Golden Demon: Difference between revisions
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Winning entries are always beautiful. It's almost enough to make you forget how much the miniatures cost... | Winning entries are always beautiful. It's almost enough to make you forget how much the miniatures cost... | ||
The competition is named for its prize, a golden statue of a Demon posed in a manner reminiscent of the Oscar award. The overall winner also gains the ''Slayer Sword'', and sometimes some other prize (a lead Thunderhawk Gunship was given to one UK winner, for example). It is the one time Games Workshop does ''not'' spell it "Daemon." Yes, we'll wait while you check. | The competition is named for its prize, a golden statue of a Demon posed in a manner reminiscent of the Oscar award. The overall winner also gains the ''Slayer Sword'', and sometimes some other prize (a lead [[Thunderhawk]] Gunship was given to one UK winner, for example). It is the one time Games Workshop does ''not'' spell it "Daemon." Yes, we'll wait while you check. | ||
==How To Win== | ==How To Win== |
Revision as of 20:16, 18 February 2012
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A miniature painting and modeling contest run at Games Workshop's Games Day conventions. Entries are sorted along several criteria, including age of creator, category (single miniature, monster, vehicle, diorama, duel, squad/regiment, large-scale model), and franchise (Warhammer 40,000, Warhammer Fantasy Battle, and The Lord of the Rings), with Bronze, Silver, and Golden Demons going to each category. Forge World also picks a miniature they like as their Best In Show.
Winning entries are always beautiful. It's almost enough to make you forget how much the miniatures cost...
The competition is named for its prize, a golden statue of a Demon posed in a manner reminiscent of the Oscar award. The overall winner also gains the Slayer Sword, and sometimes some other prize (a lead Thunderhawk Gunship was given to one UK winner, for example). It is the one time Games Workshop does not spell it "Daemon." Yes, we'll wait while you check.
How To Win
Also, sneak as many parts by other manufacturers in as possible. This works less well after Kevan Downey in the UK entered what was obviously a converted Tamiya Dragon Wagon model and White Dwarf gave it the full textual handjob before realising the "tiny chains" they'd praised him for adding were part of the stock kit.
Gallery
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Bjorn the Fell-Handed finds an unsual way around being a space furry.
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UK 2001's second place vehicle demonstrates why they have that rule about not using other companies' models.
See Also
- Games Workshop's Golden Demon Winners Gallery