I FINISHED reading the Feb/Mar issue of Medieval Warfare a couple of days before the April/May edition of Toy Soldier Collector arrived in the post.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhLrcex3x5jxpNrmf8Ig-6KznghQ87kLqAtzS9wc5SmBpqYTTYCU6uQFTfmDRt_FhcPaWFcKkTNJvKi-WccsWzJ0S8BL3gpmVwkPzPwefKzHmM-ggWhTDTBBhmXeZOevoWNmCSmjs4jEmk/s320/IMG_20180325_142815.jpg) |
Medieval Warfare volume VIII, issue 1 and Toy Soldier Collector issue 81 |
I am usually a big fan of Medieval Warfare, and especially of its sister magazine Ancient Warfare. But I felt this issue, themed around 14th-century mercenary John Hawkwood, was lacking in telling me anything I did not already know.
Toy Soldier Collector has, as always, loads of lovely-to-look-at glossy pix, even if the models are way out of my spending league (I am definitely not going to pay more than 200 US dollars - almost £150 - for a single Mamluk cavalryman).
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