Artifex Fabricatum
Ignisaurus Agadrax The Forgefire | 32mm Sci-Fi
Ignisaurus Agadrax The Forgefire | 32mm Sci-Fi
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Ignisaurus Agadrax The Forgefire is a single character miniature cast in high-quality resin, standing 36mm from feet to eyes and arriving ready to assemble and paint straight out of the box. Supports have already been removed and the surface cleaned, so you can focus entirely on bringing this imposing warrior to life on your tabletop.
This armoured colossus carries a skull-topped thunder maul in one gauntleted fist and levels a compact twin-barrelled pistol with the other, striking a commanding stride that radiates battlefield authority. Every surface of the sculpt rewards close attention: layered pauldrons bear embossed heraldic devices, chains drape across the waist plate, and a flowing tattered cape sweeps behind the figure with naturalistic weight. A crested helmet topped with a dramatic plume completes the silhouette, marking this warrior as a leader of rare standing among the war-forged legions of the far future. The base features broken rubble scatter, adding narrative depth to the display footprint.
Ignisaurus Agadrax The Forgefire is supplied in three parts for clean casting and easy assembly. The kit is designed for adult hobbyists who want a centrepiece character with genuine presence on the gaming table or in a display collection. Whether you field this figure as a warlord, champion, or named hero in your preferred ruleset, the sculpt reads clearly at arm's length while rewarding close inspection with fine surface detail throughout.
Scale: 36mm from feet to eyes. Compatible with 32mm scale wargaming systems.
Painting Guide: Ignisaurus Agadrax The ForgefireThe sculpt suits a grimdark colour palette with stark contrasts and heavy weathering, but responds equally well to a cleaner ceremonial finish. Use the guide below as a starting framework and adapt it to your own scheme.
1. Prime
- Apply a thin, even coat of grey or black primer from approximately 25cm away to preserve surface detail across the armour plates and weapon shafts.
- A zenithal highlight using white over grey primer will pre-shade the model and accelerate subsequent painting steps.
2. Armour Base
- Basecoat the armour in a deep iron or dark steel tone such as Leadbelcher or Iron Hands Steel for a utilitarian war-machine look.
- Alternatively, lay down a rich coal black as a foundation for a more ceremonial elite colour scheme, then drybrush edges with a bright silver to define the plate lines.
3. Trim and Details
- Pick out rivets, trim, and heraldic embossed devices in a warm brass or aged gold to contrast against the darker armour field.
- Paint the chains in a mid-steel tone, then wash with a brown or sepia shade to suggest aged, battle-worn links.
4. Weapons
- Drybrush the maul head with bright silver, concentrating paint on raised edges and the skull ornament to suggest impact wear.
- Paint the pistol body in a contrasting dark colour such as gunmetal or deep navy, then pick out the barrel ports and mechanical recesses in bright steel.
5. Weathering
- Apply a dark oil wash or thinned contrast paint into recesses across the whole model to unify shading and push depth into panel lines.
- Stipple or sponge chipping medium or dark brown paint onto armour edges and high-traffic surfaces such as knee guards and boot plates for battle damage.
- Add fine rust streaks below rivets using a thin orange-brown mix drawn downward with a fine brush or torn sponge.
6. Bases
- Drybrush the rubble base in progressively lighter grey tones to bring out the stone texture, then seal with a matte varnish to protect the finished model.
- Add a spot of contrast colour such as a small patch of moss or a discarded enemy item to give the base a narrative focal point that complements the figure above.
This is an adult hobbyist collectible, not a toy. Not suitable for children under 14 years due to small, detailed parts.
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