Mark Plemmons
Explorer
Hmmmm....
Seems like the best thing to do would be to only use your painted minis for NPCs and monsters. Ideally, you're the only one who should be moving them around on the table. If your players insist on moving those around, the gloss coat should take care of any minor dings and nicks.
Then tell the players that they must supply their own minis, or you'll use something like a bottle cap, stone, etc to represent them.
Or if you want to supply their miniatures for them, just don't paint them. Maybe if they see their unpainted minis facing off against well-painted NPCs and monsters, they'll decide to paint their own. And gain a little bit of respect for painted minis in the process.
That being said, I'm not a professional mini painter at all. I don't suck at it, but I'm not great, either. So I've never really minded about chips and such on my minis.
- Mark
Seems like the best thing to do would be to only use your painted minis for NPCs and monsters. Ideally, you're the only one who should be moving them around on the table. If your players insist on moving those around, the gloss coat should take care of any minor dings and nicks.
Then tell the players that they must supply their own minis, or you'll use something like a bottle cap, stone, etc to represent them.
Or if you want to supply their miniatures for them, just don't paint them. Maybe if they see their unpainted minis facing off against well-painted NPCs and monsters, they'll decide to paint their own. And gain a little bit of respect for painted minis in the process.
That being said, I'm not a professional mini painter at all. I don't suck at it, but I'm not great, either. So I've never really minded about chips and such on my minis.
- Mark