Easter Sunday witnessed the PWJ tick past two mileposts. One is meaningful, the other not so much. The first, and less important milepost was that the blog saw over 100,000 page views in one day. In the early days of blogging, this achievement might be hailed with much fanfare. Today, with AI dominating search and consumption, 100,000 page views in one day does not carry the same weight. The other, and more important milestone is that the blog surpassed 60,000 comments. Yes, I realize that half of the commentary is mine, but reader commentary is an important if not vital aspect of sharing the hobby.
| Blogger stats: 06 APR 2026 |
When I publish a new post, whether a battle report, an analysis, or photos from my latest unit marching out from the painting desk, I never quite know how it will land. While I write primarily to record my thoughts and achievements, I also write to share the wargaming hobby that has fascinated me for most of my life. Once I click "publish," there’s a pause and, often, a little apprehension. Will anyone care enough to read let alone respond with a comment? When a comment appears, I breathe a sigh of relief.
For a wargamer, blogging is often a solitary pursuit that mirrors the hobby itself. We spend long nights painting miniatures, building terrain, or researching obscure campaigns to create scenarios or rules. From a personal perspective, these are satisfying efforts. This type of self-exploration, while satisfying, is shaped by appreciation and dialog. The byline on my blog bio states that,
It is not enough to accomplish. You must share those accomplishments.
Reader comments help turn this solitary focus outward. When a reader writes "the figures look great" or "Great battle report," these comments remind me that the hours of effort are not only just mine. The blog allows these efforts to become something shared.
Besides turning a mostly solitary activity outward, comments deepen a sense of community. Wargaming may center on fighting battles in miniature, but through blogging, conversations turn toward tactics, history, craftsmanship, and battles won and lost. The comment section becomes a virtual battlefield of ideas through a mutual respect for the hobby.
To me, every comment is like adding another painted figure into a collection. The comment may be small and unique, but a single comment is important to the overall goal. Each comment builds momentum as others weigh-in turning a collection of posts into an ongoing campaign of thought and dialog. Without these responses and feedback, blogging can start to feel like a battle dispatch sent off into a destination not known.
I suggest that we keep in mind that when a reader takes the time to type a few words in response to a post, that even a simple response can carry more meaning than the reader might realize. These responses remind me why I write. I write not only to post battle reports or document progress at the painting desk. I write to connect with others who find the same joy in miniature armies and tabletop exploits on the field of battle. In a sense, each comment carries the same power as a post-game handshake across the table after a hard-fought game. In a comment, you share acknowledgment, camaraderie, and respect.
I mark this occasion as a way to thank everyone who has mustered the courage to leave a comment or two over these first 60,000 comments.
Thank you.