Palouse Wargaming Journal
Marching Through History in Miniature
Friday, August 22, 2025
Swiss Handgunners
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Small Figures and Large Collections?
The recent GWS post examining four wargaming traits and their relationships (see Tinker, Tailor...) prompted some discussion on social media. While I am not present on Bluesky, I was asked a follow-up question based upon a discussion on that platform.
From my secondhand understanding, conversations centered around the hypothesis that gamers using smaller figures tend to have larger collection sizes. I reckon the insinuation was that the analysis was being distorted by a missing Figure Scale variable. The question posed to me was, it this true that there is a negative correlation between figure size and collection size? That is, as the size of the figure decreases, collection size tends to increase. Can the survey actually test this hypothesis?
The short answer is No, not directly.
While Figure Size (Scale) is included as a variable in the survey, the variable is a ranked choice field where a respondent can rank up to the Top 3 choices. If many of the respondents are like me, they will have figures in more than one scale. Perhaps even many scales. I certainly do!Figure 1 |
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- Fantasy/Sci-Fi (blue) grouping tends to favor collection sizes of 0-100 figures and prefers 28-32mm "Heroic" figures more than the other groupings.
- Historical (yellow) grouping tends to prefer figure sizes of 20mm and under and collection sizes greater than 5,000 figures. That is, compared to Fantasy/Sci-Fi and Mixed.
- Mixed (green) grouping tends to hold collections from 501 to 5,000 figures and prefers 25-28mm figures when compared against the other two clusters.
Saturday, August 16, 2025
A Week of Gaming
On the gaming front, this week was a busy one. Four games passed into the Gaming Log, two of which I hosted. Until I have time to chronicle the two I hosted, following is a brief summary of the gaming action seen this week.
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Dog Days of Summer
Yes, the Dog Days of Summer are upon us here in the Pacific Northwest and temperatures have been hot. Even the dog seeks refuge from the heat.
The latest addition to the household, Milo, tends to hang out with me when I am downstairs in the game room whether painting, reading, or studying the game laid out on the table. Now, I tend to think he likes the company but it could simply be that he enjoys the coolness of basement.
Anyway, I stood up from the painting desk one afternoon and looked all over for the dog. He had been on the couch earlier. Well, he was there last time I noticed, anyway. He was nowhere to be found. Then, I heard a faint rustle coming from under the game table. I walked around to the end of the table and looked between the boxes lining both sides of the table. I see two eyes and a white curly head peeping up over one of the boxes from under the table's dark underbelly. In the few seconds it took to grab the camera, he jumped up onto one of the boxes and walked over to me. Clearly climbing over my boxes of figures was no concern to him. The box he is padding across is the one containing my 1/72 WWI aircraft collection. Funny dog.
Saturday, August 9, 2025
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Poor Man
While we wait for the 2025 survey to run its course, still more to discuss from the 2024 survey. If you have yet to complete the 2025 survey, you can do so at WSS 2025 Great Wargaming Survey.
Today's analysis examines four wargaming traits in the hope of reducing these data in order to produce a few identifiable and meaningful wargaming profiles based upon survey responses. The statistical technique used to explore relationships and correlations between these four variables is Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA). MCA extends Correspondence Analysis (CA), which is typically used for two categorical variables, to more than two variables. MCA is a powerful exploratory tool for summarizing and visualizing relationships in datasets with several categorical variables, helping to uncover patterns and associations that might otherwise be hidden. MCA has been utilized in a number of past analyses.
Very briefly, the key points of MCA are:
- Purpose: MCA helps to detect and represent underlying structures in complex categorical data, making it easier to interpret relationships between variables and categories.
- How it works: It transforms categorical data into a numerical format (indicator matrix), then applies dimensionality reduction (similar to Principal Component Analysis for quantitative data) to project the data into a lower-dimensional space.
- Output: The results are often visualized as maps or plots, where similar categories and individuals are positioned close together, revealing associations and clusters.
- Applications: Widely used in social sciences, marketing, and survey analysis to explore patterns in responses, profiles, or preferences.
- Do you consider yourself mostly a historical, or more a fantasy/sci-fi wargamer on a scale of '0' (pure historical gamer to '6' (purely fantasy/sci-fi gamer)?
- How do you rate yourself as a craftsman on a scale of '1' (terrible) to '5' (great)? Variable name = CRAFTSMAN with values 1-5.
- On a scale of '1' (not interested) to '5' (deeply interested), how much do you research the (fictional or not) background to your game? Variable name = RESEARCH with values 1-5.
- How many painted figures do you have in your collection?
- How often do you currently game?
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MCA: Initial |
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Outlier Removal: Research1 and Collection Size 20,001-25,000 |
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Outlier Removal: Research2, Craft1, Collection Size 0-100 |
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Outlier Removal: Craft5 |
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MCA: Final |
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MCA: Interpretation |
Tuesday, August 5, 2025
Quistello, Act I
Monday saw the first outing of the Quistello scenario mentioned in an earlier post. With six players, fighting the battle remotely, four, action-packed turns were completed in a little under three-and-a-half hours. With the hour getting late in the UK, we called a halt to the fighting. The question on the table is whether to call a truce or pick up the game another day.
- Sudden Death: Army Breakpoint Reached.
- Major Allies: Hold Quistello and the western line of the Secchia River.
- Minor Allies: Hold the line north of the canal.
- Major Austrians: Hold Quistello and either Mirasole or San Benedetto or exit five units off western table edge north of canal.
- Minor Austrian: Hold Quistello and Gaidellina with no Allied units south of the canal.
- Otherwise: Draw
Friday, August 1, 2025
That Time of Year, Again
Yep! If it is August, then it is once again time to complete WSS's The Great Wargaming Survey.
A few new questions have been introduced into this edition and a few of the old questions have seen some amendments.
You can take the survey at Great Wargaming Survey. Completing the survey takes about ten minutes or less depending upon your familiarity with the questions and your verbosity on the open-ended questions at the end.
As a test, in the "Final Observations" open-ended question at survey's end, if you put in PWJ2025 along with your final observations, I will be able to capture results from readers of this blog. With enough responses, I may tailor some of the analyses to this subset of survey respondents to see how readers collectively view some of the questions.
Go ahead, fill out the survey and try to remember your answers when some of these topics are discussed in analyses throughout the upcoming twelve months. Survey closes on 31 August.