Albany tabletop gamer travels to UK for Bolt Action world championships
Bob Quinn describes himself as an avid miniature tabletop gamer, but says his friends often call him "one of the gamiest players in Albany".
Based in the regional Western Australian city, about 420 kilometres south of Perth, his shed became a hub for preparations to join the team representing Australia at the World Team Championships for Bolt Action in the UK city of Sheffield.
The World War II-themed game is played on a board, with each move of miniature pieces such as tanks and soldiers meticulously measured and dependent on your dice roll as you work to win the battle or carry out the mission.
Bob Quinn has spent months preparing for the championship.
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ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy
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"The prep is playing games, testing stuff, this works, this doesn't," Mr Quinn said.
"
The last three months I've been trying to get at least a game in a week and then getting people to tell me what they think.
"
Each individual piece is painted by the players.
"There's two side to this; there's the playing of the games and there's what is called the hobby which is the painting, the building of the terrain," Mr Quinn said.
Players paint their own miniatures and often make their own scenery.
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ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy
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First time competing
Australia has two teams competing at this weekend's event.
Members are from various parts of the country, which means preparation has been challenging.
World Team Championships organiser Dave Nolan said it was the first time Australian Bolt Action teams were competing.
Organisers say the Bolt Action event continues to grow in popularity.
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Supplied: Dave Nolan
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Competitions are also held for Star Wars Legion and Middle-Earth Strategy Battle Game.
"Bolt Action has had a 10 per cent growth from last year where we're now up to 20 teams," Mr Nolan said.
Mr Quinn is among eight Australians travelling to the competition.
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ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy
)
"
Initially it was about flexing your muscles as a gamer, rolling some dice and showing you're the best, but after seven years it's now a case of the same sort of people returning and they get to see their friends.
"
Mr Nolan said he was excited for the event but wished travel costs were not such a barrier.
"We could get to meet people a lot easier and it wasn't a case of we're coming, but only if we can afford it," he said.
Mr Quinn began playing with a "starter army" about five years ago and has now expanded his game piece collection.
'It's a nice community," he said.
Mr Quinn's two sons have been helping him paint miniatures.
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ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy
)
"They say men don't talk face to face they talk side to side, or in this case on the opposite side of table, and as you're playing you're talking about how it's going, you're talking about your wife and kids and just how life is."
Gaming community
Another Albany gamer John Gill echoed the importance of the community gaming could create.
"When I first moved here I joined in because it was a mutual interest with a few other people," he said.
John Gill says he likes the competitive aspect of the game.
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ABC Great Southern: Rosemary Murphy
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"
I think there's a point as a guy where you either discover smoking meats or World War II. Bolt Action in particular piques my interest in World War II.
"
University of South Australia game design and digital media lecturer, Susannah Emery, said interest in miniature gaming increased significantly after the release of a popular TV series.
Susannah Emery says Australia has strong gaming community.
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Supplied: Jacinta Keefe Photography
)
"We actually saw a pretty huge influx after Stranger Things came out," Dr Emery said.
"People started going back to Dungeons and Dragons and that resurgence and popularity of Dungeons and Dragons kind of got people into those gaming shops again.
"You go into a store to buy some minis and there's people painting, there's people playing, there's a whole community ready to help people and engage with them on that."
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"The game's combative, accidents happen on the footy field. It's one of those things," Hardwick said of Saturday's incident. "We'd love Noah to keep playing (but it's) within the rules, still allowed to bump. "It was a reasonable hit, a solid hit. He's a big boy, Tom Stewart. "But once again, we'll make it very clear, it was chest. It wasn't head or anything like that - no concussion. "From our point of view he'll just go there (hospital) and see what that comes back at." Hardwick was more concerned with his team failing what he had termed a "litmus test" before the match, and ceding their top-four spot to Geelong in the process. The Cats never trailed and pulled clear after halftime to improve their record to 9-4 with a fourth straight win, while Gold Coast slipped to 8-4 with a second successive defeat. It was also the Suns' ninth loss in as many visits to Geelong's Kardinia Park base - eight of those against the Cats - since their AFL inception in 2011. 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Stewart crunched Anderson in a heavy collision during the fourth quarter of the Cats' dour 9.7 (61) to 5.7 (37) victory at a rain-soaked GMHBA Stadium on Saturday. Play was held up while Anderson was assessed by medical staff, before he jogged slowly off the ground. He was eventually taken to the Suns' change-room. The Gold Coast captain was cleared of concussion after his head hit the ground following the body contact from Stewart, but was later taken to hospital for scans on his chest region. Scott insisted Stewart showed the appropriate duty of care to Anderson and was adamant there would have to be a fundamental shift in rules for the five-time All-Australian to face sanction over the bump. "If it's a protective action where contact's unavoidable and you don't get them in the head, then you've done everything you can," Scott said after the match. "I sort of feel for Noah. Everyone loves him, he's a gun player and it was pretty heavy contact to the ribs, but it was to the body. "Stewy, I thought his duty of care to Noah was as good as it could have been, and he was good enough to hit him in the body." Gold Coast coach Damien Hardwick didn't feel there was anything untoward in the bump from Stewart, who was given a four-match ban in 2022 for a nasty hit on Richmond's Dion Prestia. "The game's combative, accidents happen on the footy field. It's one of those things," Hardwick said of Saturday's incident. "We'd love Noah to keep playing (but it's) within the rules, still allowed to bump. "It was a reasonable hit, a solid hit. He's a big boy, Tom Stewart. "But once again, we'll make it very clear, it was chest. It wasn't head or anything like that - no concussion. "From our point of view he'll just go there (hospital) and see what that comes back at." Hardwick was more concerned with his team failing what he had termed a "litmus test" before the match, and ceding their top-four spot to Geelong in the process. The Cats never trailed and pulled clear after halftime to improve their record to 9-4 with a fourth straight win, while Gold Coast slipped to 8-4 with a second successive defeat. It was also the Suns' ninth loss in as many visits to Geelong's Kardinia Park base - eight of those against the Cats - since their AFL inception in 2011. Tyson Stengle (four goals) and Max Holmes (40 disposals, 10 clearances) starred for Geelong, while Tom Atkins (23, eight) and Mark O'Connor (21, seven) were also important. AFL great Gary Ablett Jr was among the 29,502 fans on hand to watch his two former clubs do battle, and witnessed a scrappy, stoppage-heavy encounter in wet conditions. Hardwick felt Geelong were better around the contest, conceding they were "too good, too clean and too strong" for the Suns. "We've got some work to do and I was really pissed off, to be perfectly honest," he said. "We knew the game that we needed to have, and we unfortunately failed the test." Geelong lost Shannon Neale to an ankle injury before halftime, and Gold Coast's Jed Walter could face scrutiny for late and high contact on O'Connor with a swinging arm.