theavenger001 wrote:
There's all the dunland huscarls, riders, and bezerkers, as well as the aformentioned last alliance, and plastic khand. Lots of stuff to do.
It's not really
plenty.
Sure there's hundreds of characters and potential soldiers out there which haven't been realised, but is there enough interest to make people go and buy an army of them? Plastic figures require a huge output of money upfront, compared to metal (or now, one assumes) finecast. So any plastic sets have to sell lots to make the effort profitable. GW almost assuredly does have market research going on, and what "everyone" on a bunch of message boards, representing a few hundred people, say is often not what these researchers say. There's been a certain logic to their plastic sets thus far: movie armies take priority, since a good chunk of the LOTR market are people wanting to play battle games in the movie universe, and people who want movie collectables; there's a few core non movie armies based on sales of metals. The metal dwarves reportedly did well, so we got plastic dwarves, the metal Swan Knights did well, so we got plastic knights.
At this late stage in the game, the most we can hope for is popular metal armies going plastic. Were the Khand models popular? Possibly not. The Knights of Morgul seemed to warrant a plastic set; the Mordor Uruk Hai have yet to, for whatever reason.
It may well be that the safest bet is for the one bit of the movie that hasn't be revisited: the last alliance sequence.