Spectre Miniatures has released a substantial wave of 28mm modern warfare miniatures built around rapid-deployment special operations units. The new range includes Delta Force assault elements, British infantry specialists with anti-tank and precision fire capabilities, and both transport and attack variants of the iconic MH-6 Little Bird helicopter.
TL;DR
Spectre Miniatures drops new special operations units for modern skirmish games:
- Delta Force assault team with MCX Spear rifles and suppressed CQB loadouts
- British NLAW anti-tank team and ghillie-suited sniper pairs
- MH-6 transport helicopter (with optional mounted operators) and AH-6 attack variant with miniguns/rockets
- All available as physical kits or STL files for home printing
Small-Unit Strike Forces Get New Options
The centerpiece Delta Assault Element represents the top-tier access and funding that characterizes US special operations. Each operator carries the newly adopted MCX Spear with close-quarters optics and advanced suppressors, alongside extra magazines and mixed explosive devices. The sculpts reflect current near-peer conflict loadouts rather than the asymmetric warfare kits that dominated the 2000s and 2010s.
For British forces, Spectre adds an NLAW team capable of threatening modern armor with man-portable firepower. The Next-generation Light Anti-tank Weapon has proven itself in recent conflicts, making this a timely addition for players running contemporary scenarios. The British sniper team features full ghillie suits with the L115A3 (.338 Lapua Magnum) for the primary shooter and L129A1 sharpshooter rifle for the spotter—a pairing that reflects actual British Army doctrine.
Pricing hasn’t been announced publicly, but all releases are available now through Spectre’s store as resin miniatures or digital STL files.
Why Little Birds Matter at Skirmish Scale
The dual helicopter release addresses a persistent gap in modern skirmish gaming: air mobility that actually fits table-scale scenarios. The MH-6 transport variant comes with optional Task Force operators modeled on the external benches—the signature insertion method for this airframe. You can also build it with empty seats for extraction scenarios, giving narrative players a concrete objective beyond “eliminate all enemies.”
The AH-6 gunship configuration mounts dual miniguns and rocket pods, offering close air support without requiring the footprint of an Apache or the abstraction of off-table artillery. For players who favor fast, small-unit systems like Gangfight or similar modern skirmish rulesets, having a physical model for air support changes how missions play. It’s no longer a dice roll—it’s a vulnerable asset that can be suppressed, evaded, or become a liability if it goes down in hostile territory.
What This Means for Skirmish Tables
These releases tilt heavily toward competitive and scenario-driven play rather than casual pickup games. The specialists fill specific tactical roles: NLAW teams deter vehicle-heavy lists, snipers control sightlines and force movement decisions, and the Little Birds enable vertical envelopment tactics that most 6×4 tables can actually accommodate.
Painters get unusually detailed kits for 28mm modern miniatures—the ghillie suits alone will separate experienced hobbyists from beginners. Kitbashers may find the Delta team less useful since the loadouts are fairly uniform, but the helicopters are multi-part kits with enough flexibility for minor conversions.
Narrative players building Black Hawk Down-style scenarios or embassy extraction missions finally have proper assets without needing to proxy toy helicopters or hand-wave air support entirely. The fact that both the miniatures and STLs are available simultaneously is notable—Spectre continues to support both traditional and 3D printing hobbyists without forcing a choice.


