You probably all know that miniature companies like Wargames Atlantic make great looking generic sci-fi plastic kits, as stand-ins or analogues for Warhammer 40K units or Star Wars units, avoiding copyrights in a way that GW might find cheeky or irksome, or for use as generic sci-fi troopers in miniature-agnostic wargames like say OnePageRules "Dark Future" or Osprey Games "Stargrave". They are very cheap compared to GW, and are very generous with numbers of miniatures in the box. They are banned in official 40K competition, but obviously not at home.
Size comparison of some 28mm scale miniature ranges, or board game pieces:
This isn't really the right place for commercial stuff, as we are here for Warhammer 40,000 lore, and we all know the score when it comes to GW's pricing... but anyway check out a price comparison I again noticed today. I just thought this was interesting to see. Although not every unit is this bad, i.e. you can pick up certain Citadel infantry on a sprue for £15 on ebay, I've paid £35 for five Citadel miniatures new before. A comparison of similar human infantry:
- - Warhammer 40,000 unit of Death Korps veterans, included in the Kill Team starter box; £40 for 10.
- - Miniature-agnostic type generic "definitely not Guardmen, not Stormtroopers" Eisenkern, £25 for 20.
- - Miniature-agnostic type generic "definitely not Guardmen, not Stormtroopers" Jagers; £25 for 24.
Almost half the price and 2.5 times the miniatures. Of course, there are gaps in the plastic ranges of these smaller companies, like specific units, or perhaps having no tanks, but if you wanted say 20 Catachan jungle fighters as infantry, it's arguably a better option than GW right now, since the miniatures for specific regiments are ancient, and there are also thousands of unknown regiments.
Some of the "Marauder" faction's sculpts for "Deadzone", by Mantic Games, are a bit more expensive, but look like like old Orks, complete with that ape-like grin, and clothes that humourously copy human military herarldry from history or WW2 - keeping that old edition design aesthetic alive - honestly more beautiful than some Citadel miniatures:
You get other companies doing it too:
If I wasn't into 40K lore/heraldry, enough that I want official sculpts, seen in codeces, or just for their beauty, plus wasn't a frugal adult with low outgoings, I would be much more inclined toward just playing 40K with these units, or using them with a generic sci-fi rules set, making my own story. It would work for Guardsmen regiments in particular, and Orks to an extent, but perhaps not say Necrons or Eldar ranges. Whatever we reason in our heads, in terms of science fiction world-building, will probably feel much more naturalistic than a lot of what passes for science fiction novels these days. No over-complicated humanistic focus on character, just projection of military power and the pure logistics of war. I don't want to see GW out of business or anything, but their recent range in particular require a sanguine acceptance of monetary loss.
At worst, you can pay £120 just for 15 miniatures, if you go for a particularily expensive army, like a low-model count elite one, along the lines of Votann or Custodes. This is what I mean when I say I would accept lower detail, more limited poses, more obvious mould lines, for cheaper infantry. Even board game quality miniatures, such as stuff like "Star Wars: Imperial Assault", are in honesty, good enough for wargaming:
I think GW ride on the lore, the depth, the culture of Warhammer hobbyists, and would be in trouble without the setting being as good as it is. Like we have said, newer wargames might lean toward woke or progressive themes these days, just by virtue of DEI targets, globalist investors, etc, but a wargame that is miniature agnostic might be pleasingly free of propaganda in the fluff.