Books/Dice/Maps/Minis D&D on a Budget

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Brodie Loman

Brodie Loman

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 261
@jeremiahbachmann3901
@jeremiahbachmann3901 4 жыл бұрын
Can't even afford sleeves. That's how you know this guy is legit.
@Brodie_Loman
@Brodie_Loman 4 жыл бұрын
This is it, this is the best comment. everyone else no more comments. we've peaked
@jojo8949
@jojo8949 4 жыл бұрын
Chaotic Misunderstood no I will comment
@SoulStarLA
@SoulStarLA Жыл бұрын
I bet after this video he can now afford sleeves
@theepicphoenix4030
@theepicphoenix4030 Жыл бұрын
Ok
@alexanderkartashov8776
@alexanderkartashov8776 3 жыл бұрын
finaly someone who knows the meaning of the word 'budget'. I also used magnet whiteboard with magnets for minis, but i want to build a cardboard module terrain now. I'ts a bit of work but will cost just a few penny.
@cringe_caster
@cringe_caster 4 жыл бұрын
4:13 Jenga to build structures... GOD THIS IS THE BEST IDEA I'VE EVER HEARD
@jamesmilton8308
@jamesmilton8308 3 жыл бұрын
Add wood 1 in squares, match sticks, and popsicle sticks. I knocked out some nice modular wall markers. Spray paint with black base and a second light grey coat for great results.
@RichardChappell1
@RichardChappell1 3 ай бұрын
I have used that for a while, and awhle back took some 1/2" and 3/4" dowleing and cut them into 1-1/2" lengths for columns. You can even toss a thin sheet of plexiglass to add floors. All cheaper than one of the WOTC books...
@Ken-k3b
@Ken-k3b 4 жыл бұрын
Chaotic : you’re watching this video and so I’m assuming you have a pc or a phone Me: watching this video on my Samsung fridge
@Kaseygoated
@Kaseygoated 2 жыл бұрын
Best comment
@almightyn5959
@almightyn5959 5 жыл бұрын
Jenga wow bro that’s amazing I’m definitely going to use that love the video
@ciscomartinez6092
@ciscomartinez6092 4 жыл бұрын
As another college student that drinks excessively I’m surprised I haven’t used bottle caps as minis
@roobtube6707
@roobtube6707 5 жыл бұрын
when I was really new to the game I used 2d paper nets to construct dice models and lego figures as the miniatures. Now I use... exactly the same thing. Update! I now have a set of dice! Yay me! ... I still use the lego though...
@austingarcia6060
@austingarcia6060 2 жыл бұрын
I used lego too. Both for battlemaps and studs for figures.
@handlesarestupid154
@handlesarestupid154 3 жыл бұрын
"How to save money on DnD stuff!" *JUST STEAL IT*
@namelessband4L123
@namelessband4L123 2 жыл бұрын
Step one dont buy that shit
@knghtbrd
@knghtbrd 2 жыл бұрын
You don't have to steal anything. D20 SRD is free, and that's D&D without the books. There's tons of modules people have written also for free (and some for cheap if they aren't free…) That won't give you a ready supply of monsters or a world map, but there's tools for those things too … and the secret for monsters is always decide how hard you want it to be for your players and write the stat block accordingly based on other stat blocks.
@SoulStarLA
@SoulStarLA Жыл бұрын
Especially if you play a thief rogue
@TheDrewjameson
@TheDrewjameson 3 ай бұрын
I've found that with kids, the best minis are letting them draw their mini on a piece of card stock and then using a binder clip with the metal arms removed to stand it up!
@1000YearBeard
@1000YearBeard 5 жыл бұрын
My library system has LOTS of books and FREE colour printing. Browsing my local thrift store will often reward me with games with minis & dice for super cheap. Dollar store "Jenga" is a better alternative not only because of the price but because of the perfect size and 2 different colours.
@jamesmilton8308
@jamesmilton8308 3 жыл бұрын
Dollar store jenga and Elmer glue for modular wall markers.
@Wesmin
@Wesmin 2 жыл бұрын
My local library system also has a bunch of d&d source books. All hail librarians!
@MichelletheMiniatureMisfit
@MichelletheMiniatureMisfit 5 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic, thank you, I've recently started DMing and unfortunately due to circumstances out of my control, money is tighter than a ducks arse in winter.
@deathguarddavegoogley2022
@deathguarddavegoogley2022 5 жыл бұрын
Why is there never a video with a title like “D&D for the filthy rich?” Lol.
@JesseNapalm
@JesseNapalm 4 жыл бұрын
Wyrmwood table videos.
@jeremiahbachmann3901
@jeremiahbachmann3901 4 жыл бұрын
That's easy..."Buy Everything...done"
@CaedenV
@CaedenV 4 жыл бұрын
There is! It's called the wyrmwood and Critical Role stores
@tinaprice4948
@tinaprice4948 4 жыл бұрын
also look up gaming rooms and there are a few that are amazing
@KevranGames
@KevranGames 4 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/oXK4l6Gdpp1smck smh
@Steve-im6jg
@Steve-im6jg 5 жыл бұрын
I quickly scanned to comments and didn’t notice theses suggestions: 1.)Walmart has craft pain for $0.50-1.00 2.)skip the transparency/ and use a ruler instead of a grid. 3.)if you where inclined to play D&D with full rules instead of the free quick start and didn’t want to pirate them, 3.5 and 4.0 books can be had cheaply on EBay.
@Zanji1234
@Zanji1234 3 жыл бұрын
well 3.5 not sooo much since it is still popular. 4E though is kinda cheap it seems (or get any free OSR Rules System)
@hockeygrrlmuse
@hockeygrrlmuse 2 жыл бұрын
Craft Pain
@dylanwatts1045
@dylanwatts1045 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent suggestions. I'm a fan of using rulers instead of a grid as well. Also, I feel like the 3.5 SRD has more rules than the 5 SRD, and it's free, so you could use that as well.
@GAVJOT
@GAVJOT 3 жыл бұрын
Great video! I've been looking for an ACTUALLY cheap way to run a table-top RPG. I personally already had a printer, chess, plastic and a white-board pen, which let me do some things differently: I printed foldable standing paper-minis and character sheets. I used the chess-pieces as stand-in NPCs for characters I didn't have printed, such as peasants (pawns), animals (knights) or towers/pillars (rooks) etc. I used the chess-board with plastic on top as a map, drawing on the plastic with the white-board pen, wiping it off when changing scene (albeit this made every scene no bigger than 8x8 squares). With paper clips I could easily organize all the flat minis and sheets in a folder, while keeping the chess-piece "minis" in the chess-board.
@vladmurzin8459
@vladmurzin8459 5 жыл бұрын
3+5=7 ?
@Brodie_Loman
@Brodie_Loman 5 жыл бұрын
Look I never claimed to be a scientist. When I said between 2-3 I think that threw me off. I had calculated the numbers before hand and was and 7 was what I remembered it being.
@vladmurzin8459
@vladmurzin8459 5 жыл бұрын
@@Brodie_Loman oh ahaha youre too much :P great vid!
@MorrisMeynolt
@MorrisMeynolt 5 жыл бұрын
Close enough.
@josephramirez883
@josephramirez883 4 жыл бұрын
for real
@CaedenV
@CaedenV 4 жыл бұрын
Math for art students :P
@LeilanAlseides
@LeilanAlseides 2 жыл бұрын
For Minis, I've used Glass beads for years. The ones for decorating with a flat bottom. They come in a variety of different colors and shapes and it is easy to differentiate the characters. My group customised their "minis" by painting on them for easier spotting. Now I just print pictures of the characters in a rectangle format and put them on little plastic holders. Did some for our NPCs where you can write their name on it and some for monsters with numbers and bigger ones for bosses with a skull symbol. To protect them, I just "laminated" them with clear tape. Overall very cheap and looks good on the table and everyone can find everything really quickly.
@bolio9383
@bolio9383 5 жыл бұрын
Love this vid. I started playing at university last year and was also on a budget so I resonate with this a lot haha Something I do a lot now to save money and enhance the game is keep any cardboard that would be thrown away and build locations from it with paint and craft glue. Pretty easy and also fun
@Brodie_Loman
@Brodie_Loman 5 жыл бұрын
Yeah I use cardboard a lot too. If you notice in the background there are piles of boxes and sheets of cardboard.
@tinaprice4948
@tinaprice4948 4 жыл бұрын
Woot! DM Scotty style :)
@thatisjustin5524
@thatisjustin5524 5 жыл бұрын
I used a poster frame from Walmart and flipped the background that came in it , Took a borrowed tape measure and with a pencil used that to make a grid on the back of the paper that came in the frame . I used paper with clip stands that was hand drawn for the PC and enemies
@Brodie_Loman
@Brodie_Loman 5 жыл бұрын
Thats a pretty good one
@shwantheman1173
@shwantheman1173 2 жыл бұрын
Pro tip, a lot of wrapping paper comes with 1x1 inch squares on the back (usually meant for a cutting guide), can be used for a map!
@SamuelTyree1
@SamuelTyree1 2 жыл бұрын
Lol, I just added the same idea and then found your post. Derp!
@neilbradley9035
@neilbradley9035 5 жыл бұрын
Best video I've seen on the topic! Thanks friend! I'm currently a third year in industrial design! So I suppose we're at pretty similar places right now!
@jordanbeard6687
@jordanbeard6687 5 жыл бұрын
You can get craft paint at the dollar store too. It's usually just 4 or 5 colors for that price, but last time I was there they had 2 different types. One was red, blue, yellow, green; the other one was black, white, gray, silver, and what I would call non-metalic gold or maybe pale bronze. I dunno, but they were cheap and would work fine on wooden minis. Also get your paint brushes at the dollar store. And for the bases you could pick up some elmers glue while still at the dollar store, and cut some 1 inch circles from cardboard you find for free (or you probably already have some lying around, I always seem to for some reason). Use the glue to fill in the edges of the cardboard. If you want to go a step up from the wooden minis you can also get those bags of toy soldiers/skeletons/bugs/etc. Even when I use "real" minis I often use those as my bad guys. Spend 1 buck and get 30 bad guys, works for me. They also right now have these metal mini-figs for WWE. I'm working on repainting those to be D&D themed. They're a few mm too tall for regular minis, but most players don't really care about that level of detail when playing. It represents my character, and it doesn't look like a plain circle or just using some dice.
@ilovelucy3508
@ilovelucy3508 2 жыл бұрын
I love the Dollar tree ones by my house cause they're perfectly 2 inches long so they fit squares nice. I painted them with a cobble stone stencil
@y292
@y292 4 жыл бұрын
Hey just throwing it out for everyone, librarys near u "should" have computers and internet. The one i go to allows me to print sheets for .75 a page for black and white or $1. For color. Just helping out cause i like doing things cheap ^_^
@Intro2Love
@Intro2Love 5 жыл бұрын
wooden pawns, interesting! thank you for sharing👍
@koikoi3570
@koikoi3570 5 жыл бұрын
My friends and I use Legos from our houses for the Minis. If you have Legos.....go ahead :3
@nukerwolf7788
@nukerwolf7788 5 жыл бұрын
Wrapping paper some have grid on the under side
@chantallooyen3566
@chantallooyen3566 4 жыл бұрын
You could also use Lego mini figures for characters and bricks, etc. to build walls. And there are trees. This is only budget friendly if your Mom kept your old Legos from when you were a kid or if you manage to find some second hand or on a good sale. There are often small scale children’s toys in the low cost stores that can be used. My group has found dragons, trees, knights, wagons and castles this way. Pet stores sell castles and ruins in the aquarium section. The scale is usually good. If you have an iPhone, ask Siri to roll a D20 etc. for you
@timbuktu8069
@timbuktu8069 8 ай бұрын
I LOVE your philosophy! For the miniature monsters I've found that I can add some pipe cleaner "arms" and/or wings and spray paint them green. I would support you but I got this for free soooo......
@ModernMarvel.
@ModernMarvel. 3 жыл бұрын
Very helpful. Id recommend instead of jenga buy a cheap hand saw for like less than 5$. Then buy 8ft firring strips from homedepot for like 1.25. Thats a lot of jenga peices
@spicy_lemon_waves7682
@spicy_lemon_waves7682 2 жыл бұрын
I have been scouring the internet for this kind of thing, thank you so much
@MrRourk
@MrRourk 4 жыл бұрын
10mm Miniatures are a hell of a lot cheaper than 28/25mm. N Scale Model Railroad stuff is compatible with 10mm Miniatures.
@jamescole4317
@jamescole4317 2 жыл бұрын
I gotta say, Jenga is a GENIUS idea - cheap terrain, that works for more or less any scenario indoors, or if you stand them up, you have a forest. Incredible
@blazingfire90034
@blazingfire90034 5 жыл бұрын
Amazon often has sales on the books too, recently they had a crazy sale and the main 3 books (dungeon master guide, monster Manuel, and player handbook.) Were about 20 bucks each. I have no idea if the sale, is still going on but its definitely cheaper than the regular 60 dollar price.
@jordanbeard6687
@jordanbeard6687 5 жыл бұрын
d20srd.org it's all the base rules, it's legal, and it's free.
@davidr9876
@davidr9876 2 жыл бұрын
I'm new to Dnd and I'm cheap. I do have a chess set with mouse pad material board. Boom...instant minis and grid. my board has 2 1/4 inch squares ao I'll make each one = 4 feet. Hey...it will get me started lol. Now where's that Jenga set we used to have? If I can't find it I'm breakingnout the Catan set, I've got roads for walls right there. And the game board pieces can be repurposed for bushes! boulders, trees etc. Pretty sure we've got a leggo set somewhere as well. I'll make it work.
@GlenHallstrom
@GlenHallstrom 4 жыл бұрын
Good stuff there. I like the little wooden people minis, although I went heavy into tokens. Now I gotta say that it's good you pointed them to D&D Beyond for the rules BUT, being an OSR Grognard, there are a LOT of rulesets out there for free besides 5E. For instance, the entire line for the Basic Fantasy ruleset is free as pdfs (www.basicfantasy.org) not to mention both Labyrinth Lord (goblinoidgames.com/index.php/downloads) and Swords and Wizardry (www.froggodgames.com/product/swords-wizardry-complete-rulebook) have no-art versions on their website for free - the complete rules, just no art.
@prestonbrower762
@prestonbrower762 5 жыл бұрын
Using the PDFs is NOT stealing. They are published by wizards of the coast for this exact reason.
@mitchellbrady7448
@mitchellbrady7448 5 жыл бұрын
WotC does not publish PDFs
@LupintheThird
@LupintheThird Ай бұрын
​@mitchellbrady7448 The PDFs suggested by the video are indeed scans of the physical rulebook which aren't available from WotC as PDFs (bafflingly). But WotC DOES publish two very important PDFs: the Basic Rules which is a cut-down combo of the Player's Handbook and Monster Manual; and the 5.1 System Reference Document, which has minimal player guidance but over 300 monster stat blocks, over 100 magic items, most of the spells, and a subclass from each of the Handbook classes. Combine these two and it's only a step removed from having both the PHB and MM for free. These two PDFs are probably what the prior replyer was thinking of, even though it doesn't match what was said in the video.
@stanbunn1329
@stanbunn1329 2 жыл бұрын
The best way to get cheap maps is to go the dollar store and get some wrapping paper, the back of it has an almost perfect inch by inch grid.
@frost68nskate
@frost68nskate 2 жыл бұрын
I really like this. Cause like you said all the other "budget" videos are more expensive than they make it seem or take like hours of time and a bunch of material to make complicated things.
@RichardChappell1
@RichardChappell1 2 жыл бұрын
Chris Gonnerman's "Basic Fantasy Role-Playing Game" is completely free online. It's like OSR D&D. There are physical books available for typically under $5. They don't have all the pretty pictures and formatting, but - free. No stealing involved.
@mykediemart
@mykediemart 3 ай бұрын
Great suggestion and a good game
@shellykp33
@shellykp33 3 жыл бұрын
Books=library. Free and you can usually make photocopies of whatever pages you need for free or very cheap.
@duckofalltrades
@duckofalltrades 4 жыл бұрын
Hey brother, this is by far the best video of this kind in KZbin. I’ve wanted to get into D&D for a long time, but cost has always been a problem. Great info, keep the content coming.
@harryliang4743
@harryliang4743 5 жыл бұрын
This is amazing. He has the most nerd room of all time. Amen brotha
@shoddypeasant8762
@shoddypeasant8762 4 жыл бұрын
I can’t get any jenga sets so I’m gonna have to use my Lincoln logs hopefully they work
@piluex2
@piluex2 5 жыл бұрын
For my minis I just print pictures I find online,put then together on a word document, and glue them to pieces of cardboard (any cardboard works really, as long as it isn't too flimsy), and for the bases I just use cheap binder clips from a chinese store. For the bigger ones you can also make the bases from cardboard, since binder clips no longer do the job for the bigger monsters
@doodlebug8533
@doodlebug8533 4 жыл бұрын
OMG thanks so much, totally trying this!
@daledotson4336
@daledotson4336 Жыл бұрын
I like to play DND on a budget my self (self restriction due to not playing super often) I like to get stuff at 5 below or dg or animal minis and sometimes you can find a really big bucket that has trees and such for like 10 bucks and 20 animals
@Twitchay420
@Twitchay420 Жыл бұрын
my current minis are pictures that i cut out (print a page from staples for about 6$) double side and tape (acts like laminating) then glue to a bingo chip (can get a pack for 8$) so depending on size of the mini (range from gnome/dwarf - dragons) you can maybe .25-1$ per mini
@Tahn_yt
@Tahn_yt 3 жыл бұрын
I use lego heroica board games, because they've got loads of little mini's and tileable pieces
@jedimeyer1298
@jedimeyer1298 2 жыл бұрын
At this point, I've been using a Chess set for my map and minis. White pieces for players and NPCs, black for the bad guys.
@paulll47
@paulll47 2 жыл бұрын
You can shave off even more by using cardstock miniatures, I downloaded a couple of free ones and had them printed at my local stationary shop, 30 characters for 7 euros, I used the same method you used for maps untill I found a 1998 Chessex mat for 10 euros, my first OSR game was white box and its free, the only thing I spent a little more were a set of dices for 8 euros because I can't stand compurer dice rollers. Overall I would say that its pretty cheap to get into miniature gaming.
@dawnjackson5773
@dawnjackson5773 4 жыл бұрын
So 3d printers are more affordable than they use to be.. If you just save 20 bucks a month for a year.. Than you will have enough money to get a really good printer. I have a FDM printer and print really good minis.. The filament will cost you like 20 bucks and last months and months worth of printing minis everyday.. And it will save you so much money.. Also if you go to the basic fantasy rpg website you can get all of thats games books for free with out "stealing" them including adventures books because that creator of the game wants the game to be able to be played by all.. FYI it is basically old school d&d.. Or you can just play theater of the mind and not need minis that works just as well.
@AzraelThanatos
@AzraelThanatos 4 жыл бұрын
I would actually suggest skipping the map, minis, and paint. You can condense that down quite a bit more. The mini-jenga thing from the dollar tree is a good start, grab 3 of them and grab a dollar store chess and checkers set (1 of each). That gets you a decently sized grid area and minis that can be used rather easily without paint, or a couple cents to add a bit to them (Or just grab some rubber bands and coil the around to differentiate between them). I would also suggest going for the D&D basic rules first from the official site before pirating stuff, easier to actually learn the rules there anyhow. Personally, I prefer to have actual dice rather than using a dice roller when playing in person. It tends to make things simpler. Spend some of the saved cash there on a good set or two. If you want something really cheap and portable, there's what I used for a long while as a travel thing. Rules on my tablet, and I got one of the 2 pack of magnetic travel games with a chess and checkers set in them ($1 for the combined sets). I used a black sharpie, a white out pen, and some clear nail polish ($1 each at the dollar store, the marker and white out you might be able to borrow easily) to number the checkers pieces and the chess pieces with more than 1 of the same in the same color (Black on White/Red and White on the Black, then covered it with the nail polish). I got a roll of magnetic tape and some of the thin craft sticks ($1 each) and used a heavier duty pair of scissors (Already had a pair, but I've seen some in the Dollar Tree that would work) to cut them into various lengths and matched them with the tape at the same length for terrain options, then coated the wood with the nail polish I'd used earlier). A local game store had and still has sets of mini-dice for $5 and often has sales that include them, normally about 20% off. Other than the tablet, the entire thing fits inside the two game cases, and with a small notepad (and a free pen that I'd gotten somewhere) it's $12 for the entire thing, and if you want more pieces, you can spend bit more on the travel game sets as several have other pieces and colors or even another of the same 2 pack and just up the numbers, you can even put the cases up against each other to expand the board. Back when I'd started, the chess board was the easiest battlemat option and still, sometimes, shows up for smaller combats since it's easy to use for it, and my travel gaming stuff also works well and can easily fit in a pocket or two...I'd expanded it and normally put everything in a cheap pencil case I also got for $1... But from there, while you're at the dollar store, glance at their toys and you can normally find things that work well for taking things a few steps further...
@kylerchristensen4509
@kylerchristensen4509 3 жыл бұрын
So what I do in my campaigns is I use Jenga blocks and the back of Christmas wrapping paper. I Use online Dice and books. And I used chess pieces for a I minis.
@coin0matic
@coin0matic 2 жыл бұрын
If you can't draw straight lines, the wrapping paper from Dollar Tree usually has a 1x1 grid on the back! It'll say if it does on the label.
@SamuelTyree1
@SamuelTyree1 2 жыл бұрын
Late to the party, but Dollar Tree wrapping paper has grids printed on back. Throw a piece of plexiglass or transparency on top.
@remirez2k3
@remirez2k3 3 жыл бұрын
for the price of your laminate sheet and board go to dollar tree they have foam board for a dollar, get 1 bottle of dollar tree mod podge and 1 dollar black paint, and a 1 dollar ruler and a pen you have laying around your house or dorm . make and cut out modular dungeon tiles for under 5.00 as for cheapest minis i use a package of purple yellow and blue buttons of altering sizes from dollar tree for a buck one other dollar tree find - you may have to check several stores but i have found dollar tree carrying 1.00 D&D dice sets now
@pizzarat6145
@pizzarat6145 4 жыл бұрын
so I made a rpg table top called Ninja Quest based on you guessed it Hero Quest. I used ninjas my wife and I got from quarter machines, plastic miniatures from dollar tree, dollar general, and walmart. I made furniture set pieces from cardboard. I made the playing board with graph paper and pizza boxes (more than one).
@linkdapuppyandfriends9023
@linkdapuppyandfriends9023 2 жыл бұрын
Once I used a monopoly jar jar binks for my mini.
@shoddypeasant8762
@shoddypeasant8762 5 жыл бұрын
I use graphing paper and chess pieces thanks for the Jenga idea sadly I’m MEGA broke so yeah
@Lhight85
@Lhight85 4 жыл бұрын
Not cheap initially depending on your budget, but I use my printer for maps/minis. With the internet as a resource, I have near limitless pictures and art to use for these options. With M. Word, I can make these images as small or as big as I need them too. Now all expenses are just paper and ink. With MTG Card Maker, I can even make custom magic items or monsters to print for my players.
@NobodyDungeons
@NobodyDungeons 7 ай бұрын
What I did was buy a few cheap magic cards with art matching the characters, and then cut out and glued the artwork to a soda cap.
@nmfixed
@nmfixed 2 жыл бұрын
Thrift store plastic soldier minis, actually the blue ones are police and the yellow ones are construction workers. Portable budget solution: folded up wrapping paper inside out (there's Inch squares on the inside for cutting the paper) covered by an equal size plastic sheeting cut from a roll from Wal-Mart. 10 minis, dice, map materials, dry erase markers 3x5 cards & pencil for dm notes.
@vitamink2211
@vitamink2211 2 жыл бұрын
This guy has some legit freaking advice
@Alize821
@Alize821 2 жыл бұрын
"three dollars and five dollars so thats a total of seven dollars" -a college student
@DragonDM369
@DragonDM369 4 жыл бұрын
use dice as minis :) you can buy dungeon roll a dice game it has goblins and skeletons on the dice anc u can put what ever u want on the map its genious
@okrainz
@okrainz 3 жыл бұрын
2:20 nah I’m playing on a Samsung smart fridge
@BlinkySL
@BlinkySL 2 жыл бұрын
I used Disney adoorables as minis for about 3 months lol
@maryrust569
@maryrust569 4 ай бұрын
you can get mat bord at the doller tree for 1.25$
@SyaShim
@SyaShim 3 жыл бұрын
Jenga? That's brilliant!
@knghtbrd
@knghtbrd 2 жыл бұрын
If you can't afford books and you don't want to be screwing with Copyright infringement, your search terms are "D20" and "SRD". The basic D&D rules are available for free as part of the D20 system (so D&D) System Reference Document. That's what Paizo used to make Pathfinder, what all of the D&D-type rule sets like OSR stuff and … all of that is based on the SRD. You don't get monsters and campaign settings and whatnot from that. But if you're resourceful it's a place to start.
@kaitlynmorales5955
@kaitlynmorales5955 3 жыл бұрын
I use cardboard for the maps and the minis
@affsteak3530
@affsteak3530 Жыл бұрын
You could even take the Jenga blocks to the next level by gluing little magnets to them to put additional stuff on top, like bushes or fake moss for tree tops or fences for dungeon terrain
@xXnithicXx
@xXnithicXx 5 жыл бұрын
Your vid is so funny and relaxing. Big like
@RichardChappell1
@RichardChappell1 4 жыл бұрын
For minis, cardstock is about as cheap as you can go. If you don't want to print one of the thousands available online, you can draw them. They can be 2d or 2.5d (flat standup) and then you don't need a box to store them, just some envelopes.
@viansingh9754
@viansingh9754 2 жыл бұрын
you could also use chess pieces for the minis
@ramgladore
@ramgladore 3 жыл бұрын
You just need graph paper. Draw your maps with a pencil then place them inside plastic page protectors. Place them in a binder. Use multi-colored markers to place players and monsters. Use notebook paper to make character sheets. You can get cheap polyhedral dice at Walmart, 3 sets for $8. I bet the cost is less than $20. And I wonder if the local library might have books about D&D.
@CaedenV
@CaedenV 4 жыл бұрын
I started DMing for my family at home, and a group online using roll20 last fall. First, I bought the monster manual and player's handbook physical, used copies from a library $25 total Next, I purchased Lost Mine of Phandelver for the online group, and the Starter Kit for home which comes with Dragon of Icespire Peak, both of which came with dndbeyond codes for a digital copy... also ended up purchasing the monster manual, DM guide, and player's handbook on dndbeyond to give both of my groups access to these books digitally for character creation. Can't remember the exact cost, but after all of the cupon codes and everything it was ~120 total. For the digital campaign that was it! done! It was a lot of work to import maps and monsters into Roll20, but once it was done it was very easy to run, and very cheap. For the home campaign I ended up buying a bunch of dice, maps, etc... and we barely use any of it. Ended up making a bunch of printouts of monsters and characters using excel. It basically had a trifold with image printed on front and back with a 1" base, and that worked out pretty well. For the maps; we just download the art from dndbeyond, scale it up using MS Paint of all things, and print out tiled sheets. Cut and tape them together and you have a perfect map to play on, including grids... and we don't have to rely on my terrible art ability. So ya... looking back, I would just purchase digital books and campaigns, and then print out tri-fold minis and maps. You really just need the PHB and campaign for character creation as the starter campaigns have everything you need as a DM built in. The DM guide and monster manual are mostly just for home-brew campaigns as the digital copies of all of the monsters and items unlock when you buy the campaign. Anywho, that's my 2 cents. Not quite as cheap as downloading free books, but it still isn't too much investment, very little required for setup and artwork abilities, and very convenient for new players to make toons online and print their sheets or use their phone and have everything on-hand at all times.
@angelntonyoutube
@angelntonyoutube Жыл бұрын
I want another video like this one ❤
@_Gecko
@_Gecko 5 жыл бұрын
I got a big sheet of clear vinyl from the fabric section at Walmart for my battle mat. I went with the thickest stuff they had, so mine was about $3.50 per yard, but they had some that was only $1 per yard. If you carefully marked out some grid lines with a sharpie I think it would be the cheapest you could get
@thefighter6071
@thefighter6071 Жыл бұрын
Im glad to see someone else using the little wooden figures. I bought mine at a surplus store for 25c a peice or 10c for the goblid/halfling size, they called them mini wooden game of life characters. I love that surplus store.. they have barrel shaped wooden beads, pot shaped wooden beads, those wooden bases, 5 sizes of wooden cube including the holy 1x1x1", wooden spools that made great pillars, and even more.
@ptupper72
@ptupper72 4 жыл бұрын
A lot of RPGs, including D&D 5E and Pathfinder 2E, have System Reference Documents (SRDs) online which are perfectly legal to use. Some other systems only use regular six-sided-dice which are pretty cheap to get if you don't have some already.
@andywoodburn4555
@andywoodburn4555 5 жыл бұрын
Very nifty vid my friend!! However in my opinion minis and dice can be had for relatively cheaper or cheaper than free you say? Apps are cool and all but honestly I prefer having something tangible hold and roll with my hands. I currently have 4 sets of dice the first set I got with the starter set and since that set was missing the second percentile dice I snagged that one from a site online called "The Dice Emporium" for like less than 50 cents. Then my second set was a straight up 7 piece set of Chessex in red and black marble with gold ink for the numbers. I foolishly lost my D20 from that set while playing with it while I walked to work one day and it didn't make it back into the little drawstring dice bag I was carrying them in. I too replaced that particular dice using that same website. Next I was gifted a set of dice by a good friend of mine who also plays D&D and that set was completely free so sometimes it pays to have friends that enjoy tabletop RPGs. Then, last but not least you can also hunt up a game store that sells surplus individual polyhedral dice for a fraction or the cost of a normal set. I found a local shop that had them for 75 cents each and I made a "complete" set for $5.25 plus tax so therefore or in short there is no excuse to not have at least one set of real dice to use in your games. As for my minis and terrain, most everything I've built I've done with supplies from the dollar store (i.e. index cards, glue, markers, acrylic paint, tape, binder clips which I use as bases for my minis, etc.), cardboard that I stole from work (we were going to bale and recycle/pitch it anyway), or supplies I already had at home (I, my aunt and my late mother are/were avid crafters/artists so we already had a great deal of this stuff already lying around. I also made a dice box and a dice tower for rolling dice and I still intend on making my own battle board/mat using a cheap poster frame and some textured paper and a grid which I'll draw on the inside of the board with acrylic paint markers. I also have a set of dungeon tiles, pillars, and ruins that again I made from scraps of cardboard. I also forgot to mention that there are a metric TON of free resources online for printouts that you can make for your game and often times you can just go to your local library to print them all out and then you assemble them yourself. Short short version: A lot of this stuff for D&D can be had for almost nothing and in nearly 4 months of getting into this hobby I still don't think that I've scratched the $100 mark yet and I have a great collection of reusable models and dice. I've really only spent about $15-20 a month on supplies and dice so far. Might have to check out that Jenga idea for dungeon walls. That looks relatively cheap and ingenius for the "2.5D" approach to dungeon building and they'd look great with my dungeon tiles. I could even snag them from a garage sale/flea market/goodwill for nothing. #tltr
@CydonianKryptid
@CydonianKryptid 3 жыл бұрын
I once used an old bag of plastic dinos
@MystWalkur
@MystWalkur 2 жыл бұрын
My mom still had toys from when she was a kid in the sixties, so for the first year we just used the OG Little People (which I've always vastly preferred over modern. But alas they're choking hazards) the original ones are perfect for dnd scale. They're painted wood cylinders with super basic faces and plastic hair or hats on their circle heads. My mom also saved the two giant ass Lincoln Log sets she got at a yard sale so we used those for terrain
@ITSACRITICAL
@ITSACRITICAL 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome video thanks for helping out the little man who don't have a lot of money.
@hockeyslapper
@hockeyslapper 5 жыл бұрын
Man said 3 dollars plus 5 dollars is 7 dollars XD
@thewastedwanderer5787
@thewastedwanderer5787 4 жыл бұрын
What a genuine lad.
@FHangya
@FHangya 2 жыл бұрын
This is a great inspiration for gamers! Cool stuff! Also, never underestimate cardboard power. Write a name on them, stick them to a penny and boom. Or, use them for terrain :) also, you can totally start with a non-D&D game! Most of the 1st edition retroclones are free online! And they are worth every (non spent) penny!
@jordondoesthings
@jordondoesthings Жыл бұрын
Actually useful, cheap, creative, quality, AND low effort. Awesome.
@tgrsparrow
@tgrsparrow 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Super helpful in the budget department.
@jonldragonyup8309
@jonldragonyup8309 4 жыл бұрын
Minis: I used a chest set...... Then got fancy and used harry Potter chest set..... Maps: Legos.... Different color pens..... Big ass dry erase bored.....
@mythicmysticmoon
@mythicmysticmoon Жыл бұрын
I would highly recommend the Wikidot page for DnD 5e, too. They have pages for races, classes, spells, feats, backgrounds, items, etc. And then as Brodie said, DnD Beyond has the basic rules, or you can go over to D20's SRD. I'd also recommend getting the laminent grid and paper/foam backdrop he mentioned, but also get some cheap dry-erase markers to draw on top of the laminated grid. Easy to wipe off once you're done or need to adjust the scene. Chess pieces if you have a cheap set also work well for minis for player characters and major NPCs. I didn't know about using Jenga tiles for walls and such, though, that's really clever!
@vampiregoat69
@vampiregoat69 2 жыл бұрын
YES sick of these "CHEAP" items for D&D and they are $100+ that is cheap for a millionaire maybe. I DO NOT like your map ideas I get cheap but that is horrible looking maps.
@raventhunderwings
@raventhunderwings Жыл бұрын
Lined wrapping paper (dollar tree)/small figures in the toy section(dollar tree & thrift stores)/purchased gm,players guide, bestiary books amazon and actually thrift stores)/scenery (various sources)...... i was able to do a 5 year campaign with 100 maps about , 250 minis and an uncountable amount of scenery stuffs all for a total of $150 usd over the course of 5 years... it ended up being like 5 bucks each shopping trip except for the books where I bought 2 brand new and the others for like 5 to 15 used at book stores and thrift stores
@pipedreams308
@pipedreams308 2 жыл бұрын
I have been playing D&D since 1982. I have plenty of stuff to play. But, If I use maps and minis, it’s a mix of minis (both painted and unpainted), toys, junk, and other junk made to look like different junk. But, I still prefer theater of the mind.
@BolofromAvlis
@BolofromAvlis 2 жыл бұрын
It should also be noted that some companies actually make free versions of their rules in pdf form. For instance, Troll Lord Games' awesome system, Castles and Crusades ( it's essentially AD&D converted over to d20 rules) offers a free version of their 7th printing of their player's handbook from their web site. No matter what printer you have, Castles and Crusades rules are the same. the various printing are basically correcting editing errors and adding new artwork/ page layout. I believe you can also still find a version of their " Monsters and Treasure" pdf for free as well. You really only need those two things to run and play Castles and Crusades, though they also have lots of supplements and other books, adventures, etc, to buy as well.
@mykediemart
@mykediemart 3 ай бұрын
Dollar store is your friend. Some have dice with all the different sides, Amazon also has cheap dice as well. Amazon also sells game pieces/ tokens and meeples
@ericdafish8123
@ericdafish8123 4 жыл бұрын
if you can draw or have access to a printer you could always go with paper minis
@adamtholander8214
@adamtholander8214 4 жыл бұрын
step1: Go to this site: printableheroes.com/minis# step2: Download and print the monsters Step3: glue cardboard from breakfast cereal or something similar to the fot of the mini. step 4: Have fun!
@mckennadaley3793
@mckennadaley3793 2 жыл бұрын
I use Legos for my minis, I have a bunch from when I was younger and I have found some knock-off stuff for cheap they r good if my players want a more personal flair but they make so much more since then buying new figures for each campaign and character. I have also used those metal paperclip binder things to hold up a paper drawing that I glued on cardboard. If you don't have any artistic talent that's ok, I don't either the trick is to force your friend who likes to doodle to draw everything for you. Also side note its not the DM responsibility to pay for everything if you want to get minis or something make sure your players chip in
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