Village Works Review.
Village works is an awesome buy if you need a quick, decently detailed village where interiors are not needed. The texturing work is very good and the amount of different types of exteriors walls that are included allows for pretty much any building a person can think of. The ability to mix and match the different walls, makes this set a good buy if the game played does not need to use interiors. This is great for getting up and running with a village in the shortest amount of time. I use Village works for my Warmachine games as well as Dungeons and Dragons Miniatures games. It would work well anytime a quant medieval look is necessary. I have used this set with Rezolution to create some of the more haunting locals along with the modern Mayhem sets.
There are set buildings in the set like the stone hut, stable and the mill. But the real value in Village Works is the ability to modify buildings or create them from scratch. Match the right plaster wall with the correct stone base wall and you have a custom building. Add a roof and your done. Change the stone base or the plaster wall with the same roof and you have a different building. There are props to create a a more believable medieval town. There are textures for stone, stucco and wood exteriors. There is a bridge. There is a water wheel if someone wants to have a mill. This set comes with some various ground tiles that are nice to use if you need a creek or narrow river. A pond tile and a bog tile. There are templates for tents that would be used with a tournament or visiting dignitary. There are also props to fill the streets with to make the town come alive. There are shipping crates, a cart, food stands, etc. The instructions on how to bring it all together are ver well done. All that a person needs is their imagination. This is where the strength of World Works products come into play. Being able to cut short a wall to change the way the wall fits with another part of the building is great. You cannot get that from Resin terrain.
The set comes with paper miniatures that you can use to get up and running as quickly as possible. I’ll admit I’m a metal miniatures fan (ok, I’ll accept plastic, but I like the 3d look of the mini’s and I like painting them) but the paper mini’s are not bad. They just aren’t metal or plastic mini’s.
There are no interior walls. A separate set called Pubs and Inns will provide the interiors to the buildings. So Role players will need both sets in order to create a town where the player characters would be at home in. Not that I find this too disturbing as I first purchased Village Works to give my war gaming terrain a boost without bankrupting me. And this set has done this very well. Which brings me to the bridge. The bridge while nicely detailed is very narrow and the cart included in the set would not make it across the bridge, a single small mini would make it across the bridge but that is it. Great for the defender, until he wants to chase the enemy down and destroy them.
Village Works is a great buy for those who need a village quickly, economically and without a lot of fuss.
Village works is an awesome buy if you need a quick, decently detailed village where interiors are not needed. The texturing work is very good and the amount of different types of exteriors walls that are included allows for pretty much any building a person can think of. The ability to mix and match the different walls, makes this set a good buy if the game played does not need to use interiors. This is great for getting up and running with a village in the shortest amount of time. I use Village works for my Warmachine games as well as Dungeons and Dragons Miniatures games. It would work well anytime a quant medieval look is necessary. I have used this set with Rezolution to create some of the more haunting locals along with the modern Mayhem sets.
There are set buildings in the set like the stone hut, stable and the mill. But the real value in Village Works is the ability to modify buildings or create them from scratch. Match the right plaster wall with the correct stone base wall and you have a custom building. Add a roof and your done. Change the stone base or the plaster wall with the same roof and you have a different building. There are props to create a a more believable medieval town. There are textures for stone, stucco and wood exteriors. There is a bridge. There is a water wheel if someone wants to have a mill. This set comes with some various ground tiles that are nice to use if you need a creek or narrow river. A pond tile and a bog tile. There are templates for tents that would be used with a tournament or visiting dignitary. There are also props to fill the streets with to make the town come alive. There are shipping crates, a cart, food stands, etc. The instructions on how to bring it all together are ver well done. All that a person needs is their imagination. This is where the strength of World Works products come into play. Being able to cut short a wall to change the way the wall fits with another part of the building is great. You cannot get that from Resin terrain.
The set comes with paper miniatures that you can use to get up and running as quickly as possible. I’ll admit I’m a metal miniatures fan (ok, I’ll accept plastic, but I like the 3d look of the mini’s and I like painting them) but the paper mini’s are not bad. They just aren’t metal or plastic mini’s.
There are no interior walls. A separate set called Pubs and Inns will provide the interiors to the buildings. So Role players will need both sets in order to create a town where the player characters would be at home in. Not that I find this too disturbing as I first purchased Village Works to give my war gaming terrain a boost without bankrupting me. And this set has done this very well. Which brings me to the bridge. The bridge while nicely detailed is very narrow and the cart included in the set would not make it across the bridge, a single small mini would make it across the bridge but that is it. Great for the defender, until he wants to chase the enemy down and destroy them.
Village Works is a great buy for those who need a village quickly, economically and without a lot of fuss.