For Christmas this year, I somehow convinced my wife that we should give her cousin and his kids the Dungeons and Dragons 5th edition starter set... and further that I should buy and paint up a set of miniatures to use with it.
Now, this new D&D set is a "theater of the mind" sort of thing (also known as cheap), so no fold out maps, no tokens or stands. It barely has dice. So I really wanted to juice it up for them and make it seem more exciting. Thus the miniatures, and I also made a whole map pack of the Sword Coast for the cousin, who will be the DM of the group. (and that is why I made the
Faerûn t
ravel distances matrix). I went a bit deep with the maps and such, and got about 20 pages of material, including a DM screen that I found somewhere online when looking for travel distances, and I also bought a set of dice for each of the kids.
Anyway, as the kids range from 3 to 8 years old, I knew that I wanted to use Bones miniatures, and began by reading the pre-generated character sheets, which happily are gender neutral. After a few lunch times worth of trawling through the Reaper online catalog, I ordered some miniatures from a seller on Ebay, and set to work. I made a few conversions, mostly to remove the more egregiously bendy weapons, but also to shift them more in the direction of the starting equipment.
Here is the starting group.
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Two humans, elf, dwarf, and halfling |
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Converted staff |
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Converted warhammer |
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Sculpted on detail removed, painted on heraldry |
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Replaced sword with great axe, removed dragon head, replaced with sculpted tree stump |
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No changes! |
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Replaced bendy sword with plastic |
Now, I figured that my own kids might want to play too, and so they needed their own figures (and character sheets, which I wrote up). So I added a barbarian and a Gnome fighter to the group.
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Thankfully no changes |
And I also painted up a henchman/torch bearer and a donkey, because every D&D group needs someone to do the dangerous work for them, and I hope that having miniatures for them will help the group to remember this important fact.
I had a pretty good time painting these, although as always it was a bit of a rush at the end to get them done in time. The wilderness type bases were a lot of fun to do, and if you look closely, you can see there is quite a bit going on there.
Anyway, so there is most of my hobby work for the month. What about you, did you make any miniatures to gift?