Description
This blister pack can be assembled as either a Dragon or Daemon class battleship. The hull consists of multi-part segments and the fins are set on ball joints, allowing a massive degree of modelling flexibility! It is cast in exceptionally tough impact resistant resin and features extraordinary detail. 1:9150 (0.2mm) scale.
Typical Length 120mm (depends on pose). 17 Resin Parts total (including optional ones).
NOTE: Provided with a multi-part Dropfleet flight stand, designed to track in-game status without the use of tokens. Miniatures supplied unassembled and unpainted.
The Daemon Class Battleship
The Daemon class battleship and its sister class the Dragon are undoubtedly the oldest designs of starships still in service with the Scourge navy, behind the rarely seen Super Dreadnoughts. Their segmented hulls and undulating forms are quite different from most modern Scourge ships and the extent of their pitting, battle scars and general ageing have resulted in dating estimates of between 500 and 2000 years old for some examples. The disturbingly organic prow of the Daemon class is laced with oculus weapons and tipped with a pair of furnace cannons, making these veteran slaughterers among the most potent ships the hated aliens have to throw at mankind.
The Dragon Class Battleship
Similar to the Daemon, the Dragon class battleship is a truly ancient behemoth that has weathered the centuries to visit devastation and misery on countless subjugated races. While the Daemon is equipped solely with conventional ship-to-ship weapons, the Dragon includes a pair of cavernous hangar bays, lairs for roosting fighters and bombers. It also carries a pair of enormous Scourge torpedoes – capital ship killing superweapons against which there is little defence save fleeing the Dragon’s inexorable advance.
CourteousMongoose (verified owner) –
Even by Scourge standards, this kit is an odd one, but it’s the most flexible DropFleet model in terms of how the ship can end up looking. This can be touch fiddly, as each of the five hull sections and all of the fins are separate pieces with a significant range of movement, but the end result is worth it. Just take the time to figure out exactly how you want it to finally look before you start gluing, as you really don’t want to have to try pulling it apart again.