I lost my Skaven years and years ago, and these days focus on 40k and (lately) Adeptus Titanicus, but otherwise I’d take you up on your offer-challenge, yes-yes! (Sets up a warpstone minefield)
See my post above regarding my mostly-plastic dwarf army. Got it, thanks.
I wasn’t arguing in favor of 3D printing. I was arguing against gatekeeping game designs. Plenty of other tabletop war gaming systems allow play with tokens for a very low barrier to entry, then you can upgrade as time and money permit. Everyone gets to play, but the hobby is still a hobby.
Nah, I’m talking more about the stuff wayyyyy back in the 90s where Paramount went after so many Star Trek websites only to have it blow up in their face in terms of the fans. They were super jerks compared to today.
Yep.
That’s why the T&Cs of AO3 (Archive of Our Own) specifically forbid users from posting links to their patreon / Ko-Fi / tip jar style site.
This.
For a while, one of D&D campaigns I play in was using customized Lego Minifigs for the PCs, and we are still using paper tokens (and 3d printed bases) for the monsters and NPCs. the other ones are using tokens and whatnot, because we’ve not had the funds to get proper ones cranked out. (yet.)
This is to be expected, really. Games Workshop’s games are designed to sell miniatures. Their games stores are designed to push games workshop products (and somehow kill off independent game stores in the process.)
How is there not a Lego tabletop RPG?
That’s a fantastic question; unfortunately, I don’t really have a good answer.
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