eyeheartawk
#1 Enworld Jerk™
Who's claiming that in this thread?But to act like it's some sort of rip-off or scam for foolish D&D whales . . . . that's condescending, IMO.
Who's claiming that in this thread?But to act like it's some sort of rip-off or scam for foolish D&D whales . . . . that's condescending, IMO.
Well, I have not posted in the thread because that would be about all I could say on the matter ... this is a huge amount of money for a very specific set piece and you could build something more versatile that could fill this role for a lot less money.Who's claiming that in this thread?
some rich people but tesla, some buy Humvees that are real military steel that have about that efficiency... again it comes down to what you want.YMMV - but that is because you're spending a fortune on a vehicle that gets 3 miles per gallon if you buy this thing.
You could put the tavern set out on the table just to create atmosphere. This would be particularly good in an Undermountain campaign, since the Yawning Portal is also the entrance to the dungeon; each adventure would begin with the players looking at that crumbling circular hole into the bowels of the earth.Way overpriced, but if I understand correctly, it is completely modular, right? Which means that you could use the pieces to build a normal tavern aswell.
Most D&D adventures include a tavern, so in that respect, it could be used in any campaign. But do you need a miniature tavern to depict a tavern in your campaign? Depicting a dungeon I get, since combat takes place in it, and positioning matters. A tavern on the other hand, with the exception of the occasional bar brawl, seems like a location where this is less important.
It certainly wouldn't be cheaper. More modular, but not cheap by any means.I wonder what it would cost to try and do this same thing in Dwarven Forge?