Dragonlock Dungeon Terrain Kickstarter Is Off & Running
October 7, 2015 by stvitusdancern
Fat Dragon Games has gone to Kickstarter to help fund an interesting campaign. They are looking to create an interlocking dungeon terrain set that you and get this, can print at home on your 3D printer!
A few months back the guys were talking about 3D printers and the possible future of subscription or purchase of miniatures that can be printed at home.
The future is now upon us with this new project. Imagine it, you are at home and decide you want to expand your current dungeon for next weeks game day.
You load the file into your 3D printer and hours later you have terrain. Isn't technology grand? Check you the Fat Dragon Games Kickstarter and see what the possibilities can be, they have already blown past their funding goal.
Is this the future of miniature gaming?
"A few months back the guys were talking about 3D printers and the possible future of subscription or purchase of miniatures that can be printed at home..."
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Just had a look at the kickstarter page, now I’m wondering if I can afford a 3D printer. This stuff look superb!
They have a for free open license standard for dungeon tiles already. Although I do like the locking bits…
Example below…
http://www.thingiverse.com/search?q=dungeon&sa=
Now how do I persuade my wife that we really need a 3D printer, any ideas everybody?
Well if you want a REALLY good printer you could take out a large insurance policy on her. Then run her a nice hot bubble bath for her one evening, insist she gets in and relax with a glass of wine while you make dinner, leave a radio on the side of the bath so she can listen to nice relaxing music and then, accidently knock it over into the bath when you come to refill her glass. I myself am actually looking for a good 3D printer on-line as we speak. And a cheap but powerful radio. And a… Read more »
That’s disturbing waywarddarkwolf.
Safety fuses will all but ensure her survival.
Think your plans through…..
tsk tsk….
I’m actually crafting my own dungeon out of polysytrene (https://boardgamegeek.com/blog/4873/building-dungeon) but I’m curious.
If you have a 3D-Printer how expensive would it be to print a dungeon?
In germany there’s absolutely no hype about 3D-Printers going on.
Those bits look far too high resolution to be 3d printed on a home device. Well, maybe just my home device…