I need photographic evidence of a german warrior using that roman helmet.
To be fair there's an important principle to bear in mind,
absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
It is quite reasonable to assume that someone might use a piece of kit picked up from a fallen foe for example - we know for sure this happened in multiple eras in the past, from the early-mediaeval period up to the present day, so there's no reason to presume otherwise for earlier times.
It's named a Romano-Germanic, the helmet makes perfect sense to me given the supposed subject (although perhaps bronze would be more appropriate). It is not the helmet at all that bothered me.
I always wonder why miniatures that deal with the (ancient) Roman era attract this kind of critical comments. Dozens of new figures from other time frames are announced here and applauded without any comment on their historical correctness. When it is a Roman related subject, however....
Fair question in principle. Perhaps it's because it's often so obvious? That can be pretty grating. And there's the watershed thing - a certain weight of "Oh God, not
another one" on top of that. That gets old, really fast.
If WWII-era stuff posted here had the same kind of anachronisms (not the same number, it wouldn't require that) we've seen with older subjects I can guarantee to you that there would be as much griping about those errors, if not more because it would be far more obvious and to a larger number of members. Can you seriously imagine the reaction to an SS figure armed with a wheel-lock, or wearing 19th-century boots? And how about both together?!
In reality it is not just Roman-era figures with anachronisms that get highlighted. You might not recall, in addition to clearly fantasy elements we've seen kit items that are
centuries out for the stated date of the subject. Centuries. Would you be uncritical of a late-renaissance figure armed with a Brown Bess, with a 1911A1 holstered at his belt? Those are not exaggerated examples of the level of error on some ancient-era figures.
Einion