After the second game that way of playing the game seemed to turn out as a good approach. Granted, at the beginning I had my doubts, but I did not always want to play a basic team or start with a teamvalue of 1000 in each league. I wondered if it would be possible to just continue my roster sheet and if I would find players who would also follow this style. In short, this was the basic idea of what would later become known as the Challenge.Īt the time, I wasn't as narrative a player as I'm now, but I didn't have time to participate in a league, and in 2009, Blood Bowl experienced a relative drought in the German-speaking world of tabletop players.
As I liked how it turned out, I decided to paint one model completely before each game, so after ten games I would have a fully painted team of eleven players without losing motivation on the go. After a brief look, I realized that I had a lot of skeletons, a few zombie parts, the old model of Ramtut, and a few 3rd edition human players left.Īfter putting together one of the models, I tried out the color scheme I had in mind.
So how does a solo campaign work then? At the end of 2009 I had the idea to use leftover parts from my bitzbox to reduce my enormous pile of miniatures a bit. In a solo campaign you play against other players too. First of all, I have to make it clear that you cannot play Blood Bowl alone (except virtually on the computer).