Adventures in Dwarven Forge

Dragon Vindaloo

First Post
I have a couple of sets of Dwarven Forge and although I really wanna use them and they look great I havent gotten the chance yet because the people I currently play with are not into it. So I have started a new game on Monday nights revolving around the sets and much more miniature use for a couple of guys I used to play wargames with. Does anyone have any cool modules for use with DF or can anyone point me in the direction of some quick and easy adventures that will work well with DF?

DV
 

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A lot of the Goodman Games Dungeoncrawls are easily represented in Mastermaze. I'm never afraid to simplify a room a bit for it to work with what I have.
 


resscane said:
I had never seen Dwarven Forge in play till the past year when I joined a new group in miami/ft. laud. They have a whole house dedicated to D&D., and miniatures and Dwarven Forge.

Its made for some amazing games and gaming exp. Now granted these guys are a little over the top in commitment and funds expended, but you can do some amazing things w/ this stuff.

http://www.dwarvenforge.com/dwarvenforums/viewtopic.php?id=1048

Now that's gaming!
 

I've used Dwarven Forge in about half my games. Sometimes you have to tweak the dungeon layout a bit to make it fit. The Narrow Passage set is vital for any level of detail - it's a pity it isn't being made anymore.

I find the main advantage over a battlemat or something else 2D is the 3D aspect. Raised platforms, chasms and stairs suddenly become more "obvious" and tactically interesting.
 

Well, I'm apparently going against the grain here, but I hate games that use Dwarven Forge and similar items. I find that they make it very hard to see what's going on unless you hover directly over the maze, and I prefer not to have the entire party standing and looming over the board/table/whatever during every combat. Put me down for someone who's happier without.
 

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