Sunday, 5 July 2026

Is the Hobby Changing?

After more than four decades in the hobby, I believe the answer is yes—but perhaps not in the way many people expect. Over the last few years, I've attended a number of wargames shows where I've noticed something that would have been far less common when I first entered the hobby. The crowds seem broader. There are more families, more younger gamers, more women, and a wider mix of people enjoying tabletop wargaming than I remember seeing twenty or thirty years ago. More importantly, the atmosphere has been incredibly positive. The enthusiasm for history, miniature painting, tabletop battles, and the social side of the hobby is every bit as strong as it has always been.


In this video, I reflect on those observations and ask whether these changes might actually be one of the best things to happen to historical wargaming. Rather than focusing on controversy, I wanted to look at what I've genuinely experienced while attending recent shows and speaking to fellow hobbyists.

One of the biggest conclusions I've reached is that new players don't replace the traditions that many of us have loved for decades. They add to them. Every newcomer brings different interests, fresh ideas, new projects, and sometimes introduces us to campaigns or historical subjects we may never have explored ourselves. That's one of the great strengths of tabletop gaming. The hobby grows not because it abandons its past, but because each new generation builds upon it.

The routes into historical wargaming are also changing. Where many of us discovered the hobby through clubs and magazines, today's players often arrive through YouTube, podcasts, board games, fantasy gaming, or social media before finding their way to historical miniatures. The destination remains the same: a shared passion for history, creativity, modelling, painting, and rolling dice with friends.

One thing I didn't include in the video because of time constraints was my theory that maybe Covid and lockdowns have accelerated a process that has been happening for a while now. Lost of 'new' gamers rediscovered a hobby they had played when they were younger during this period. But there are also a lot of other new wargamers who seem have entered the hobby since 2020. I don't know if there is any actualy data to support this, its just anecdotal evidence and what I think I can see at shows. Maybe a new generation of wargamers had their perspectives on what was important, and what wasn't during those long lockdowns. As a society we seem to have a better appreciation of metal health and welbeing following the Pandemic, and a social hobby like wargaming, with painting and creativity at its core, fits perectly with that mindset. Maybe that is drawing new people into the hobby? Or maybe I'm imagining it? 🤣

Ultimately, this isn't a video about politics or changing the hobby into something different. It's about recognising that every thriving hobby needs new people, new ideas, and new enthusiasm if it is going to flourish for decades to come. From my perspective, after forty years of gaming, that's exactly what I'm beginning to see.

I'd love to know whether you've noticed the same changes at your local club or the shows you attend. Do you think historical wargaming is changing? If so, do you see those changes as positive? Join the discussion by watching the video and sharing your own thoughts in the comments. The conversation is always better when more voices are around the table.

2 comments:

  1. Strangely I see exactly the opposite. All the shows I go to the people attending are all middle aged men at the youngest. Simon Jones

    ReplyDelete
  2. Clickbait again here unfortunately.

    ReplyDelete

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