I love this month’s topic from
the RPG Blog Carnival, so I had to join in.
I am very proud that my kids have followed their old man and become
incredibly cheap in their young ages, so not all of these ideas are my own. Just saying.
OK, so the way I typically game
master nowadays is through the use of a simple white board and dry erase
markers. I know a lot of folks have
vastly better resources, but this really works for me. I don’t just use white boards, but I use some
small ones that I found at a school supply store a while back. This means I can easily pick it up, draw and
then put it back down, and if there are people at the far end of the table,
they can have it handed to them without disrupting figures, etc. That’s the easy way.
But let’s be clear - figures are
cool and cool is fun! But how much cool
can you afford? The cheap way to do
figures is to use these new sets that we found at Toys R Us. They are effectively toy soldier figures, but
in different shapes. The two sets in the
picture here are: Pirates & Skeletons and Mythic Warriors (normal adventurers and orcs mainly). These ran my oldest son about $10. Now, not every style of bad guy can be found
in these limited number of sets, so he went a step further. He got a couple sets of really cheap green
army men and then took a lighter to them.
Some were ruined (he uses these as corpses), but the rest became zombies
and other generic horrors. Are they all
to scale? No! but they meet the rule of
cool.
The next two are not
cheap! They are instead, things that we
already had around the house that we can use as figures in a fun way. The first began when my daughter started
playing. Being a young(er) girl, she had
brought some of these tsum tsums to the table with her (I think because she
wasn’t sure she was going to like the game and wanted to have a toy to play
with). Well, I was using the white
boards and at one point there was a minor debate about where people were. So I grabbed her tsum tsums and placed them
around the white board so everybody knew what was what. Fortunately, she had male and female “figures”
and the younger group of players was having a bit too much fun with using
Disney characters as their figures, but oddly enough it worked. Again, these things are not cheap! But we already had them, so it worked for
us. I strongly suggest using the
smallest of the rubber ones. Yours don’t
have to be tsums, but you probably have something around the house that will
work.
OK, last one. Again, this is not cheap! But you probably already have them laying
around your house. And these can be far
more useful than tsums: Legos! Yep, the world’s greatest toy (just my
opinion), makes the greatest playing field.
Not only can you use the mini-figs for showing where characters are, but
you get a larger base and the figures will stay standing up. Don’t know about you, but when I used lead
figures (or whatever they are made of now), keeping them standing up was a
problem, especially when people would get up from the table to get closer to
the figures and personally move them.
This one can go as big as you
want it to. You could lay out the entire
dungeon in Legos and run the party through the whole thing. We normally don’t do that, but it can be
really helpful to place 6-8 Lego blocks on the big plate to show generally
where the walls are. I admit I have
built a couple of things from time to time, typically trapped hallways or one
time a balistae. You can even do
elevations pretty easily, which I have never had enough stuff to do by other
means.
Looking forward to see other
“thrifty” ideas this month!
whoa?! where can one get that hardcopy of Legendquest? :)
ReplyDeleteThere are still a few copies of LQ laying around, but you're so much better off buying the Omnibus edition on line.
ReplyDelete