Saturday, 6 September 2025

Colours 2025

The harvest is being collected, the trees are beginning to turn and the nights are drawing in, so it must mean it's Autumn and time for the Colours wargames show at Newbury racecourse. A long term favourite show of mine, being relatively local and at that time of year when my mind turns from gardening more towards gaming. So after an easy and leisurely drive, I arrived just before 10.00am and there was already a very long queue to pay and get in. After a short wait it all started moving very quickly and not long after I was in the venue.

So first off photos from the show, which frankly is what most people want to see! Apologies for many of the shots, as the lighting was not ideal and the camera struggled, plus it was also hard at times to get a good view of the tables. Not all the games on show were as advertised in the brochure, but I have tried to be as accurate as I can.

Boscombe Down Gamers and the Battle of St Venant, France, 1940, using Chain of Command. A scenario based upon one from the TFL Pint Sized Campaign booklets, tweaked for the show.

I've been pondering making a cemetery for my games and this certainly provides plenty of inspiration.

Lots of little details dotted across the board.

A nice WWI memorial on show.

Most of the houses had an advert on the end wall, which really added to the look of the game.

Never Mind the Ruckus and a War of the Roses skirmish game.


Not sure who put this on, nor the period, but it looked like Normans versus...?


An ECW skirmish game I believe, the same rules as seen as the recent IPMS show.

Standing Ready Games and their 'Packing Heat' rules. It looks like 1930's America.

Anschluss Games and their 'Son of Stalin...And Golden Roubles' game. They re-used most of the board from their previous Kelly's Hero's inspired game.

Loved the church and the damaged buildings.

Newbury & Reading Wargames and 'Chariot Geddon' game I think. Certainly I've never heard of the rules in use. The unit labels were rather distracting.

Deeprose Games and their Battle of Cannae game using Hail Caesar! Epic rules and figures.

It certainly gave the lovely impression of a massed Ancients battle.


Always nice to see a good fort on the table.

Simon Miller and another demo of his 'Lust for Glory' rules for the WSS, based upon his very successful grid and card/chit based rules system.



Jackmanimation Gaming Club and the Battle for Hue.

Loads of lovely terrain on show.


An essential really to have for this period!

Wargames Association of Reading and the Battle of Maldon 991AD.

Certainly a massed shieldwall feel to the action at this point.

Flanks, who needs to attack flanks?

Liverpool Wargames and the Franco-Prussian War, using Eagles of Empire rules.


Gripping Beast and WWI massed battle.

I think this was at Partizan earlier this year.

Too Fat Lardies, General d'Armee 2 and Waterloo. A very popular game and hard to get a look in, even to take a photo or two.




Ecorcheurs! and Crossing the Somme, 1346.



Swindon & District Wargames, Battle for Berlin 1945.



Lots of detail dotted all across the board.


Southbourne, The Battle of Consthum, 17 December 1944 and Chain of Command.

James Morris and Chums, the Battle of the Five Armies, using Midgard Heroic Battles rules. Another very popular game and a massive one too.

A neat idea to use the drawing from the Hobbit for the backdrop.

The Leggets and the Battle of Henrysburg. Looks like the French and Indian Wars.




A lovely looking game but the unit cards were too distracting for me.

Rapid fire Reloaded and Purple Heart Lane Breakout.

Simply done but very effective and exactly the sort of game you could put on at home.


A demo game from Peter Pig for their latest version of the popular AK47 rules.



Another AK47 game, but inspired by the film 'The Wild Geese'.



Baccus Wargames and their Battle for Lens, 1648. A nice idea to use the inside of a wall paper pasting table for the board, by the look of it. Sadly no one seemed interested in this game.


As I was leaving the show, I heard some planes flying overhead, which turned out to be a sort of Battle of Britain type flight.


Luckily they flew over again, allowing me to see that there appeared to 3 Spitfires, a Mosquito and a B-17.

As I drove away the Spitfires had peeled off and were flying over the racecourse on another lap to wherever they were doing their flypast.


The Haul
I collected a pre-order from Pendraken for some WWII British for use in Sicily and Burma, as well as some late WWII and 1950's Soviet AFVs for a future project, but more on that in another post. On the way down I realised I needed some more fences for my BUA's, so picked up a pack of 6mm and 10mm ones from Pendraken. 

Thoughts On The Show
I had a good wander around, bumped into a few fellow gamers I knew, but not as many as previous years. In the end I spent 2 hours there, which was more than enough for me these days. So a few ponderings on the day out in no particular order:
  • Even though the show was busy, it just somehow seemed to lack any atmosphere this year. Hard to explain really but it just felt a bit flat to me. Still enjoyable but lacked a certain something, a spark or such like. 
  • Chatting with Leon on the Pendraken stand, he felt that is was less busy than last year and you could certainly move around the ground floor hall, where most of the traders are located, much more easily than in previous years. I hope things picked up across the board for all the traders.
  • As always the B'n'B was packed and I didn't even attempt to have a look, as it was nigh on impossible and frankly I doubt there would be anything of interest there for me.
  • The organisers used a different entrance this year, which caused a bit of a log jam to say the least, leaving many traders left out in the cold for quite some time. Why they did this, who can say, but it didn't work!
  • Some traders had taken others slots, which caused some last minute panic, rearranging and most likely some Anglo-Saxon expletives. Not good, not good at all.
  • There were more Fantasy and Sci-Fi games and traders this year, up markedly from previous shows. 
  • 3D printing was certainly on show in force this year, both terrain and figures wise. there seemed to be quite a few 'one man bands' on show, given the ease with which you can print stuff on demand these days. In a way it reminds me of the surge in MDF buildings from say 10 years ago. 
  • There were fewer book sellers than in previous years, with just the two main ones I see at the show each year. Some of the prices being charged were yet again eye wateringly high! A real shame as normally I like to come away with a book or two.
  • On the top floor of the show, the space is so large and airy, that the smaller figure games just get lost compared to the 28mm ones. Also a bit more terrain or a good games mat would certainly help. Certainly on the middle floor the game space felt more confined, so the games looked better than upstairs. The PP and Rapid Fire games being a case in point. 
  • It was nice to see the PP and Rapid Fire games at a level that one could easily achieve at home or at the club. Whilst the 28mm big boys upstairs will grab the headlines and the magazine coverage, yet another Waterloo game or one without flanks and just headlong massed frontal assault leaves me cold I'm afraid. But hey, they were popular so what do I know!
  • Skirmish level games were very much to the fore, which is not a surprise when you look at the rules out there these days. This is the first time that I can remember when there has been so many of them though.
  • As always I came away from the show with plenty of ideas for my games, whether that be forces, terrain or campaigns, which is of course a good thing!

What Next?
Well next Friday I'm off to Chris Gregg's for the start of his 3 day game based around the Battle of Eckmuhl in 1809. So I need to get my Napoleonic head on in advance of this and read up on my orders, forces etc. After that, who knows?

Thanks for reading and as always comments greatly appreciated!

TTFN.


38 comments:

  1. Agh! Missed it again Steve. Thanks for your coverage and comments. Some good looking games. And Lens looked like it deserved more attention.
    Chris/Nundanket

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    1. I nearly missed it too Chris, thinking it might be next weekend. Luckily I checked a few weeks ago! Glad you enjoyed it and the Lens game should have got more attention, but it was tucked away and the Baccus guys were naturally focussing on selling product.

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  2. Interesting report, many thanks. Pity the atmosphere felt a bit flat! Also interesting about the books, both in terms of number and price. But the games looked nice, some looked very 'doable'. Thinking about the Baccus' Lens game, it does look more like a print of a battle then anything else there. But I suppose the eye is drawn to the terrain in other set-ups, and perhaps also, 'our' aesthetics, if there were some kind of 'hobby average' - are more genuinely described as based around the toy soldier, and perhaps the image mediated by films.

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    1. I was trying to explain the feel of the show to my wife and it felt more like a wake than a show at times, or maybe that was just me. The book issue has been going on for a long time, but more marked this year. Gone are the days of some decent book sellers, ditto traders selling rulebooks etc, which have largely disappeared it would seem. A fair point that our eyes are drawn to the big games, with big figures and terrain, which just work in this sort of setting. At home the Lens game would look stunning.

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    2. I'm slightly reminded of an old Mike Siggins' column about a Partizan show where he was suddenly hit by a wave of negativity about the whole thing: the show, his hobby, everything just seemed pointless. I have never quite experienced that level of ennui (and TBF the guy quickly recovered), but I have on a couple of occasions felt a bit of it in terms of 'why am I here at this show? what thing am I trying to achieve or experience here? could I have had a better time with these four hours if I had stayed at home and put on a game for 2 hours, painted for an hour and done some online shopping for an hour?'. I think one of the advantages of doing these photo reports is it forces me, at least, to look a bit harder at what I am seeing.

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    3. I did wonder about the show, maybe 3 years ago, when the games were pretty poor to be honest, and what I could have been doing that would have been a better use of my time. I think if I was a 28mm gamer, then there would be more to tempt me, which would make it easier to justify attending, as there's just so much stuff for you. Of course the petrol money could have been used for figures etc, but normally there a few things that really click and make it all worth the effort in attending.

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  3. Oh! What a show! Thank you for a great photo-relation!

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    1. You're wlecome Michal and we are lucky to have many good shows in the UK and not too far away either.

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  4. Thank you, Steve. Interesting and enjoyable and good not to have to make the effort to get there myself - although I had actually forgotten it was on. ! I appreciate the hard work involved in getting round and taking so many pictures forour benefit. Not an easy task! And hope the game at Chris Gregg's goes well. Hopefully you'll be doing a report on that one... :-)

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    1. You're welcome David:). As mentioned above I nearly got the dates wrong! This year it was easier to move around, bar the 3 big and popular games, which were surrounded by gamers and lookers on. I'll be doing a report on Day One, which is the only day I can make. We'll have to wait for Chriss to do his usual excellent 3 parter on all of the days. Let's just hope we Austrians can make a fist of it on Day One!

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  5. Nice show recap, Steve! I noticed that more than one of the games on display here I saw in a recap from an earlier show. Does a particular demo tend to make the show circuit?

    I always look forward to your report out from Chris’ gaming extravaganzas.

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    1. Thanks Jon! Aside from the traders taking their demo boards around the shows, you do tend to see the same games over the year, sometimes two. Not surprising in some ways given the time, effort and cost that goes into some of them. Whilst nice to look at, I much prefer the Rapid Fire type game, as that's what I can put on at home.

      I'll try and get plenty of good photos of Day One, to help set the scene for the rest of the action. Looking forward to it and praying for good Austrian dice rolls;)!

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  6. Another lovely montage of show pix Steve, most of the games look great...loved the ruined buildings, given my current obsession with these!

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    1. I though you might like the Berlin game Keith, given your current games set in Stalingrad:). Plenty of the games did look lovely, but at times hard to get a good view or the lighting not showing them off in their best light.

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  7. Thanks Steve, an enjoyable browse through your post. I looked at the cemetary also with eyes looking for modelling tips, it just seems that kind of eye catching feature. Agree that including some games that you can re-create at home, such as the Rapid Fire table are an important part of what a show should do. I was really surprised that there was a feeling of lower numbers. with Partizan doing so well, I would have put Colours up in that Premier League of shows. Also very surprised at the low interest shown in the Baccus 6mm game, that just seems like a table full of ideas and so different from everything else.

    Enjoy your wargame fest with Chris.

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    1. Glad you enjoyed it Norm:). The cemetary was indeed lovely, but not sure I could do anything like that in 6mm, my preferred size for buildings with my 10mm figures. Having a mix of the 'game at home' look at the 'show stoppers' is important and I think they got a good balalnce this year. People were still arriving when I left and attendance was good, but it wasn't as packed as last year. When I went upstairs at the start, it was virtually deserted, which was a first, apart from the queue to drop stuff off at the B'nB'. I think the Baccus game suffered from its position and that they didn't have anyone actually playing the game, which I think you need to do.

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  8. An enjoyable review and nice to pore over the pictures of some lovely games. Must admit I do like the Baccus idea of using a pasting table, very clever, one I may steal! The Lardies game looked pretty spectacular too, very nice.

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    1. The Lardies St Venant game was lovely and they had a really good info board on the game too and how they went about creating the scenario etc. The pasting table is a neat idea and I've seen DBA gamers do something similar, with everything being held within the two boards when folded up, so dice, figures and terrain.

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  9. Great report, Steve…thanks for the excellent pics!! The Baccus game probably suffered, like the Peter Pig ones, from less ‘through traffic’ , just from being off the main hall. Good looking games in both cases, though. The BnB was, indeed an awful scrum, and I tried a couple of times, but finding very few ‘deals’ and a large number of other items offered as massed 28mm for £250-£400 isn’t quite my idea of what the overseas guys might call a flea market.
    Overall a good show, but agreed on the ‘certain something’ about the atmosphere. Hard to pin down…
    Still, less than an hour away, and a good one, nonetheless…👍🏼

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    1. Glad I'm not the only one noticing the 'atmosphere' at the show this year. The games certianly suffered being on the middle floor and in the alcove, which didn't get any natural flow to them at all. Also they were a bit cramped for space, which didn't help, as you didn't naturally want to wander and explore the tables, compared to most of the top floor. I think I've been going for 15 years or so now and only missed the Covid one and maybe another due to being on holiday. A very good show as you say, but just a bit off this year for some reason...

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  10. Enjoyed your show report, Steve. Lovely photos. I really liked the look of the Lens game. I do like looking at games that I feel that I have half a chance of recreating at home.

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    1. You're welcome Ricahrd:). Whilst the big 28mm show tables with hundreds of very well painted figures (don't think about the cost) look great and draw the punters in, it's the tables that you can recreate at home that always inspire me the most. Yes, a 12' x 6' can look great, but when your gaming space might only be 6' x 4' if you're lucky, then you just can't related to it all IMHO.

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  11. Thanks for all those pics Steve 👏📸 As you and others have said, there seem to have been plenty of well presented games - lovely figures and terrain.
    I agree wholeheartedly with your comment about the average home gamer.
    A 12’ x 6’ battlefield is a dream most of us will never achieve at home (common sense suggests it is difficult to play on any table where you can barely reach the centre of the battlefield). I have a small wargame table, so by necessity I concentrate on the smaller figure scales to maximise the available area. On my table any 28mm games are just skirmishes, whereas my 2mm and 6mm little fellas have comparatively much more room to manoeuvre.
    Cheers,
    Geoff

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    1. Glad you enjoyed it Geoff:). I think even if I had the space, I wouldn't want or feel the need to have a table bigger than 6'x4', as this is more than ample when playing with 10mm figures. Also there is only so much my old brain can cope with playing solo, so a reinforced Battalion for WWII, or 3-4 Brigades for the black powder period. Hence enjoying the the tables that we can all achieve at home more than the showstoppers.

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  12. Hi Steve, missed you!
    I wandered around for three hours - 1030-1330 - and spoke to some old friends and a few new people which was good, but I obviously didn't spot you - sorry!
    This was the first time I've been in a while and I know what you mean about atmosphere, I was surprised how down beat it felt. It could well have been me of course – a been there, seen it, done it type of thing perhaps. It's difficult to get the thrill of the new you had, good grief, fifty three years ago!
    I liked Ecorcheurs and The Battle of Lens and AK47 but the 28mm ubergames tend not to inspire so much as make me wonder how I would justify the expenditure, the time and storage!
    I think the internet has removed a major reason for attending big shows for me - I can browse in comfort at home and buy as I want rather than having the urgency of must buy now or it will be weeks of reading magazines, getting catalogues and sending cheques.
    That said I was surprised that I made no purchases at all – except for a black coffee and a pasty for £9-15.
    I do have purchases planned from my wanderings but at the time I just did not feel the inclination to start ordering there and then. Odd.
    All in all, I’m glad I went but it lacked the zing I used to feel. Maybe I’ve grown up! Say it ain’t so!

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    1. Ah, maybe at Lincombe Barn at the end of the year though?! Even though I go every year, more or less, I still get a kick from visiting the show. However this year felt more like a gentle nudge due to said atmosphere. The big games you do wonder how they can afford it or whether it goes down as a business expense? As you say you don't really need to attend a show these days, certainly not in terms of buying stuff, but you do get to spot the odd item or detail that you would miss online. Oh, we are getting older, but definitely not growing up;)!

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  13. Nice photos,like Keith, I liked the ruins ,although with the chimneys and walls I thought the first one might be difficult to put any figures in ? Still, it looked good! I've only been to Colours once and if I have to choose one ( which I kind of do!) it's going to be Partizan, but thanks for the review!
    Best Iain

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    1. Some of the games on show do have 'issues' in terms of actually being able to use the terrain in the game. Quite often, these showcase games actually seem to have little play going on, as the organisers are chatting with the punters. Partizan is certainly THE show in the UK, but it's quite a trek for me compared to Colours, which is an easy drive in comparison. These days I'm trying to do both shows, but how long I can do Partizan as a day trip remains to be seen:(!

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  14. very nice job! I do like a good convention report post. Some great looking games going on there. 😁

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    1. Glad you enjoyed it Stew:). Very small scale compared to the US conventions scene, but still it works for us this side of the Pond!

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  15. I wandered round for a few hours. I think I was feeling ‘off’ before lunch so I felt it was a bit flat. However I picked up a few things in the early afternoon, chatted to a few people/traders etc. which was a bit better.

    On balance it was worth going but I did not find it as inspiring as I have done in previous years.

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    1. Glad to hear your experience improved after lunch Edward and always nice to buy a few things too:). Certainly less inspiring than previous years but I was glad I went.

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  16. Thanks for your report. So far it’s the only one I’ve seen (other than a YouTube video which shows the author’s keyboard). I must admit I found this surprising but given your comments and my own observations at a number of shows around the UK, I probably shouldn’t be.

    I’ve seen similar trends- lower trader attendance, much more fantasy, fewer booksellers. I do think that a number of shows will disappear or shrink significantly. It’s a pity but we’ve been through a golden period where we had big shows and the internet.

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    1. Some others have commented about the lack of post-show coverage on Blogs or Youtube etc. Am I the only light in the darkness;)? Without the traders, punters won't attend, but with punters, the traders won't attend either. Post Covid a few of the bigger names have stopped attending shows for various reasons, as once you've got a well known name, you can just really on online purchases, alongside the time and cost involved. Given the number of shows we have, sometimes they have to pick and choose. IIRC Pendraken are away 3 weeks out of 4 at one point in the year, which takes some commitment for sure.

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  17. I was there for a couple of hours in the morning. I intentionally arrive at 10.30am to avoid the queue. It just means you park at the far end of the large car park. Didn't buy a single model soldier but as someone pointed out, that's the web is for. Also not a single book. I think a Caliver was missing and they normally have something to tempt me. I did buy some terrain, resin animals, paints and brushes. I wanted some trees from Debris of War but someone had cleaned them out of their whole stock. As always the best bit is just nattering to people you bump into.

    I actually thought the numbers were comparable as in previous years. Also good to see so many women and younger people. I actually love the larger games ie the waterloo one, Simon Millers and that WWI trench game. Some of the participants of the Waterloo game were v chatty. Agree with the comment about the French/Indian game ie too much non wargaming clutter on the table and I didn't like the large movement boards sitting on the terrain.

    Missed the flight pass!

    Guy

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    1. I arrived a bit later than normal, after a much more sociable set off time that previously. Getting there at 10.30am sounds a good idea and the walk is not far at all. Buying stuff is nice (most of mine were pre-orders) but chatting with fellow gamers is always the best bit. Certainly a braoder mix of gamers this year, maybe induced in some part by more SciFi and Fantasy games and retailers? The fly pass was a nice surprise and if you search Colours 2025 on Youtube, there is a show report and the chap has managed to catch them flying over the racecourse, which is pretty cool.

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  18. Thank you for sharing your visit Steve.

    Willz.

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