We could use some... figurines!

By Norsehound, in Star Wars: Edge of the Empire RPG

I'm firmly planted with Grimmshade as far as experience and usage. I think many players have a very limited and particular view on minis based on Pathfinder or D&D 4. You say "mini" and people automatically think about grids, movement rules, and "board game" play. That's just one tiny slice of the pie. Even my best Mind Theater players are hard pressed to keep up with everything in an urban combat when there are 5 player characters, 10 allies, 20 enemies, and environment/terrain features all over the scene. In-depth fleet battles with AoR will no doubt fall under the same spotlight. The whole abstract nature of narrative play allows for huge, expansive encounters, not simply 4 heroes vs. a cube in a hallway type scenarios. Having a small, aesthetically pleasing visual representation on the table generally encourages faster, smoother narrative that focuses on the actual engagement, rather than details of how the stage is set. My table sees a nice mix. Many times there's nothing on the table outside of character sheets and the whole thing is worked out verbally. Other times we have a table full of minis and maps. The worst thing I could do as a GM, in my mind, is subscribe to one method or another exclusively and force it on my players. As always, your mileage may vary.

balanced and flexible. do you do yoga, keeop? ;)

I do, actually :) Namaste.

Forgot I had some pics on my phone, I was super lucky and got a 8' by 4' table from work that's wonderful for gaming, even with 6 players, myself GM'ing, our podcast recording gear (we record our sessions), sheets, dice, maps and figures. Admittedly adding beer and snacks makes for a pretty full table, but is worth it ;)

I like the snowball mic. It's what I use for "rough recording" at home for my songwriting.

What's the podcast? I'd love to listen!

The snowball is great - as long as you have a Mac. The version I have doesn't work on windows for some reason.

The podcast isn't up yet, I'm working on the design/development of a nerd site (will have blogs, a podcast or two, etc.) that should be up in the new year.

In the meantime I'm editing through the last 6 sessions we've recorded, which of course is more than 22 hours of material! I plan on breaking them up into episodes that are around 1 hour and 15 mins each (roughly) that I'll release weekly. I'll definitely post here when I get them done - my group is fairly new to RPG'ing (only 2 out of 6 had every played before) and they're a salty bunch, but hilarious, I think it will make for a good adult-oriented RPG podcast.

Glad there's some interest!

Also into Yoga, I have to move my table sideways when it's not in use so my wife can practice in the dining room, as she's a teacher (so I practice as well).

The snowball is great - as long as you have a Mac. The version I have doesn't work on windows for some reason.

The podcast isn't up yet, I'm working on the design/development of a nerd site (will have blogs, a podcast or two, etc.) that should be up in the new year.

I do have a Mac. LOL

Looking forward to the podcast!

Figurines doing Yoga? What happened to the thread?

Anyone got any good suggestions to go to for getting small minis in bulk that look like star wars figures?

Figurines doing Yoga? What happened to the thread?

Anyone got any good suggestions to go to for getting small minis in bulk that look like star wars figures?

Miniature Market has several Star Wars mini's that you can pick up for under a dollar. That's how I got most of mine. I wasn't running a Star Wars game when WotC was putting out all the sets.

Man, this thread has me REALLY wanting good cardboard representations of ships and vehicles, as well as tokens for characters.

With 3d printing these days I would like to see a character generator like star wars galaxies that can make unique characters. then be printable in different poses and equipment.

Welp! Time to drop this link in here again.

Download 'em, print 'em, assemble 'em to your heart's content. It's 30mm though. Also, you'd need to assemble bases separately from OneMonk or buy the plastic bases as per the last two photos below.

I'll make more up as I go along.

papermini-eote-beginner-game-01.jpg

papermini-mos-eisley-aliens-03.jpg

eote-poggle04.jpg

Thank you! These are exactly what I want more of. These and flat tokens like the Beginner Game. Just something to indicate relative position and likeness.

I have come to prefer cardboard and paper to metal and plastic minis.

FFG could easily sell me boxes of tokens, pawns and maps.

It's about time somebody pointed people to this. This is token tool. It's how I make all my tokens for my games. I've made a couple hundred of them at least. theTodd has seen them.

You just find the picture you want to use, save it to a folder on your computer, open token tool, drag the image into token tool, select the token base you want, and save it. Then copy and paste the saved token image into something like word. The default size is 1", but you can make them bigger if the resolution on your picture is good enough. Make enough tokens to fill a page. Print on cardstock. What you do from here depends on how much work you want to put into them. I glue the cardstock page with a heavy coat of elmers glue to a piece of cardboard like you find on the back of a notepad. Weigh it down with a heavy book or something so that it doesn't warp (cover it with paper towels so you don't get glue on your book). Let it dry for at least 24 hours. Then cut out with scissors. Some people buy or make special punches though.