Saturday 10 April 2021

PAPERCRAFT BUILDINGS AND TERRAIN IN 28MM

Quite a few times I have been asked about the buildings I use when playing Fear of the Dark , and I think they deserve their own post... 


When I started with the idea of ​​playing skirmish wargames alone and at home, I had several problems, the buildings I wanted to use as terrain (resin, 3D, mdf, plastic ...) were expensive and occupy a lot of space. Think that we are dealing with solo wargamers, and most of them have to store their miniatures and terrain at home.

"They were expensive" ... Many of you will think that they are not expensive for the quality and detail they offer, but of course, if we think that I play alone, the cost in mdf (for example) of a city that fills a 90x90 game board, being the only one who pays for all the buildings becomes too expensive... 
And if we talk about making several settings... Well, that´s quite a lot of money... 

"they occupy a lot of space"... Buildings to represent a city on a 90x90 game board occupy quite a lot, and we are not talking about shelves or boxes in a club, we are talking about a house where I live with my wife and two little boys...  for example...

So in my search for a solution I found cardboard buildings, they are cheap and if I could find a way to store them without occupying much space they would be my best option.










Most papercraft buildings are designed to be made and stay that way glued, being impossible to fold them without breaking them, and then the buildings, although being cheap, they take the same room as a resin or mdf one.

As I didn´t find buildings that could be folded flat I chose to design them myself so that they could be folded and could be stored without occupying a lot. 

Based on papercraft buildings from companies such as worldworks games, fat dragon games and Z-war one boardgame, I "re-designed" the buildings so that they could be folded, separating walls and roof. 




I made a few houses printed in A3 on 200 grms paper, look at the result, and see how those houses look once glued and how much space they take once they they stored... 
In the last photo you have an example game board with these houses.








Apart from that small town I wanted to have a city setting, and I wanted the roofs to be playable, so they needed a flat surface.
Once again, using models that I bought from companies that sell them online to make building models that can´t be folded I modified them.

Here we see how it is folded and how we assemble it, in the last photo, with minis and some terrain. 







There will be people who think that the idea of using papercraft is not good, but for me it is ...

Why? Well, because the cost is the cheapest I have found, I can make many houses of different settings and most important, it allows me to keep everything in a single box...

I usually use recycled boxes (I have many of the same) with the measures 38x28x10 cm, to give you an idea it is like an A3 but 10 cm high.



Inside those boxes I can put an entire city and still I have plenty of spare room. Everything you see in the second photo is in that box (buildings, streets, lampposts, trash cans ...), and as you can see, there is plenty of room left.



In the box in which I put the middle east town, I had so much spare space that I put all the palm trees, small terrain pieces, figures ...




And maybe you think that this system works with simple structures, because another kind of structures would be more difficult to fold. Well, this is the las terrain piece that I made myself from a Dave Graffam model.



All the buildings you see in this pictures are modified versions of products you can buy online, so I'm going to make a small list of the best companies I have found:

Worldworks games, has plenty of houses and buildings for several settings (medieval/fantasy, modern, far west, scifi...)

Fat Dragon games (nice selection of medieval/fantasy and modern/20´s buildings)

Stoetzel models (several modern/20´s buildings and houses)

Dave Graffam (fantasy/medieval houses)

This options are really cheap (think around 1-4$ for a big building you can print as much as you want) but there are other FREE options that you may consider as well:

Zwarone is a really good zombie boardgame that is worth to be considered for zombie apocalypse games, and in their web page they offer to download for free a set of several houses that have a really good quality (I use many of them when I play).

Papermau is a webpage full of free papercraft, you can spend a whole afternoon checking this webpage to find real treasures. It has a good search engine to look for what you need (try house, boat, egyptian temple... for example).

There are many more companies, but these ones listed above have the highest quality/lowest price that I have found, and apart from such a huge amount of buildings, they have mats, scatter terrain, bridges and almost anything you may need for your wargaming table. 

Well, I hope I have satisfied your curiosity, and as always, I hope to encourage you to play alone...

Don't let terrain and scenery be a problem...

20 comments:

  1. Hi, nice infromation and inspiration. Any concerns in sharing your files?

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    Replies
    1. I'm afraid they have their copyright from their owners and can't be shared freely, but you can buy these files from the own designer's websites that I have linked in the post.

      Delete
  2. Thanks a lot for all the links! Definitely worth a look.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Thanks a lot!!
      I hope the post is helpful!

      Delete
  3. This is great. I'm gonna be checking out those links.

    Could you go into more detail on how you modified the buildings in order to get them to fold flat? Any tips or tricks? What paper do you print on, what type of printer?

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    Replies
    1. Don't know exactly how to explain how they fold flat...

      Think that the walls have to be a square or a rectangle and that they have "invisible" fixing tape in the sides they are linked so that they can work as a hinge.

      The roof has to be a piece apart that is put on the top and makes the structure a bit more sturdy.

      In the pictures of the brick building you see how it works.

      Just try and you'll see that it is not so difficult, if you find some trouble they will be solved in the next building.

      I don't have a printer, so I make them in a printing shop in 200 - 300 grms paper (cardboard).

      Delete
  4. Excellent info and well done. The one 'issue' is you don't provide any detail on what program(s) you used to do the mods, and what you did (in general) to modify them so others can do it too. The article is great in that it relays the fact that "it can be done" - but would be of more help if it was "here's how to do it." Great info nonetheless!!

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    1. The problem is that I can't do an article for every person, as some people want more info on free companies, other people want more info on how to fold them flat, other people want more pictures with examples... And this would be an endless post...

      Don't know exactly how to explain how they fold flat...

      Think that the walls have to be a square or a rectangle and that they have "invisible" fixing tape in the sides they are linked so that they can work as a hinge.

      The roof has to be a piece apart that is put on the top and makes the structure a bit more sturdy.

      In the pictures of the brick building you see how it works.

      Just try and you'll see that it is not so difficult, if you find some trouble they will be solved in the next building.

      I used photoshop to modify the files and printed them in 200 - 300 grms paper (cardboard).

      My advice would be that you try to make one simple structure and you'll realize that it is not difficult at all.

      And buildings will grow in difficulty as you improve your papercraft skill.

      Delete
  5. How do you make your flat roofs? Do you have a template?

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    1. I se the Fat Dragon Games system, if you have a look at their capital city set, you'll see that those are the buildings that I use.

      The roofs are the same, the modified part are the walls.

      Delete
  6. Nice overview article with good suggestions, and nice to see an another gamers confidence and affirmation that such terrain pieces exist, are readily available, and viable option to enable gamers to game on an atmospheric table.

    Much appreciated.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks a lot!

      Papercraft is an underestimated resource...

      Cheap, fast, easily stored and nice looking...

      Delete
  7. Can you tell me which company makes those Middle Eastern buildings please? I have checked all the links but can't find those actual buildings. Cheers

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    1. I did them myself as I wanted a fold flat MENA village.

      I wanted to do an egyptian campaign and maybe give the village with the campaign so that It is easier for players to.play.

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    2. Thanks for the reply, they are very cool! There seems to be a dearth of these types of buildings out there. I don't suppose you would like to share your files if they were created by you?

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    3. Once I make that egyptian campaign I will share them as a way to thank players the support to this project.

      Delete
  8. Discovered Fear in the Dark today & I must say it looks very interesting.... and eventually ended up here. Thanks for sharing your lovely work.
    Though I like the pre war era most of my minis & settings are scifi but I think the rules can adapted... Cthullu is transdomensional being after all.
    Most of my minis etc. are 18mm.. so there is more space saving to be had. If I may make a suggestion, I design my card buildings to fit into each other to save more space. Look up Toposolitario he has some great free scifi foldable buildings.

    Thanks
    Z

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks a lot!

      Fear of the Dark could be played in scifi setting, but slight changes should be done to some of the scenarios.

      I design the buildings to fold flat so that they save space. I have a really Big city in a small box!

      Delete