Welcome to Marauder Moments - a chronicle of the Mortimer Street Marauders; the games we play, the rules we use, the figures we play with and the scenery they fight over. Hope you enjoy these pages and maybe call back to catch up with our escapades.

Saturday, 2 February 2019

Thoughts on blogging, facebooking & foruming?

"What's the point in all this facebooking, foruming & blogging?"

Napoleon didn't have to grapple with this shIT...
Not my picture, it's just always amused me.
This might seem like a negative title for a post but it's actually inspired by a private message I was sent by a reader in response to a recent post. To my knowledge the sender has never commented before & to be honest I haven't checked to see if they are a "follower" or not. The point is that they took some considerable time to write to me with quite a long missive which in part looks like this...

"Your blog is colossal mate - your mention of old Wargames Illustrated WGHC stuff brought a smile. That's always been what I've wanted to aim for since I was a kid and saw Charles Grants rules in the library. The latest post is a walk through memory lane, and as you say, painting & sculpting has changed but these still have a great look! The battles you and your mates play are fantastic...

...so keep the blog going, you had an extended break but I still kept coming back for inspiration."

For a while I have been halfheartedly wrestling with some questions about why I write this blog or why I don't sometimes write this blog! Over the last couple of years other more immediate social media platforms have taken some of the limelight in our hobby, notably facebook groups, instagram, pintrest & youtube. Lastly we still have the old school forum - the hotbed of creativity & positive energy - I jest. I have flirted with some of these, you may have seen that I post links to the blog on some facebook Napoleonic pages & some forums too. Pintrest & instgram, at my three daughters behest. Twitter I stay well clear of of although no doubt there is some gaming content there too.

Austro Hungarian senior officers.
The reason I have done this is simply to grow followers & likes by driving viewers to the blog to get them to comment or follow it - pretty simple. However a harsh truth is this - facebook followers will often like the post on fb, maybe even comment, but given the speed of response they cannot possibly have visited the blog let alone looked at the pictures or read a single word. Facebook likes will often outnumber site visits. Facebook seems very transitory to me, there's no sense of a permanent archive, no long reports or discussion. Many thanks to those who do visit Marauder Moments though.

The forums generally leave me a little cold... I have loyally supported the General de Brigade forum for years but it seems increasingly like an echo chamber! The General d'Armee forum seems to be on the Lardies website but to be honest I can't be bothered with it! I used to post on TMP but not for a long time now, it's not as toxic as some imagine but it doesn't float my boat.

I still read plenty of blogs but sadly the two which launched this blog are now largely defunct or void of fresh Napoleonic material, they are;-

https://itinerantwargamer.blogspot.com/
&
http://garagegamer.blogspot.com/

The moving image

I was impressed with Dave Brown's youtube films introducing GdA to the gaming world - great stuff. Youtube is where it's at for modern gamers, if you play 40k the content is limitless & very professionally done. It's funny, informative, critical & very detailed in reviews & previews. People are making a damn good living out of playing 40k on youtube!!! To my knowledge nothing like that exists for Napoleonic players, nor I suspect will there be! I'd love to do that but the tech is beyond me & I suspect the prospect of we Marauders in a cellar drinking & swearing while playing toys on film might not inspire! I don't think youtube is ready for that yet.

Russian Tony demolishing French champagne with ease.
Chris & I after the Attack show in Devizes one fine summer day. 

French Tony recording casualties & supping ale.
Might he resurface in 2019? I hope so!
So what am I driving at? My attempt to win more followers & more comments leaves me a bit hollow - I have known this for along time if I 'm honest - I already have great readers. What gives me greatest pleasure is the kind of feedback in the comment above; heart felt appreciation for what we do and how we say it. I have a hardcore of most excellent followers who very kindly comment and usually in glowing terms. Thank you.

Foundry Prussians from my collection assault a burning village. 
The person I quoted above makes three really solid points, the first & third are linked. It really is a "colossal" blog! It wasn't always so, I remember the first posts literally being seen by no one except my chums! This is my ninth year and the content has ballooned. I have never been one to post every time I get a new book or toy, I don't do WIP posts & try to avoid personal or non Napoleonic material although not always. This means that the meat and bones is big battle reports with lots of pretty pictures - exactly what I would want to read. Sometimes I do new unit posts too, those seem popular. Those usually get done when basing is completed in my kitchen. I am half planning to do another Vogue post this time the Moscow edition! I'd like to do a photo shoot of my Russian Life Guard and another far larger shoot of Tony's Russians. My point is once again that this is what I'd want to see on a blog.

Tony's Russian army needs a big photo shoot sometime soon. 
My new friends second point is the "memory lane" thing. I seem to have struck a chord with lots of people when mentioning old skool gaming & modelling of the Gilder variety. In that spirit I may do a few posts showcasing the pictures from those early magazines which featured his Napoleonics & articles - copyright be damned. Those few pages printed decades ago made all this happen. Imagine if there had been an internet back then... And yes, my mates and our battle are fantastic!

The Gilder effect.
Pic taken at Mark Freeth's Wargames Holiday Centre, scenery & collection mostly by Peter Gilder. 
 
The last point mystery person makes is that they "...still kept coming back for inspiration."

That makes this all the more worth while. I know from the back end management side of the blog that an awful lot of people still find us and comeback to delve through old articles & pictures. It tickled me recently to see my Neapolitan Guard pictured beside a uniform plate on a painters post, he was asking which was correct, my rendition or the plate! Last week I saw someone else I don't know had shared my post to a third party page - I found myself liking it! 

Austrian cavalry massing outside a walled city near the Danube 1809. 
There in lies the answer to why I write this blog - I like it.
It pleases me. I will endeavour to continue to do so. I like looking back at our games, rereading the nonsense I write & looking the pretty pictures. I may even finish the Borodino & Sofonova reports one day, maybe.

French light cavalry & horse artillery from Rich's collection.

Rich - honorary Marauder, retired.
The feckless chase for followers & likes isn't for me anymore, I would rather know we have 20 people who actively engage with the content again & again as if it's a resource of some sort.

Long serving Marauder Moments vets will no doubt object to Mr Grumpy's replacement at the head of our Bavarians. 
Maybe no one will read this as much is me thinking aloud. Suffice to say there is plenty more content in me and plenty more games to play with the Marauders. There is even a massive new project underway but more of that when it's ready - I don't do WIP posts.   

Work in progress post which I don't do of course. 
                         
All my posts are strictly Napoleonic wargame related.
Many thanks for indulging me in this post if you got this far & your support - you amaze me!
Special thanks to the guy who pm'd me as above, be assured;
"The best is yet to come." 

Stay safe, Jeremy
         

24 comments:

  1. A most interesting read Jeremy. I always enjoy your posts for the games, the photos and your wit, but it's also good to read a bit of serious Jeremy!
    For what it is worth, I am with you on preferring the longer, more deliberate (and open) forum of the blog. Perhaps it's since it suits the longer, more deliberate form of historical wargaming with figures?
    Me too. A post about a single unit or work in progress keeps things ticking along (and is easy/quick to look at and/or to read), but is not in the same league as a post about a grand game, described in detail and with humour and beautiful photos.
    Pleased that you'll be keeping them coming in future.
    James
    p.s. Your work in progress looks like a drop from that scene in "The business"!!

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    1. Thanks James,
      its just been bugging me & having reread this I struggled to express myself clearly but its off my chest so I can move on!
      Very best wishes,
      Jeremy
      PS heaven knows what customs would have thought of those boxes.

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  2. Most impressive and beautiful looking game, and the command stand with the computer is a very noce touch!

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  3. "There in lies the answer to why I write this blog - I like it." Amen , brother.. I just assume no one is looking, and when they do respond its a very pleasant surprise..

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    1. Bingo Steve! That's the precise attitude I'm going to adopt forthwith! Rather like singing & dancing in the shower...

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  4. Hi Jeremy

    I have recently commented on my own blog about comments and support from blog followers. My experience has been very similar to your own. There are obviously a lot of loyal followers who visit week after week but don’t feel the need to comment. You are certainly not alone in this.

    It is interesting that some blogs receive a lot of comments. I don’t know whether this is down to the style of writing or simply that they have a different relationship with their readers. Whatever the reason I wish I had their skill.

    In May 2011 I completed a series of blogs about “Walking Napoleonic Battlefields” I received very few comments, but according to the blog stats it is still getting regular visitors. Apparently there have been 80,000 visits, 732 of them last month! I am not sure how accurate these stats are, but it seems remarkable that people are still reading it when my last post was almost 8 years ago.

    I suspect that all of us who have been writing regular blogs for some time do so for our own satisfaction and enjoyment. That being the case comments should not be too important. But a little recognition goes a long way.

    I hope that you continue to enjoy the experience sufficiently for you to continue to write an interesting and colourful blog

    best regards

    Paul

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    1. Hi Paul,
      on reflection I read a fair few blogs without commenting & lots don't seem to have the "follow" function anyway. I tend to agree, if it keeps me amused and tickles the fancy of a few other it must be a good thing.
      Thanks for taking a few minutes to comment with your experinces,
      Best wishes,
      Jeremy

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  5. Very good table with so lot of beautifull figures!
    The first picture with the computer is great!
    Bravo!
    :-)

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    1. Bravo Zoom13!
      Be good out there, cheers for visiting & commenting.
      Best wishes,
      Jeremy

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  6. I just like to tell stories. Some blogs specialise - which is good because you know what to expect. Others don't - which is good because you don't know what expect. If I follow a blog (such as this one), it must contain something that holds my interest!

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    1. Hello Archduke Piccolo,
      glad I excite, please pop back as I shall endeavour to hold your interest further...
      Best wishes,
      Jeremy

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  7. If we're getting philosophical, then posting thousands of well painted Napoleonics engaged in storied grand contest is its own axiomatic justification I think ;)

    And you're dead right, the longer more considered format of blogging, and continuation of a blog over time, offers a depth of interest that is missing from many other options.

    I use my own blog, most commonly to remind myself of colour schemes, and finding other people's blog updates in my side bar! And as my own collection has grown larger I've also found it useful to work out how many units I have painted when aiming for scenarios, how I've done things previously and so on.

    In any case, whatever reason you do it, I'm glad you do Jeremy!
    I also spent some time looking at the blogs you cited as inspiration, great stuff, shame to see them end mysteriously for the garage gamers. Must organise so if I get hit by a bus someone posts something so people are not left wondering :)

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    1. Cheers Chasseur, we seem to be fairly like minded although the "hit by bus" routine hadn't occurred to me - now that is serious...
      Cheers for reading & commenting hopefully back to more regular posts soon enough as Chris is itching to do a big game & I have more material from Austerlitz & maybe run a few pics from those really old magazines we all keep talking about in mysterious terms...
      Be good out there,
      Jeremy

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    2. We do the same with Our Blog!
      😎

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  8. Truth be told I can imagine updating this blog is alot of hard work and effort! I don't comment that often but I check this blog regularly (even on your hiatus I checked in every week to see if anything new had been posted.
    I tried my own blog and it fizzled out as I ran out of steam I hardly have enough time to play games let alone post up reports on them! But I'd like you to know when I see a new post on this blog I get that same feeling I used to get when I got my copy of wargames illustrated/white dwarf through the post!
    Whether Im sat on the sofa with a glass of something or even on the loo reading your blog is a highlight of my day/week/month and best of all it inspires my own games and model/scenery collection because what you do is what I and alot of others aspire to - just as you did with those early Gilder publications.
    So regardless of site hits, likes or whatnot I'm sure there are plenty like me whom lurk a bit but enjoy your blog immensely so keep it coming and if I ever meet you I'll buy you a pint or two! :-)

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    1. This is just about the kindest message I've ever had Robert.
      I won't let you down I hope...
      Looking forward to that pint, best wishes,
      Jeremy

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  9. Great post Jeremy, I do think the blog is a lasting format and much more fulfilling than a collection of Facebook posts that evaporate in the ether.

    Why do I write my own blog? Follows and comments are good, but for me, it's an aide memoir to paint colours used, figures long sold and half remembered games in the distant past.

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    1. Hi Scrivs,
      hope you're warming up a bit now?
      I agree wholeheartedly with your comments especially the "evaporating into the ether" bit, so true.
      Take care old chum,
      Jeremy

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    2. Cheers Jeremy, it's warmed up a bit, still below freezing though. At least it keeps the mosquitoes at bay ;)

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  10. Thanks for explaining why I have continued with my blogs. Its difficult sometimes to identify why I actually write the damn things.The mention of the WHC has actually made me feel a bit guilty that I havent added more information to my Peter Gilder blog, and as a result I think I better throw some more effort into recording the doings of the great man. So well done. Oh by the way where in earth did you find that lithograph that finishes your post? Very graphic but also a true reflection I would like to think of the Napoleonic wars.

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    1. Cheers Robbie,
      very happy to shed some light on your motivations by discussing mine. Get blogging about Gilder again, I liked that blog.
      The Grenadier "en avant" turned up in a google search for Napoleonic porn if I recall - suffice to say, it's niche...
      Best wishes,
      Jeremy

      PS We should collectively baffle google by searching for ACW, SYW, WW2, WOTR porn etc!

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  11. Hi
    Great words, I like your mystery man have always kept popping back and your games/pictures provide constant inspiration.
    For my sins I am 'big battle gamer' being part of a little group of gamers called the COBs and just over a year ago got the dream lodge in the back garden which enables up to an 12 x 6 permanent table which can be left set up. We also get 2 massive weekends which get most of the more distant members of the group together for a 3 day game which can feature upto 8,000 of our own troops.
    I have a little website were I try to emulate your posts, a few followers etc but you might just want to take a look -
    https://coboldboys.weebly.com/

    (And boy do I still miss the garage gamers updates

    All the best
    Dave T

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    1. Dave T,
      I have emailed you personally having visited your website - beautiful collections & admirable scenery, "Living the dream".
      Many thanks for your kind words, much appreciated.
      Best wishes,
      Jeremy

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