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Looking for the Best Game Rooms & Ideas.

My friend Andy's game room was used as the game room in Fear of Girls Episode #2. The walls are designed to look like stones, a fake fireplace sits centered on the north wall, a fake wooden door is affixed to the western wall. All four walls are shelved with numerous D&D minis, Ral Partha minis, Dwarven Forge terrain, and many pieces of home-made scenery. He used to have two of the statues that were featured at Wizard of the Coast's store at the Mall of America - those have since moved on to storage as they take up way too much room. The only downside to our "dungeon" is that we need space heaters to keep it warm in the winter. Minnesota can be very cold in January! :)

Here's the link to Fear of Girls Episode #2. The first part takes place at the Monster Den in Minneapolis (a great store), at about 2:00 minutes in you will see Andy's dungeon.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bP3GYdrW450"]YouTube - Fear of Girls©: Episode 2[/ame]
 
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Currently we live in an apartment, so our game room is also the dining room. We have a Chessex Mondomat over the dining room table, which gives plenty of play area, fold-up mini-tables to set things on (mostly miniatures and notes), and it's a short walk to the kitchen with its fridge.

Unfortunately, the shelves of RPG books and the miniatures storage is in the office but it's just the next room over, so it's not a problem to pop over if someone needs a book or the DM needs to grab a few more minis for something unexpected.
 

To me the most important element is the table.

When I had the space, I had an oversized (mine is 4' x 8') game surface with a 1" grid drawn onto it, and you can write directly on with wet / dry erase markers (plexiglass sheets on the top if it). Around that huge table I could seat 8 players easily, with their books.

Here is the table I built: The Ultimate Gaming Table

If I were to do it again, I would probably build this style, because I like that you can change the tabletop to be different things (like what if I wanted a hex map?): The Drunk Dwarves » How to Make the Ultimate War Game Table

Good lighting is another thing I like. I had a pair of shop lights directly over my table, so it was very well lit.

Along the wall I had all my minis in plastic bins sorted out by type, and a bookshelf with all my books crammed into it.

This was all before we moved. Now I don't have the space, so we play at the FLGS or around my dining room table.. but I miss my game room.
 

I like that idea of a map mini-table atop the game table. Lets the map and books/sheets not interfere with each other. I can't tell how many times we've had to push books out of the way of minis or the DM's drawing of rooms.
My problem with the small table on top of another table is that I have a mixture of rather short (barely over 5' tall) and rather tall (over 6'4") people in my group. If I make the main table low enough for the shorter people to see the top table, the tall people cannot sit at the table comfortably. If I make the table high enough for the tall people (including me) to sit at, the short people cannot see the top table.

What I use are some rather nice looking wooden folding table around the outside of the table. They can go next to the table, underneath the lip of the table, or wherever it is comfortable for you to use it. Gets the stuff out of the way, but easy to use.
 

I find the library look can be a bit messy looking and distracting. Rather than a bunch of book shelves, how about cabinets? Obviously the price increases, but we're dreaming here, so...

Most of the cabinets would have normal doors, but you could have glass doors for things like minis and such. If you have small children, need the room to double as a spare bedroom when guests show up, or a room for entertaining, having everything behind doors would be nice.

One wall would be floor to almost ceiling cabinets. One wall would be kitchen counter height with a fridge and wet bar and cabinets above. Wall three a window and wall four the door. There would be a ceiling fan and the table wold be something large and sturdy, maybe Amish built. True game tables just don't do it for me and a normal well built table can be used for so much more.

There would be lighting above the wet bar area (one switch) and maybe lights that shine upwards on the cabinets (another switch). Of course the ceiling fan would have a light on another switch.

Speakers in the ceiling is a good idea. An maybe leaving room for a TV in all the cabinetry is a good idea to in case you need to sell down the road or if you start adopting more digital game tools.
 

I find the library look can be a bit messy looking and distracting. Rather than a bunch of book shelves, how about cabinets? Obviously the price increases, but we're dreaming here, so...

Most of the cabinets would have normal doors, but you could have glass doors for things like minis and such. If you have small children, need the room to double as a spare bedroom when guests show up, or a room for entertaining, having everything behind doors would be nice.

One wall would be floor to almost ceiling cabinets. One wall would be kitchen counter height with a fridge and wet bar and cabinets above. Wall three a window and wall four the door. There would be a ceiling fan and the table wold be something large and sturdy, maybe Amish built. True game tables just don't do it for me and a normal well built table can be used for so much more.

There would be lighting above the wet bar area (one switch) and maybe lights that shine upwards on the cabinets (another switch). Of course the ceiling fan would have a light on another switch.

Speakers in the ceiling is a good idea. An maybe leaving room for a TV in all the cabinetry is a good idea to in case you need to sell down the road or if you start adopting more digital game tools.

I like the idea of cabinets, too... but what about bugs? I have a worry of spiders making their homes inside closed cabinets.
 

I like the idea of cabinets, too... but what about bugs? I have a worry of spiders making their homes inside closed cabinets.
If you get spiders, and they make home, it usually means there's other kinds of creatures in your home that they are eating. Spiders rarely survive indoors on their own. It's almost impossible to keep spiders out, but it's much easier to keep the pests they eat out. Just keep your home pest free and the spiders stay out too. Besides, the spider is your friend. ;)
 



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