D&D Paladin and Gobslob the Bugbear

Every year the Curis Christmas list (or “Curistmas list”) features swathes of miniatures suggestions. Family assume I’m no longer a teenage nerd (haha!  half true!) and that I can’t possibly still want tiny toy soldiers.  However, me and a group of miniature-loving friends arranged a Secret Santa so there was a teenage nerd present under the tree on 25th December.

Dungeons & Dragons dnd Paladin versus Bugbear Citadel Preslotta Warhammer

ADD6 Paladin and Gobslob the Bugbear from Citadel Miniatures.

The Dungeons & Dragons Paladin was gifted (thank you anonymous Santa) on the condition it was painted before the day the festive surfeit of Baileys was finished.  I painted him alongside the Bugbear as that’s the first of the monsters needed to run the Lost Mine of Phandelver scenario from the 5E D&D starter set.

Dungeons & Dragons dnd Citadel Miniatures Warhammer Paladin

This Paladin is such a thin miniature, he’s almost a Paper Mario character.

Everything on the Paladin is a sculpted texture.  All the armour panels are festooned in splodgy texture.  The cloak is splodgy fur texture on one side and splodgy abstract tree texture on the other.   It makes his overall form difficult to read as it’s a mound of details akin to a Michael Bay Transformer design.  On the plus side it does make him gloriously quick to paint, and I could spend a load of time on the only smooth surface – the plastic shield.  I painted a rampant griffon design, hinting he’s a distant relation of Lord Weuere in my Norman army.

Dungeons & Dragons dnd Gobslob the Bugbear Citadel Miniatures Preslotta Warhammer

Drool-worthy painting?

“Gobslob” is the Bugbear from Citadel Miniatures’ 1983 Dungeon Monster starter set.  With a name like that he had to have a big bit of drool hanging out of his mouth.  It’s made by melting blister pack into transparent stringy goo with a soldering iron, then dribbling contact adhesive down it.  Though I assumed the glue would remain clear when dry, it went a cloudy green colour.  I’ve decided to run with this and say Gobslob has an excessively bacterial mouth.

Dungeons & Dragons dnd Citadel Miniatures Warhammer Paladin

Sir Griffiths du Filigrann lost in a mine, somewhere in Phandalin.

Congratulations to Asslessman and Rochie for getting their Secret Santa miniatures painted and blogged too.  Now on to paint more of the monsters needed to run Lost Mine of Phandelver.

Curis

Curis has painted for Games Workshop, Forge World, Warlord Games, Mantic Games, Avatars of War, Wargames Foundry, Studio McVey and many others. He's won at Golden Demon and Salute. He publishes monthly painting tutorials on Patreon.

9 thoughts on “D&D Paladin and Gobslob the Bugbear

    • January 29, 2018 at 2:22 pm
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      Thanks Riot!

      Reply
  • January 29, 2018 at 2:52 pm
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    Gorgeous work on the pair Curis.

    Gobslobs eyes are particularly nice. I would definitely have copped out with those, made them cloudy orbs or something.

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    • January 29, 2018 at 3:12 pm
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      I did initially paint them in a solid bloody red, but they looked too much like goggle lenses – especially as they’re sculpted over the top of the face rather than as part of it (the joys of pre-slotta).

      Reply
  • January 29, 2018 at 4:25 pm
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    These turned out lovely. The edging on the paladin’s defines his shape nicely. He has a brilliantly dashing face. I imagine he shakes out a perfectly coiffured blonde mane when he removes his helmet. Gobslob is marvelously horrible thing, the eyes and the slobber really make him, though his skin and jewels on the shield are great as well. LOVELY STUFF.

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    • February 7, 2018 at 2:58 pm
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      Thanks, the face on the Paladin was one of those amazing ones where it paints itself, which came as a surprise. It’s a wonderfully character old piece of lead.

      Reply
  • January 29, 2018 at 9:44 pm
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    I love the illusion of depth that the cloak seems to have due to the painting. I know he is like a playing card though.

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    • February 7, 2018 at 2:59 pm
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      Nicely put! Yeah, the cloak transitions from black to white. I think the figure is a second-cousin to historical flat miniatures.

      Reply
  • March 8, 2018 at 9:18 pm
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    A great pair, and that Bugbear-Gollum really does have some trippy eyes!

    Reply

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