Marvel Zombies: Jimmy Woo and Ben Urich

Marvel Zombies: Jimmy Woo and Ben Urich

And a third pair of CMON’s Marvel Zombies bystanders in a row – that’s right, I just went on a bit of a run with these as a nice kind of simple palette cleanser models. Today we have the comics version of Ben Urich as well as Jimmy Woo. Jimmy here is different from the MCU version due to his blue-grey suit, while Ben Urich here is a little more different to his remixed version.

Marvel Zombies: Jimmy Woo and Ben Urich

These two look like they’d make a decent investigative team. A shame that these models are just cannon fodder tokens in the Marvel Zombies game, which is why Marouda and I like to create custom cards to use them as survivors in the more general Zombicide games. We were also working on some house rules to crossover the Superheroes and the regular Zombicide survivors, though we’ll need to get back to playing Zombicide to get some more games in.

Marvel Zombies: Happy Hogan and Harry Osborn

Marvel Zombies: Happy Hogan and Harry Osborn

Today it’s another pair of CMON’s Marvel Zombies bystanders. We have Norman Osborn, the son of the Green Goblin and absolutely not the Green Goblin in his classic comics look, and secondly a model that was part-painted for a good couple of years – Happy Hogan, Tony Stark’s driver – and later on, a top executive/administrator for Tony and/or the Avengers, depending on which version of the Marvel timeline we’re looking at.

Marvel Zombies: Happy Hogan and Harry Osborn

As I noted in yesterday’s post, suits really aren’t my favourite, which is why Hogan took so long to get painted. He was originally picked as an “easy win” that took a couple of years to get past the base coat of the suit, and then I managed to get motivated to paint him alongside Vader, The Emperor, DSII Luke, Harley Quinn and another figure I literally just finished this afternoon at the time of writing (Sunday afternoon). Harryand his outfit really show it’s 4-colour-comics origins with the red-blue-green-green-yellow scheme, but I’m much happier to be painting the comics-based verison of Harry that I grew up reading rather than a modern reimagining that mostly just keeps his name and a couple of other traits.