The answer is paper terrain. Card stock models fit the bill perfectly. The cost is quite low, assembly is quick, and storage is simple.
I started poking around the internet to find some card stock / paper modeling resources. I found a variety of free models, a lot of them amazingly good for a free model! These models also looked good on the table. At the end of this post I'll put up all the links I found useful. But there is one site I've found that is just great for war gaming needs. Check out Dave's Games for some excellent models.
Dave has a few free models to check out, with the coach house being the best. This is a layered PDF file. That means you can make the house look like brick, stone, stucco, or some other textures. You can add or remove doors and windows. The chimney position can be changed, and the dormer is optional. There are several other options as well. So for one free model, you can get a three or four buildings out of it. Check it out. Here are some shots of the coach house and the hovel models.
So these represent my first attempts at assembly. I really screwed up the roof on the small house (the hovel model). The coach house model looks much better. You can see these are sized for 28mm models. However, you can apparently scale the printing for different sizes. So if I wanted 15mm terrain for Flames of War, I can print at 50% reduction. My only problem is Adobe Reader doesn't have a scaling option that I can find. But you might have it on your printer.
I was so enthused about this, that I purchased the ruins bundle, which gives a bunch of ruin models that look fantastic. Here are some shots of a ruined foundation, just right for WWII or 40K games.
Again, I'm just learning things. So my cuts are a little sloppy and I didn't get things to match up perfectly. But practice will make perfect. So I'm saving those multi-storied building ruins for last.
So, I know that a fully modeled, 3D piece is beautiful and an art form unto itself. There really is no substitute. If you pick up a paper model and hold it up to your face, you'll be unimpressed. I get it. But for gaming purposes, how often do you do that? You just note that the building obstructs LOS or slows movement or presents some other challenge. A paper terrain piece can do that and look great in the process.
Finally, cost is something I've heard a lot about especially printer ink. So, let's do some quick math on this. I'll just throw all costs together and not even break it down to a "per model" basis. Here's what it takes all told:
- Ream of 110# card stock $18
- Full ink cartridge $30
- Glue stick $2
- Xacto knife $5
- "Ruins" bundle (16 models) $30
- Grand total $85
So get moving on your instant terrain! Here are some links to get you started.
Dave's Games as I mentioned is a great, low cost resource.
Paper Terrain.com has some interesting 15mm stuff
World Works is the grand-daddy of paper eye candy, though more for RPG or small skirmish games.
Wizards of the Coast has some awesome looking terrain for free. This stuff looks great, especially the covered bridge! Don't miss this.
Model Train Software.com has software that will let you design your own stuff. Looks very interesting!
Cardboard Warriors is a forum about all things paper model. I've just found this site, and it looks promising.
Also, if you've come this far and didn't ditch my post, here's proof I still plan to use 3D terrain. I've finally, after 3-4 years of procrastination, painted my GW modular gaming hill. And my cat approves!
5 comments:
Nice man, only suggestion I would offer is to use black foam core for the ruins. You glue the printed material to the foam core and then cut out. This will give you some depth on the walls instead of looking so thin.
But nice work man.
Jerry, those came out nice.
Thanks guys! I've thought about mounting to the black foam core, especially for the bigger pieces.
I like it. I have always wanted to do card terrain as thee are some really cool options out there. I might have to check some of this out.
"My only problem is Adobe Reader doesn't have a scaling option that I can find."
However, the Foxit PDF Reader allows you to print at any percent.
See: http://www.foxitsoftware.com/Secure_PDF_Reader/
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