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14Mar/250

Deth Wizards – They not just hunger, they are thirsty as well

In addition to the regular houses and shops (and their ruins) from the Briarwood range, we were looking for a show piece for the table. Not necessarily for Deth Wizards per se, as the table setup is rather compact with 30 by 22 inch, but for the overall set.

And the largest piece from the Briarwood range is the Leaping Frog Inn, which is also available as a ruined terrain piece, but due to its size, is split into several smaller pieces around 15 by 15 cm.

Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins

The Leaping Frog has quite the foot print, and we went for the ruins as they are more accessible for gaming. The ground floor has the main building and a small stable building, which is later connected through the first floor. The rooms are big enough to later house furniture or small scatter terrain in case it is needed.

Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins

The first floor is multipart as well and covers a flight of stairs, along with several rooms. To give you an idea, where this is heading, we placed some of the furniture in there. And now the small stable building is connected to the main building.

Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins

And last but not least the roof parts are added. These are a bit bigger and I am not sure, if I will glue these on or keep them separate for transport / access during gaming.

Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins Dark Realm Forge - Briarwood Leap Frog Inn Ruins

I have to glue these "moduls" together per floor and do some minimal clean up for some loose strands of filament. These were printed with minimal supports, so clean up was in general quite easy.

It is quite sturdy as it is, so I am not decided nor sure if this needs additional basing / a supporting base plate to keep the parts together and blend in the edges. Beyond 3d printed terrain, this is very likely the biggest single piece of terrain that I own, next to the Pegasus Bridge.

Posted by Dennis B.

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