RPG Evolution: Gift Ideas for Miniature Gamers (2025)

Here's a list for gamers who need miniatures at the table or are just starting out.
Thanks to improvements in manufacturing, small publishers can now produce miniatures at scale. Here's a list for gamers who need miniatures at the table or are just starting out.

Please Note: Products listed on Amazon fluctuate in price and availability, so if you want this in time for the holidays be sure to order early.

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Dry Erase Tokens ($8)

For the DM who values flexibility over form, these tokens are perfect. It accomodates large and medium-sized creatures and is double-sided. I use these for my weekly games and honestly if your players don't mind, it covers 90% of all use cases for miniatures.

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Combat Risers ($12)

Miniature combat can be complicated under even the simplest circumstances, but flying minatures adds an additional axis that can make it very hard to see who is where. Enter these transparent combat risers, which give a sturdy platform for your characters and monsters to fly (or fall).

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Monsters, Mimics, & Mysteries ($28)

This set features a large chimera, mimics, assorted monsters, and other objects. Some of them are very unique (Krampus, deformed godling, axolotl warrior), while others are of limited use (I love mimics, but I really don't need a mimic of everything). Of this set, the "mysteries" are great, and this set includes quite a few decent character miniatures: a tabaxi rogue, satyr bard, two tiefling types ("cursed orc" is rather tiefling-y, and the demonic cleric).

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Classic Encounters - Expansion Set I ($43)

This set features a large giant, three large elementals (two are translucent, the acid and air elementals) and a naga. There are multiple versions of the same monsters, which are relatively common: harpies, dire wolves, wild boars, and then several humanoids: knights, ghouls, bugbears, werewolves, bandits, cultists, oozes, and mummies. There's a few strange outliers (I don't know what a "gas serpent" is and there aren't many Medium-sized giant worms in D&D). This is one of those sets to fill out a DM's arsenal and overall it does a decent job.

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Ominous Encounters ($45)

This set is known chiefly for its huge miniatures, including an overweight dragon (Themberchaud made an appearance in the D&D movie and we'll never be the same), a "rhino monstrosity," a cyclops, and an ogre sorceress. The rest of the set features three miniatures in different colors (gray, orange, green) and different fiendish types, mostly monsters with a couatl thrown in for good measure. I'm particularly fond of the pumpkin-headed monster because I am using one in my campaign.

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Classic Encounters - Essential Set ($50)

In case you were wondering where the other elementals were from the earlier set, this set has them: a water and fire elemental, both large, along with a huge dragon, and three large figures (ogre, dire bear, and troll). The rest is your standard monsters in varying amounts (giant rat, kobold, gnoll, troglodyte, goblin, orc, skeleton, giant spider, gargoyle, giant fire beetle, and zombie). There's a magma ooze for some reason, plus a few banshees and ghosts. There's also a dragonkin shaman, a tiefling sorcerer, and a half-elf for PCs. And of course...a huge dragon!
 

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Michael Tresca

Michael Tresca

These figure look a lot better than some of the sets I seen on Amazon for about the same cost. The above classic set looks like it has most of what one needs and might just make it under the tree.

I also seen some new styles on the Advent Calendar with dice and figures that might be cool for people.
 

These figure look a lot better than some of the sets I seen on Amazon for about the same cost. The above classic set looks like it has most of what one needs and might just make it under the tree.

I also seen some new styles on the Advent Calendar with dice and figures that might be cool for people.
Yeah the advent calendars are MUCH better than they were. I got one that was just a hodgepodge mess of leftovers that nobody wanted.

Way better now! https://amzn.to/4isX5wN
 

What's the quality on those Under Dusk miniatures?

I bought a set of Wildspire miniatures because they were cheap and...you get what you pay for. If you're only interested in tokens for tabletop use, then they're probably good enough, but don't buy them for a serious miniatures afficionado (nerds like me). Really low quality plastic (very bendy), and very low detail. I primed them but then couldn't find a single one I felt was worth the effort of painting, so threw them in the recycle bin. However, someone over on Minisgallery has told me that they've improved their game lately.

For high quality unpainted plastic miniatures that don't require assembly, I recommend Steamforged Games, especially their "Epic Encounter" series. Each set comes with the miniatures, a two-sided battle map, and a short adventure module (links are to Canadian Amazon; the prices will likely be much better in the US). And many FLGS carry them. Here's an example:


And if you don't mind doing some assembly, Dungeons and Lasers offers sets that are in a stiffer HIPS plastic that allows for better detail and are really outstanding miniatures. Here's an example (these were originally Stretch Goal miniatures; I have all of them and they are excellent):

 

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