hurts. Not not a few years extra when you're 20. That's. That's the wrong now. Actually, I'm 50 anyhow, anyhow, we're sort of we're sort of off the rails again. We'll get this train, let's get this dwarf land train back on the on its tracks. And so you had, you had your wood off army and then you had. Epic was the first propagating.

Epic epic. The orc epic army as well. So how did this turn into working for Gangs Workshop? Well, I think this was, Oh yeah, it would have been like by five years after I started with the epics, yeah, I would have been about 1212 or 13, maybe a little bit younger. So I've been playing the games for about, yes, seven or eight years by the time I was living in Wales. And then there was a Games Workshop much closer to me.

So I was going there pretty much every weekend and just doing whatever stuff they were doing there, playing with people. I was pretty friendly with the staff. I was about to go up to university and needed a part time job. So they were the first place I went into. They happened to be hiring at the time when I was looking. And yeah, sort of went through the the classic Games Workshop interview process. I don't know how much has changed now because again, this

is a fair, fair while ago. But yeah, so I was working as a part timer from when I was 18 through to about, yeah, 2122 when I finished university. And then I jumped into a different job after that. But yeah, it was, it was good. I I enjoyed it for the most part. The the corporate style of games workshops a little mixed.

I think again, a bit of a problem with a lot of the bigger hobby companies is they either end up being kind of mismanaged because everyone's super buddy buddy and we're all in it for we love the hobby, but we don't really understand the business. So we're just sort of doing what we love and hoping for the best. Or it becomes like super corporate and then you're just constantly trying to fight with like, we need to do this because people want this. And then corporate is like, no,

don't do this. This doesn't make money. Yeah. There's always absolute fight with with businesses, but yeah no for the most part it was pretty good. Used to do all the Thursday night battle bunker stuff. So not Thursday night. Saturday night battle bunker. Thursday was warstorm was

firestorm. Sorry. So yeah, Saturday, Sundays for the late night gaming in Cardiff. And we used to like for a small, small shop, we used to get like 20 or so players coming in and then there was a pub next door and you know, the older guys would go down to that while they were waiting for the game and come in a bit afterwards times. Yeah, good, mate. Yeah, I'm sure you have some really good memories there of that time. So then you eventually came to Japan. Yeah.

So we, we always sort of involve the gaming or gaming yourself with other people during that time from, you know, from the times of Games Workshop to up to now when you came to Japan. Pretty much, yeah. I mean, there was, there's maybe like a brief window where I stopped playing Games Workshop stuff. So I think it was either 4th or 5th edition of 40K. Just sort of put me off for a while right as I was like my my minor gripes with Games Workshop. I hope they'll forgive me they

listen to this. You're selling this stuff now? Yeah, Yeah, I know. But I'm making them money. They've got it most to me. Basically, yeah, because I was a part timer. So I think it was 4th edition was just being released and obviously we had to run demo games for people. That was like a big part of the job. It's they gave free rule books to all of the staff except the part timers.

And then they wanted the part to buy like this 50 LB rule book, which at the time that's like as a weekends of work. You know, why? Why am I having to spend my money to teach the game that you want me to teach to people? Like give give me a rule book, please. And then, you know, considering like all of the discounts you got at the time anyway, it just felt it was, yeah, it was it was not not a great move on their part.

I felt so that that annoyed me. And then basically from that I just because I didn't learn the rules, like I don't have a rule book. I'm not learning this. I'm not paying to learn this so I I stopped playing games version for a while and I got into war machine. So I don't know if you have you played War Machine at all. I have tried it, it just wasn't my thing mate.

No, that's, that's fair. It, it stopped being my thing pretty quickly too, for a while again, because like a lot of my friends are playing it. So I sort of, I persevered for a

while. But that was, yeah, this sort of a side thing, I think for a few years it was mostly sort of role play games for a good four or five years until I then working for Firestorm. And then just working with Firestorm is like, OK, let's let's give tabletop games another go. And then I went back into a war machine first because that was the most popular game at the time, and then they kind of screwed that up. So I jumped back into 40K and then I moved to Japan.

Did you have high expectations of finding a player group in Japan? No, not at all. I think when when I moved here, I brought my Blood Bowl team and my Malafo stuff because it was just small and I liked the models. So I had those. Oh, and Guild, Guild Ball, I had that with me as well because the same reason, just small and I liked the models. So I was like, on the chance I find someone who's sort of interested, it's a very low buy in point to sort of get someone

else to play. And then I've played any of those games since I've been here. So what? What? Because I think you're, you're like me. I I live in an isolated area of Japan, not close to the major cities. And you live in Shizuka Prefecture at the base of Mount Fuji. I believe. I'm not I'm not exactly the pinpoint location exactly where you are, but. Yeah, I'm so honestly, Mount Fuji is still pretty far away. It's like a four hour drive. It just how does it feel?

Yeah, it just, it's so weird on the perspective, like it looks super close. But yeah, if you try and drive good, 3-4 hours. Wow. OK, yeah, yeah, it's, it's, it's big. So, but I'm, I'm still kind of far away. So if, if you are, if you're in a car, then it's super convenient because the Tomei exit's like 3 minutes away. But not even that. Yeah, it's you can. You can see the Tomei exit from my house effectively.

Right. OK, it might because I know one other, a friend of mine here, Tom, was interested in coming to one of your Age of Sigma events at some stage. So I might come down there with my epic Space Marine one day, mate, who knows? Nice. I mean, I'd have to pick up on me again, but I'm I'm definitely. Up for that? We'll bring some old hammer to all of the Hawthorne games. Yes, but so So what what what became the like?

I know you talked about you know your your writing experience and you you're a you're a professional writer and you write books, but you're looking for another Ave. apart from teaching. What sort of crossed the line then for you to start up War Storm Games? So that's a hard one to answer in a direct way. I think mostly it was the fact that, and I mean my, my boss himself has said this, this isn't like a big secret or

anything. So teaching is not a long term profession in Japan like you either I think start your own a Kiowa here or you got to find something else after a while. So I've been doing this for eight years now, six years with the place I'm at. And it was a case of, you know, what, what, what am I doing next? I don't, I didn't have the aspirations to be an English school owner just because of the level of where I am. And that sort of that constant stress and fight to find and

keep new students. It's like that that's always a thing. And you know, you're, you're providing for that like a sort of a not, not like a life altering service, But given the importance of English within the Japanese education system, you know, I think if you're offering an English service and it's not as good as it can be, that's that's not great like that. That's a pretty serious thing. And I think, you know, obviously there are some good schools

here. I also think there's a lot of people who just get into it. They think it's an easy, easy way to make a bit of money and it is if you want to be lazy at it, you could definitely go down that route. But that that wasn't for me. I didn't want to sort of not do something I'm like very passionate about when it's such a big deal students. So then it came down to like, well, what can I do that's not teaching my Japanese?

I don't have any of the, the certifications, so I couldn't get like an office job or anything like that. My Japanese is possible. But yeah, I'm, I'm not a professional speaker or a fluent speaker, I guess would be a better term for it. So then I thought, yeah, you know, the, the war gaming came around again because we have a, a second building on the, the property here we're in because we're in the countryside. We've got quite a large space.

So we've got our main house and then as a second older property. So it was just a dumping ground. I was like, well, I can just turn that into a shop. Oh, brilliant. Because for the part of the Games Workshop contract, you have to have a physical location now, right. So that there was for a while they were testing out like online only, only stores. But because people are just doing super discounts and stuff and it was like just really

undercutting everything. They, they put a stop to that like, no, you must have an accessible brick and mortar store open for X number of hours every week before we'll even consider. So I was like, great, OK, open the space, get some tables in there. So because it's already on my property, you know, I'm not paying rent to anyone, which was the main things. If it's OK, you know, my worst case scenario was I put like, I just like ¥500,000, like half ¥1,000,000 into like stock and

furnishing. And then, you know, if it all goes tits up, well, I've still got a whole bunch of plastic toys I can either sell off to make most of the money back or hey, I've got like 50 new armies now. You know, it was like very low risk entry point for me, which given what I know a lot of start up game shops go through, I I've definitely had an easier route with my situation.

I've been very lucky there. So it just kind of like fell into place ultimately, I guess is the short answer for how I got into the war games, like I like games. I want a new job. I have an empty building. Let's let's just do it. Let's roll those dice. Yeah, yeah. When I, when I saw the pictures, I thought, wow, that's, that's really brave of David to do this because I, you know, I know you've got a family and

everything. I don't, you know, if I could do that, like at the at the risk of losing everything, you know what I mean? But knowing that now you had to like abandoned building and you sort of just restored it and converted into a game store. I think that's a brilliant opportunity, mate. I think that's fantastic. And then to see people there gaming there and you can see people on the Facebook group that you've got there.

And I was like, wow, there's, there's actually people gaming and playing games and not just Games Workshop. They're playing, you know, bold action or what have you. And, and it seemed quite a number of, you know, people there actively playing, which is really nice to see as well. So it's great that you're sort of building a little community of players and gamers around your store.

Well, you say around my store, I mean, I sort of I opened with the plan of having 8 gaming tables because when I, when I was talking to one of my old Co workers from Firestorm, he's like the events manager there. So I just told him like, you know, getting some advice on what would be a good number of tables to actually have and like, what would be his recommendation for setting up. And yeah, 616 was basically like the magic number of this lets you run like 16 player spaces is

a good size tournament. So that that was my aim. But ultimately, because I am a little bit farther away from any sort of train stations and public transport isn't so great, I wasn't expecting a huge number of players to actually come down. And then I've got people travelling from Chiba and Nagano and stuff. So like I've got a lot of guys driving. Yeah. Again, like 3-4 hours to come down and play these events, which is amazing.

I, I was very surprised by that. But again, I guess it's the whole, if you build it, they will come. Yeah. Nice, mate. That's great. Yeah. I'm really happy that people are making the effort to come out there because like you say, unless you don't tell anybody about it, no one's going to get there, no one's going to come, no one's going to know anything about you.

So hopefully that will grow and hopefully you get some young blood in there, Some, you know, young Japanese boys or girls curious about painting or playing some of these games you've got on your shelf. And you know, you sort of build it that way as well. So you've got some local guys and local kids coming in and playing games and buying product, you know, and growing the the tabletop war gaming

hobby as we know and love. For the last Bolt action event, we actually had a family come down from Nagano to play in that. So I got the yeah, dad, dad and his two sons. So yeah, you know, you're definitely seeing like that kind of like family culture of playing, playing games come up. And it's not been confirmed yet, but I'm hopefully off to one of the universities in Chiba before the end of the year to run some demo games in the university as well. So kind of Oh.

Right. As that's hopefully on the table. So I mean, that'll be obviously for students only. So it's not, I can sort of advertise, but yeah, like just trying to get into places like that is on my my plan just to sort of run more games and choose more people to the hobby. And again, you can like as a language learning thing because obviously the games are mostly in English. So it's a, it's a double win. You get to have fun and do some English.

Yeah, that's good, mate. We should, We should definitely. I don't know if you know about it, but in Tokyo there's like a games show, like as in as in board games, tabletop gaming. There's some kind of exhibit that's held every year and now they've started including miniature games, miniature based tabletop games. I'm really keen to go down

there. And I don't know if it's like a lottery system where you just put in your application and if you're lucky you'll get accepted and be able to come down and reserve a table. But I would love to run Test of Honour as a game there for people to try out. It's it's, it's so much fun. It's very thematic, very easy to pick up and play and you're just playing and enjoying and killing other samurai in no time. So yeah, we'll have to.

We'll have to look at that and see if we can make sort of like a joint stall, you know, so warm storm games on one side, cram the command games on the other that. 'D be pretty cool actually. I'm being probably next year now realistically, but a friend of mine, Annie, who is the owner of Bad Squido Games. Yeah.

Annie Norman. Yeah. Yeah. So yeah, she used to work out of the back of Firestorm when I was working there, but obviously now she's she's off on her own and she's doing very, very well for herself, which is. Yeah, she is. But she she stocks a really nice range of Samurai models. She does. I'm I'm hoping I've already been in contact with her. I've been a bit lazy and just bouncing out obviously the financials.

But yeah, I want to get the the Samurai from her in stock probably next year now, so that that definitely work out. Yeah, I'll definitely pick up a few of those because I really like Annie's models. I think she did it, she did a range of like female shield maidens as well. And I know about this the the samurai range that she has. So yeah, that'd be really nice to see that sort of diversity in in different kinds of model ranges as well in your shop.

So it's not just Games Workshop, you have alternative miniatures. Yeah, from different companies and the sort of smaller companies that need a bit of a yeah, just need some more, you know, some more eyes on their on their product.

And yeah, that sounds great. Yeah, I mean, I mean, when I first started doing the, the Bolt action, you know, I, I read do Warlord games and their international trade Rep there was pretty excited to hear someone in Japan's like, hey, I want to fucking stuff like yes, please. How do we, how do we make this happen? Well, no, it's, it's definitely, I mean, I'm, I'm always, I've always been a fan of the Games Workshop product.

Like I, I do think they make high quality product, but at the same time, you know, there, there is so much stuff that's worth trying and playing. I mean like the one I'm adding to the website now is Moonstone. Yep. So again, getting that in stock again, actually someone I used to work with at Games Workshop, Mick Green is the the manager for that. So yeah, it's, it's, it's kind of funny how a lot of people I know are just running these game

things now. But yeah, I mean, Moonstone, you know, it's an award-winning game. It genuinely looks fantastic. And a few people already asked about it. So I'm, I'm excited to get that in store just out of stocking Infinity as well.

So with N5 coming out. So yeah, no, I definitely want to get as much as I can in because even if it's like just a small holding of core products, someone will want to try it, you know, and you just, you never know who's going to find like their next favorite game that they really connect with just because you had something for them to try. So I I think variety is important for sure.

Yes, I think so too. I love independent game stores for that reason, because there's always something there that maybe you've never seen before or you've seen advertised or seen on a video. And then you get to see the actual physical product in front of you and hold it and all that kind of thing and, and make your decision there and there. But yeah, it's good, man. I'm really glad that it's growing and that it's becoming a success for you. And long may that continue into the future.

And I hope to honestly hope to get down there to meet you one day and to to see it for myself. So I'll have to find out exactly how far away it is from Ibaraki, Japan. I would imagine about 3 or 4 hours. Probably. Yeah, we were down that way many, many years ago. My son was really young to go to the Fuji Highland Park to go and see Thomas. Thomas. Landlord it is. Yeah. So yeah, just the adjoining

prefecture there. Yeah, although again, even that's not super close to where I. Am OK. Like such a long, like just prefecture, but then even like what they class as Fuji and again the Fuji name gets thrown around a lot so that the Fuji Q Highland is actually nowhere near the city. It's nowhere near Fuji. Yeah, exactly. Nowhere near the the, Yeah. But you can see obviously see Mount Fuji quite clearly from that. As you say, it's so big, it's so enormous that you can't miss it.

So it's really nice to see just for the enormity in the, the, the spectacular nature of, of Mount Fuji. It's really impressive. So yeah, mate, I look forward to coming down there at some point in the future and saying hello and seeing, seeing the store physically. But until then, we'll keep in contact and keep in touch. And I'll be looking out on your web store for things I can pick up here and there. Certainly the paints, the Valea paints and the, the Army Painter paints.

I'm, I'm curious about now. So I might pick up a few pots and see how they go and, and go from there mate. So look, David, thank you very much again for coming on the Crown of Command. And like I said, we'll keep in touch and hopefully have you back on maybe for an event or something that you're running or sort of a catch up in the future that. 'D be awesome. Well, thank you for having me. It's been been nice actually

talking. Yes, it's it's been good to talk to you mate, even though we've sort of met online, but it's great to to put a face to the name and a voice as well. And and we'll we'll catch up again soon, mate. OK, so until then, take it easy. Yeah, you too.

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