LOOTgames Prepare For New 3D Printable Sci-Fi Kickstarter
May 11, 2020 by brennon
LOOTgames has got a fun new Kickstarter in the works for those who like their 3D printable terrain. Not All Bunkers Created Equal Kickstarter is coming soon and will provide you with a myriad of new buildings to print off at home and use in your games set in the far future.
Updated Kickstarter Launch Time - Tuesday 13.00 CET
This is just a sneaky preview of what they have lined up. It looks like it will feature a bunch of buildings which are very Sci-Fi agnostic and useful in all manner of different games. I see a lot of these that would be good for Star Wars: Legion, Warhammer 40,000, Infinity and also plenty of Pulpy games like 7TV too.
The piece below looks like the kind of thing that a mad scientist would use to power his doomsday machine for example.
The terrain here is the perfect option for those looking to create iconic objective pieces for the tabletop. Once you have narrative pieces like this you can start to develop a range of scenarios which involve them in some way.
Beyond the standard sort of take-and-hold scenarios, you could use them in skirmishing games as places of refuge, ways to power up machinery and more. It's always better to play a game which is a bit more than "kill each other".
Get ready for the Kickstarter launch tomorrow and we'll be back with more examples of their work!
"Once you have narrative pieces like this you can start to develop a range of scenarios which involve them in some way..."
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Nice looking terrain prices.
Idontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3DprinterIdontneeda3Dprinter…
….but I want one.
It really bugs me that so many of these companies are releasing these great models that you can only get with a 3D printer. I’m with @sundancer though, if they weren’t so expensive (at least ones that can actually print a decent-quality resin mini), I’d snap one up in a heartbeat.
I jumped in on a whim, when Photon + resin and all the stuff to get started was a shade over two hundred quid. You can get going for about £270-£290 now (probably closer to 300 euros) which is *quite* expensive, but for me, well worth every penny! The Phrozen Sonic Mini looks a very interesting little machine and if I could source one for the fabled $190 as originally advertised, I’d probably be spending a lot of time convincing Mrs Blinky that everyone needs two resin printers!