Help support TMP


First Look: Battlefront's Munich House


Back to PROFILES


Areas of Interest

World War Two on the Land
Toy Gaming

Featured Hobby News Article


Featured Link


Top-Rated Ruleset

FUBAR


Rating: gold star gold star gold star gold star gold star gold star gold star gold star 


Featured Showcase Article

Refurbished Skulks

unknown member updates the bases on some cheap pre-paints.


Featured Profile Article

First Look: Battlefront's 1:100 Wespe Artillery Battery

unknown member looks at another D-Day: German set for Flames of War.


Featured Movie Review


Revision Log
27 April 2020page first published

2,222 hits since 27 Apr 2020
©1994-2024 Bill Armintrout
Comments or corrections?

The Membership System is temporarily offline for maintenance. It should be restored shortly.


TMP logo

Membership

Please sign in to your membership account, or, if you are not yet a member, please sign up for your free membership account.

unknown member writes:

Today, let's look at another pre-painted model in the European Houses series in the Battlefield in a Box range: Munich House. The box says this is 15mm scale.

Munich House

The box is thin cardboard over a thick cardboard insert, with the contents wrapped in bubblewrap.

Munich House

The model consists of first floor, second floor, and roof, made from what seems a ceramic-type material. Each story holds two medium-size Flames of War bases.

Munich House

This house is quite similar to the Antwerp House we previously profiled, the differences being the windows here have no shutters, and the finish is plain rather than stonework. The roof pieces are identical (and interchangeable), just painted green here and red on the Antwerp model.

Munich House

Another difference is that on this model, there is a black lip visible where first and second story meet. There's less gap on the Antwerp House.

Munich House

The quality control on the paintwork is good, with the only flaws being some white dabs on the frame of the front door, and a white spot on the green roof.

Again, a useful, robust model for your WWII games. This model would also be easy to repaint, adding more variety to your tabletop.