![]() ![]() No matter how many miniatures we own, we still will not have exactly the right one or exactly the right number for every battle. Even if we spend thousands of dollars on miniatures, as some veteran DMs have, finding the right miniature can take too long to make it useful when running a game. Sometimes it’s money, sometimes it’s time, sometimes it’s physical space, sometimes it’s the flexibility of our game. No matter which of the paths we take or products we buy for D&D miniatures, we’ll always make tradeoffs. We have a wide range of options, from no cost at all to thousands of dollars, but none of these options are perfect. The use of miniatures has evolved in the four decades since, but even today there is no perfect solution for representing monsters and characters at the table. Back then it was often lead or pewter war game miniatures, sometimes painted and sometimes not. It is the same for combat as it is for exploration or roleplay.Įver since D&D game out forty years ago, however, players and DMs have often used some sort of miniature to represent their characters or monsters. When running D&D in the theater of the mind, the DM describes the situation, clarifies it from the questions of the players, listens to what the players want their characters to do, and describes the outcome. ![]() We can use a gameplay style known as the “theater of the mind”. ![]() Groups don’t actually need to use anything to represent monsters or characters in Dungeons & Dragons. When we say “miniatures” we’re really talking about the physical objects we use to represent the characters and monsters in our D&D games. We glossed over one giant topic, however, the topic of miniatures. In my last article we talked about the tools we need to run our D&D games. Monstrous Compendium Vol 3: Minecraft Creatures ![]()
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