Showing posts with label Caves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caves. Show all posts

Friday, January 31, 2014

Subterranean Battlemaps: A "New" Product and a Business Recap

The Fantasy Cartographic's "newest" product went live on RPGNow.com yesterday: Subterranean Battlemaps.

Except, well, it isn't really new.  All of its contents were available before.

Let me step back.

Do you ever have that feeling, as you try to work your way through various projects, that the one or two old ones that you never finished have come back to haunt you?  That exact thing happened to me earlier this week.

If you have spent any time in these parts at all, you probably have picked up on the fact that I sell a few minor wares over at RPGNow.  Admittedly, they are minor.  At one time, I had grand aspirations of putting out lots and lots of material.  Not to make a lot of money (because the chances of that are slim to none), but to just do it.  To satisfy that little itch that so many in the OSR have of putting material out there.

Those aspirations ran into life.  And just like my blogging has not been as prolific as I would like, the output of the The Fantasy Cartographic has been (to me, at least) disappointing.

Way back in November 2007, I released my first product, Locales, Volume 1.  I'm still a big fan of that one, and I think it holds up--especially for us OSR types.

In 2008, I released the following products:

Hand Drawn Maps, Volume One.
Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves, Volume One.
Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves, Volume Two.
Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves: Battlemaps One
Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves: Battlemaps Two
Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves: Battlemaps Three

These were all collections of maps, some made by me and others drawn by a very talented artist called Terrain Monkey.

The 'Battlemaps' products took the maps from the two 'Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves' products and expanded them into one-inch per square "battlemaps" specifically for use with miniatures.  [That was back during the 4E days, and I thought that I'd jump on that band wagon a little.]

2009 became the '4E Year' for The Fantasy Cartographic.  In February, I released a product called Power Cards: Secrets of Necromancy.  These cards were in support of Zodiac Gods Publishing's Secrets of Necromancy, a 4E sourcebook that presented an alternate character class for 4E, the Necromancer.  [Just in case ZGP is not familiar to you, it is Tori Bergquist's company, he of Realms of Chirak fame.]

Working on that product was a warm-up of sorts for me.  Later in 2009, I released Fantasy Class: Martialist, a 4E sourcebook of my own detailing a new character class. [I've been meaning to write a post on that product for some time now and my thoughts on 4E.  One more thing to add to the list...]  A topic that I will touch on in that post is that the Martialist didn't do that well.  As I read the reviews for it, I realized that my take on the class wasn't compatible with the 'standard' 4E default of super-heroic characters.  I did things in the design of that product that, in hindsight, are much more in keeping with the style of D&D that I grew up with.  Oh well.

I rounded out 2009 with two re-packagings: I created Bundles on RPGNow, lumping together the two Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves products into one and dropping their price and lumping together the three battlemaps products into one and dropping their price.  In the case of the three battlemaps products, I realized that they were woefully overpriced.  In both cases, the bundles were a way to group like products together and increase their value.

All told, the battlemaps dropped from over $25 to $9 when I bundled them.  (There's a lesson in there.)

2010 continued this trend.  I released Basic Maps, which combined the contents from the Caverns, Tunnels, Caves bundle and Hand Drawn Maps into one product.

So that now brings me back to the point that this post started with: Subterranean Battlemaps.  Just as Basic Maps was a compilation of previous products, Subterranean Battlemaps is a compilation of the previously bundled battlemap products.  And while the bundle sold for $9, this new compilation product will sell for $2.50.  Here is the description for the product: 

Subterranean Battlemaps is a compilation of three previous releases from The Fantasy Cartographic: Caverns, Tunnels, and Caves: Battlemaps 1, 2, and 3. 

Most recently sold as a Bundle, those products are no longer available in that format or separately here at RPGNow.



Frankly, when sold separately and then as a Bundle, these products were overpriced.  Their new pricing as a compilation now is much more reasonable.

For what you are paying, Subterranean Battlemaps is actually a steal!!  It contains:



 • Maps for fifteen different subterranean locations.

 • 295 pages of one-inch scale battlemaps for those same fifteen locations.

 • Black-and-white maps that are easy on your printer!



These maps are for use with 4E or any other rpg that requires the use of miniatures.

I don't think that many of you will buy this.  While I think that it is a useful product for those of us who play with miniatures, I would be surprised if it was a big seller (define that how you will).  Ultimately, I released this product, because it has been a little nagging itch in my head for years now.  I knew that its predecessors were overpriced; I knew that I wanted to fix that; and now I think I have.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Basic Maps for your Fantasy Needs


Basic Maps is a product that I have for sale at RPGNow.com for $2.30.  It's just what it says it is--basic dungeon maps, 39 to be exact.  For your viewing pleasure, below you can peruse all 39 of them in low res.

The first 30 are cave and cavern complexes.  The last 9, which are hand-drawn and in a different style from the first group, are of an assortment of types of locations.

Personally, I think that 39 maps for $2.30 is a pretty good deal.  Perhaps, you'll agree.






































Friday, February 8, 2013

Forgotten Works: Cavern Complex

Here is a map that I did almost three years ago for a project that I can't remember anything else about.

I came across it while looking for other things on my computer.  Perhaps I should spend more time looking around...



Feel free to make use of it for your own personal use.  If you do, I'd love to hear about it.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Subterranean Design - F#@$ Yeah!

It's included on My Daily Read for a reason.  If you aren't a frequent visitor, you are missing out.  I'm talking about Subterranean Design of course.

This amazing collection of images should serve as fantastic inspiration for anyone who plays D&D, or any fantasy, science fantasy, or even science fiction rpg out there.  Absolutely incredible--I cannot say enough about how good the site is.

And for those gamers who claim that dungeons are unrealistic, outdated, or just plain stupid, taking a look at the real world dungeons presented at SubDes should change your mind.  If it doesn't?  Well, that sounds like a personal problem to me.

Go check it out.  Check it out often.  Check it out every day.  You won't be disappointed.  I promise.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Awesome Cave

As several other (real world) projects are taking up my time right now, I might have to back off of my Map Roundups for a few weeks.  That probably upsets me more than it does you, but taking the time to wander far and wide over the blogosphere looking for map-related posts does take a little more time than I have available right now.

But I did come across a nice post this morning that I HAD to link to.  Thanks to Trey over at The Sorcerer's Skull for posting this about some caves in Viet Nam and Mexico.