The game pieces from Shogun/Samurai Swords may come in handy with experimenting with Japan's late feudal  period using Warlord Games' Black Powder rules and any suitable Richard  Borg hex game board and terrain (ie. Battle Cry, Memoir 44, Battle Lore). As I mentioned in a previous blog or two,  Borg's boards are a great way to play the Black Powder rules if you  don't have the time/inclination/funds for collecting large painted  armies of lead or plastic. I have already tried this with the American  Civil War and been quite satisfied with gameplay. This is also a quick  way to get some experience with Black Powder with a quick set up and  clean up time. 
The shogun army pieces should give you enough figures for a good  game (assuming about 4 figures per unit and hex); if you combine a  couple of army colors then you ought to be able to something really  large. 
As for the rules, I know they don't really apply to the  period, but I think they ought to work well enough. If post-Mughal  Indian armies can get a fair translation with the rules (check out their  entries in The Last Argument of Kings supplement for examples), then I  think 16th/17th Century Japanese armies are worth scratch-building using  the game's easily-tweaked unit templates. While I don't think the period was dominated in numbers by matchlock-armed peasants, I think the armies that relied on unarmored peasant levies make a good fit here.
The Imperial Japanese Navy … in 1/1200th-scale: Even more additions
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My quest to build up a sizeable force of Imperial Japanese Navy 
1/1200th-scale model ships continues, and I have recently acquired the 
following new ship...
13 hours ago

 
 
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