I got a shipping notice from FedEx on my order so maybe next week for me.
It definitely makes me want to know more about the store, in a way that a lot of "dragons confronting heroes" art does not. All of those characters look very specific, including the cleric with the glowing eyes.Damn you. Love the cover on that box.
I laminate almost all my maps. It removes folds. They can't be torn. They can be written on and erased. Water proof.Can anyone explain why people want dense laminated maps, as opposed to the 4e maps which unfolded without "bending upwards" all the time? The 4e original battle maps for their adventures were simply printed maps. The Gale Force did printed maps that rolled. The whole time, other companies did higly laminated, unable to unfold except with heavy books, maps. Why are those the ones that are popular?
I get that point. But how many times do you use one map? Once? Twice? Maybe, three times at most? Why not have a map that actually unfolds and lays on the table flat?I laminate almost all my maps. It removes folds. They can't be torn. They can be written on and erased. Water proof.
The maps you're talking about positively are extremely popular and, at least for a time, sold very well for decent coin in the aftermarket. I've never understood why WotC didn't make more of them.Can anyone explain why people want dense laminated maps, as opposed to the 4e maps which unfolded without "bending upwards" all the time? The 4e original battle maps for their adventures were simply printed maps. The Gale Force did printed maps that rolled. The whole time, other companies did higly laminated, unable to unfold except with heavy books, maps. Why are those the ones that are popular?