kiznit
Explorer
Sometime shortly after Christmas, all of my miniatures (about two large boxes worth) were stolen out of my car.
After much lamenting, disparaging, and wondering what the heck some two-bit thief would want with a couple hundred dollars worth of half-painted D&D miniatures (I should check e-bay), I finally resigned myself and my brother and I recently started to recreate our collection, mostly out of the svgames.com Chainmail blowout sale (I'm sure you've seen the banner blinking at you - less than a buck a miniature is a pretty wicked deal!).
Anyway, I've been thinking a lot lately now about having some modular dungeon pieces to be adventuring with, a la Master Maze. Master Maze is, of course, way too expensive (I read someone suggesting that the best way to use Master Maze is to buy a set, put it in the closet and never open it, save up a month or two till you can buy another one, keep repeating this until you have 5 or 6 sets, then open them all and go nuts - but I think that's because if you open just one and see what you get for $80 dollars it's really hard to buy another one).
A 3 to 4 hundred dollar investment being way out of my league, so far I have figured out two other options:
Option one is Hirst Fantasy Architecture, with which you can make absolutely beautiful modular dungeon pieces and castles all by yourself for around $30 bucks a mold (which are infinitely reusable), you could probably end up getting 3 or 4 different molds and then you're set for life. These models are aMAZing looking, and have an infinite amount of variety to them. The problems with these is that they are incredibly time-consuming to make, which right now I'm pretty sure I can't handle.
Option two is good old Dirt Cheap Dungeons which are wonderfully inexpensive downloadable paper modules (everything from villages to landscapes to dungeon ruins) which run for only $10 bucks each (cheaper for B&W) and are fairly quick and easy to assemble (and are infinitely reprintable as well). On the other hand, we're talking cheap paper here...
Have any of you used either of these products, or know of any other alternatives? What do you think of them? I've known people to use LEGOs or even just wooden building blocks.
Tell me your stories, please. Thanks!

After much lamenting, disparaging, and wondering what the heck some two-bit thief would want with a couple hundred dollars worth of half-painted D&D miniatures (I should check e-bay), I finally resigned myself and my brother and I recently started to recreate our collection, mostly out of the svgames.com Chainmail blowout sale (I'm sure you've seen the banner blinking at you - less than a buck a miniature is a pretty wicked deal!).
Anyway, I've been thinking a lot lately now about having some modular dungeon pieces to be adventuring with, a la Master Maze. Master Maze is, of course, way too expensive (I read someone suggesting that the best way to use Master Maze is to buy a set, put it in the closet and never open it, save up a month or two till you can buy another one, keep repeating this until you have 5 or 6 sets, then open them all and go nuts - but I think that's because if you open just one and see what you get for $80 dollars it's really hard to buy another one).
A 3 to 4 hundred dollar investment being way out of my league, so far I have figured out two other options:
Option one is Hirst Fantasy Architecture, with which you can make absolutely beautiful modular dungeon pieces and castles all by yourself for around $30 bucks a mold (which are infinitely reusable), you could probably end up getting 3 or 4 different molds and then you're set for life. These models are aMAZing looking, and have an infinite amount of variety to them. The problems with these is that they are incredibly time-consuming to make, which right now I'm pretty sure I can't handle.
Option two is good old Dirt Cheap Dungeons which are wonderfully inexpensive downloadable paper modules (everything from villages to landscapes to dungeon ruins) which run for only $10 bucks each (cheaper for B&W) and are fairly quick and easy to assemble (and are infinitely reprintable as well). On the other hand, we're talking cheap paper here...
Have any of you used either of these products, or know of any other alternatives? What do you think of them? I've known people to use LEGOs or even just wooden building blocks.
Tell me your stories, please. Thanks!