Then why even make a miniature product line at all?
Then why even make a miniature product line at all?
Then why even make a miniature product line at all?
A picture of a pipe is not a pipe. A picture of a tree, is not a tree.
A scale model of a tree isn't a tree either.
Beacuse most people just want something that looks kinda a little better than pennies and gumdrops. Scale freaks aand other terrain-wanery represents the lunatic fringe of gaming in some respect. Take a bow.
I've got some 28mm scale models of Bonsai trees that can hardly be seen.
Getting the thread back on track.
Scott_Rouse said:D&D 4e is not for everyone. Regardless of the D&D edition you play, if you are still playing, you are playing D&D. It says so right on the book.
With my quote in mind and responding to the OPs query, the statement on the tile pack is in no way an acknowledgment of the the fact the 4e is not for everyone but we are also not so naive as to think that the only people who buy these things play 4e. They are an RPG accessory for games that use 1 inch grid (or games that don't if you can look past the lines and hash marks) and the statement is meant to acknowledge that.
Yes, I think you're right. People who like prepainted minis that are only approximately to scale are just wrong. How can they be so wrong and not realize it?Then use/make tokens. They are cheaper to make, and you can fit more in a pack for less to the consumer.
I think more people would agree with you if you'd stop being so obtuse. Small DDM minis have the same size bases. Mediums have the same size, etc. We're talking about small differences in scale that do not affect their use in the game one iota.I mean should a kobold be put on a large DDM base? Why not, who cares right!