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12 votes
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Scientists and archivists worry Epic Games' control of the 3D model market will 'destroy' cultural heritage
35 votes -
Framework portable handheld case (Beth Deck) by Beth Le
34 votes -
Xbox unveils four new accessibility offerings
28 votes -
Inside Penny's Big Breakaway - The platform game evolved - developer deep dive
7 votes -
Decades later, John Romero looks back at the birth of the first-person shooter
18 votes -
My 3D printed Catan upgrade set is now live
20 votes -
Penny's Big Breakaway | Announcement trailer - 3D platformer by the creators of Sonic Mania
10 votes -
Looking for advice on designing 3D printable board game inserts
Hello Tildes board gamers! I got a 3D printer last year, and over the last few months, I've started printing organizers other people have designed from Printables and Thingiverse, especially for...
Hello Tildes board gamers!
I got a 3D printer last year, and over the last few months, I've started printing organizers other people have designed from Printables and Thingiverse, especially for games with poor provided organization or lots of tokens and cards... however there are a number of games I have where people haven't designed a good organizer, or the ones which exist are lacking in some way (don't fit my boxes, missing boxes for expansions, only support all the expansions, etc)
Does anyone have tips on getting started with designing my own? I've got some very basic 3D modeling knowledge, but my primary strengths are as a programmer, so leveraging something like OpenSCAD would be ideal. I saw the boardgame insert toolkit, but it seems relatively basic - there are lots of convenience features I'd love to add as well (like curved walls for token holders to make it easier to get tokens out). Is that a good place to start, or should I look elsewhere?
Even just some ideas about tolerances and/or tips for how to size sections for cards would be super helpful.
8 votes -
Building a board game using AI as a guide
6 votes -
The Warthog Project - My home flight simulator: An overview
4 votes -
Tunic | Trailer
9 votes -
3DSen: A NES emulator that makes games playable in full 3D and VR
8 votes -
noclip.website - A website that lets you view famous levels from all kinds of games in 3D
33 votes -
3D Printed Dungeon Tile Recommendations
So I'm running a D&D 5e campaign, and so far have been doing "theatre of the mind". But it has it's limitations when I want the players to use actual combat strategy in some areas. I have...
So I'm running a D&D 5e campaign, and so far have been doing "theatre of the mind". But it has it's limitations when I want the players to use actual combat strategy in some areas. I have experience a few years ago with using a 25mm paper grid for 3.5e and Pathfinder, which worked well because it was quick to draw a map with whiteboard marker.
Now I have a 3D printer, and I'm wondering if anyone has any dungeon tile recommendations, considering the following:
Firstly, are there any systems that are quick to assemble/disassemble as the players discover new rooms, or we need to clear table space?
Second, stability of the map is important. If a player knocks the map with their hand, will everything collapse, simply shift slightly, or is it rigidly held together?
Third, community: A larger community that contributes (and takes contributions) would be better than a propriety system that doesn't allow homebrew designs.
I've seen a few systems (openlock, openforge, and almost any keyword combination that I can think of is on kickstarter), but I'm finding it hard to get a feel for how popular the systems are, and how well they actually work when on the table.
Does anyone have any recommendations on a good system? I guess i'm most interested in the game flowing smoothly, but I'm not opposed to going to a blank paper grid if that's really the better solution.
8 votes