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  • 2020-12-20
    La****ll
    Great quality! Smooth wood and clear designs. Fit perfectly on a grid. They even include a free gift!
  • 2020-09-06
    Su****21
    In-person tabletop gaming is taking a hit thanks to COVID-19, but we still try to find ways to roleplay and hope in the near future things will return to normal with face-to-face gaming sessions.+ The wood is plenty thick enough to be durable+ The laser etching has unique symbology for each class of character and monster type AND the word of what it is below.+ Name is easy to read.+ Having multiples of the same monster does really help.> My only problem is if you are sitting 3 feet away all the wood pieces tend to blend.Unlike cardboard pawns that are full color and distinct in their color, these are all the same color wood, and seeing from a distance or behind the GM screen requires getting up to see which is which on the battle map.I'm learning how to paint miniatures, so I'm probably going to start by picking a color for each player class (one shade of green for ranger and another shade for the druid) and putting a colored border around them so our group can see from a distance the color difference AND differentiate from monster tokens.+ Wood is light that these are easy to transport around without feeling like I'm bringing a 2x4 in my backpack.+ The size of the wood tiles fits well enough on a battle map and you can stack condition rings under the square tiles easily too.OVERALL:A simple solution to generic monsters and player classes that one set could get used as proxies regardless of the fantasy scenario/campaign you're going through. Especially if you never invested in cardboard pawns or spent way too much money on plastic/resin/metal miniatures, then this is a great option to consider.I like it a lot!!
  • 2020-09-06
    Su****20
    In-person tabletop gaming is taking a hit thanks to COVID-19, but we still try to find ways to roleplay and hope in the near future things will return to normal with face-to-face gaming sessions.+ The wood is plenty thick enough to be durable+ The laser etching has unique symbology for each class of character and monster type AND the word of what it is below.+ Name is easy to read.+ Having multiples of the same monster does really help.> My only problem is if you are sitting 3 feet away all the wood pieces tend to blend.Unlike cardboard pawns that are full color and distinct in their color, these are all the same color wood, and seeing from a distance or behind the GM screen requires getting up to see which is which on the battle map.I'm learning how to paint miniatures, so I'm probably going to start by picking a color for each player class (one shade of green for ranger and another shade for the druid) and putting a colored border around them so our group can see from a distance the color difference AND differentiate from monster tokens.+ Wood is light that these are easy to transport around without feeling like I'm bringing a 2x4 in my backpack.+ The size of the wood tiles fits well enough on a battle map and you can stack condition rings under the square tiles easily too.OVERALL:A simple solution to generic monsters and player classes that one set could get used as proxies regardless of the fantasy scenario/campaign you're going through. Especially if you never invested in cardboard pawns or spent way too much money on plastic/resin/metal miniatures, then this is a great option to consider.I like it a lot!!
  • 2020-09-06
    Su****19
    In-person tabletop gaming is taking a hit thanks to COVID-19, but we still try to find ways to roleplay and hope in the near future things will return to normal with face-to-face gaming sessions.+ The wood is plenty thick enough to be durable+ The laser etching has unique symbology for each class of character and monster type AND the word of what it is below.+ Name is easy to read.+ Having multiples of the same monster does really help.> My only problem is if you are sitting 3 feet away all the wood pieces tend to blend.Unlike cardboard pawns that are full color and distinct in their color, these are all the same color wood, and seeing from a distance or behind the GM screen requires getting up to see which is which on the battle map.I'm learning how to paint miniatures, so I'm probably going to start by picking a color for each player class (one shade of green for ranger and another shade for the druid) and putting a colored border around them so our group can see from a distance the color difference AND differentiate from monster tokens.+ Wood is light that these are easy to transport around without feeling like I'm bringing a 2x4 in my backpack.+ The size of the wood tiles fits well enough on a battle map and you can stack condition rings under the square tiles easily too.OVERALL:A simple solution to generic monsters and player classes that one set could get used as proxies regardless of the fantasy scenario/campaign you're going through. Especially if you never invested in cardboard pawns or spent way too much money on plastic/resin/metal miniatures, then this is a great option to consider.I like it a lot!!
  • 2020-08-31
    A****.
    The tokens are cleanly etched and easy to read. Mine punched out relatively cleanly although the vast majority had a bit of hanging wood remaining at the top center: fairly easy to pick off by hand and certainly a quick sanding if it bothers. No other concerns punching them out and the quality seems fairly sturdy. I am planning to use these primarily as an initiative tracker but they can certainly serve fine as a substitution or lower-cost alternative to miniatures.
 
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