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Post by Bhoritz on May 5, 2018 11:36:14 GMT -9
Hi, I am turning my carboard minis into pieces to play in Tabletop Simulator. Though it is normally a program to play through the internet, I intend to use it on the table to display the tactical situation (and a lot of other things, taking advantage of having a screen to record and show things). Non figures elements (trees, the bridge,..) are just quick scribbles in a notebook (you can still see the 0.5 mm squares) turned into 3D stuff. I wanted to know if anybody else was using his figures minis this way?
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Post by mproteau (Paper Realms) on May 5, 2018 11:45:10 GMT -9
I'm not using anything like that, but I gotta say. Those trees are the bees knees!
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Post by Vermin King on May 5, 2018 11:45:17 GMT -9
I hadn't seen this done before, but it is intriguing
Also intriguing are your 'scribbles'. I wish I could do scribbles like that. Beautiful
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Post by okoto on May 6, 2018 11:36:03 GMT -9
I have never used Tabletop Simulator. I love your scribbles.
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Post by Bhoritz on May 8, 2018 9:12:46 GMT -9
Thanks for the comments. The way I am using Tabletop Simulator for RPGs, it is not different than playing at a table. Any cardboard stuff can be easily transformed into elements for the game, because paper models have generally quite simple 3D structure (I experimented with Dave Graffam, Okum and One Monk stuff before deciding to draw new things myself). I decided on the uncolored look because it was way faster (and it is indeed very fast) and it made the figures stand out better. I still print the figures for skirmishing on a real table, and I'll probably turn some of the background elements (like the bridge) into (color) cardboard models at some time in the future, if needed for a game.
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