Vet-Con 2023 took place starting the evening of November 9th and ran all day on the 10th and 11th, the actual Veteran's Day. It was an all historical miniatures convention (though see a photo below that put a 'stain' on the event 😕) and well attended.
There were a few games that did get cancelled both before and during the event - and one that started very late and another that didn't happen because their respective game masters got stuck in really bad traffic - one had a five hour and the other a six hour drive that should have been only about two and a half hours.
The location was the Holiday Inn in Auburn, California, USA at the junction of US Highway 80 and Highway 49 (the main road through California's gold country of the famous Forty-Niners gold rush).
This is the second edition of this event with a third planned for 2024 but running Friday, Saturday, and Sunday (Veteran's Day being on Monday). There were a lot of us in attendance who were veterans - though many who were not, of course.
I tried to get photos of all of the events, sometimes just one shot though anything set up after I left on Sunday after my last game won't be here - I did get some in the process of being setup for later before I left so I don't think I missed much.
There were a number of games that may look the same but had more than one 'edition' run by the same game master, usually with a different objective I think.
It was the most enjoyable convention I've been to in probably twenty years which I attribute to so many games to choose from - I played in five different games starting with an AWI game on Thursday evening using Fistful of Lead: Bigger Battles. Friday morning I played in a colonial game using Congo rules involving Bungstarter Station (fans of Major General Tremorden Reddering website might remember it), and then later in the day was a Viking game using Fistful of Lead: Might and Melee rules. Saturday started with an Old West game called 3:15 to Reno and using the free rules Ruthless and ended, for me, with the First Battle if Tuyuti 1866 using Black Powder rules.
Won some, lost some, had to bale early on the Thursday game since it was getting too late and I had to drive home and again on Friday left early because my energy just dropped like a rock - perhaps because I had to make a trip home midday to help wife out for a bit so some extra driving after a short night.
I have tried as best as I can to organize photos so a game is all in one sequence though the separate room that was hosting tournaments I just took quick snaps when I had a moment to dash down the hall to that room. (Some may be out of order apparently!)
(Actually, the following was actually the game I played in on Friday morning - the Thursday game didn't have the Bungstarter Station seen in the second photo. See further down for the Friday game.) This is Congo! and was the first game to start running (the other two scheduled to start at the same time were the two with game masters in that traffic mess). I didn't play in this version so not sure what the objectives were but it looked like everyone was having fun.
Below is the first scheduled version of Spaghetti Western which I thought about playing in but decided to try the AWI game because I had another western to play - wanted variety in what I played. The game master was the man behind the convention who comes all the way from North Carolina to run this event - he used to live here so he is keeping in contact with a lot of his gaming buddies over the decades. Game being set up.
This was the game I played in Thursday that was supposed to start at 6 PM but didn't get started until 8 PM: Battle of Bugtussle, Pennsylvania, 1780. I was on the Continental side with a couple of newbies to the rules on the opposite side including a board war-gamer who had never played miniatures before but seemed to have a good time and saw him in other games during the next couple of days. I baled at 10 PM but I understand my side won in the end. Yay!
Here is the Spaghetti Western underway.
Game being setup for Friday - may be more shots below.
Another game being setup for Friday and perhaps more below.
Hold on! I think these photos were from the Thursday night version of the Congo! game - no Bungstarter Station. Must have loaded in odd order from my phone or when sent from phone to computer. Will leave as is. (and edit above comment). The British players were able to get the survivors from Bungstarter Station, most importantly the female reporter carrying some looted item from us natives. However, my natives did very serious damage to the civilians taking half of them out - and one British soldier, too! Alas, despite all the damage I caused, I got wiped out to a man - my fellow natives survived but got pretty beat up too. It was a fun game.
My biggest unit almost wiped out but not quite yet.
The British soldier I took out - and the first of their casualties!
I played an optional event that caused a gorilla to burst out of the jungle and accost a couple of British soldiers, they survived but not unscathed.
Not one but two cool river boats!
I never saw this lion in the grass until the game ended! Tall trees blocking my view.
All the animals assembled before being put away so I could get this shot. Two of the giraffes were wooden pieces the game master found, they worked fine in the game.
I believe this was a Fireball Forward game. Just took quick shots of this game.
This was an American Civil War naval game, Battle of Mobile Bay (Damn the torpedos, full speed ahead!), rules Sail and Navies.
Afraid I'm not sure what this game was, just a quick shot - if I figure it out I will edit this post.
Same here, not sure.
This was one of the tournaments running - the photo of the rules will tell you what it was.
This was a World War One game, Second Battle of the Aisne, 1917, using Trenchline rules. Looked well attended with involved players, Black Powder rules.
This was one of several games set in the wars in South America in the 1900s, Battle of Maipu, 1818.
This is a general shot of the main gaming room, the tournaments down the hall behind me a bit. It might seem small but it worked, most of us know each other, many of us for 30 years or more, so it was a pretty friendly convention. There was a nice contingent of younger gamers in the mix, not teenagers but under 40 and maybe even under 30, good to see.
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