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Adventure Tiles (2001)
Fiery Dragon/
Skeleton Key Games
Date Reviewed: 4-5-2006
Critical Kobold Rating:
(5 out of 5 Dice)

Hey, nice tile!
Is it Mexican?
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OK, check this spiffy sweet stuff out…
The Adventure Tiles
are for use with miniatures, but they certainly don't require minis
to use. There are dungeon, wilderness, cavern, and even sci-fi floor
plan sets available. The tiles are some pre-made cardstock dungeon
map sections that a harried or busy DM can slap down for visual
effect while describing the scene, or even just a small room,
instead of scratching the corridors out on a dry erase mat or on
graph paper.
(Graph paper. Ha!
How 80's!)
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I got these small tins holding dungeon
corridor layouts during Gen Con '05 at the Fiery Dragon booth. While
they have Fiery Dragon's logo on them, they seem to be produced by a
company called Skeleton Key Games. The set I got came in a handy
little tin box, for storing and protecting your paper dungeon. If
you check out Skeleton Key's webpage, it seems that they are now
producing many new sets of tiles under the product line "e-Adventure
Terrain Tiles". You can purchase these as PDF sets, and print them
off to suit your needs.
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Here, the Voodoo Orc
canoodles with a fiery booth babe. |
I bought the
Dungeon sets because they looked cool. The fact that Fiery Dragon
had a fiery hot blonde babe workin' the booth had absolutely nothing
to do with it.
Really.
Well, it didn't
have everything to do with it, anyway. The product honestly
did look cool.
Anyway, the squares are
all durable 5 inch grid interchangeable floor plans, printed in
color, depicting stony dungeon corridors and rooms where mysterious
denizens of the underground might dwell, awaiting bold adventurers
to investigate. There are almost 40 cards in a tin, so you have
quite a selection of room shapes and designs to work with.
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Each square of five by five inches can be positioned whichever way
you want, and placed along the edges of adjoining tiles to form your
dungeon. Because each tile can be repositioned, you can of course
use the same tiles to create different layouts every time you game.
The down side is
that some tiles do have odd features. Noticeably, out of the entire
set, there's actually only one single tile that is just a five by
five square stone floor, with no other features. Then there are
eight other tiles where they're mostly empty floor, but one or two
edges of squares is taken up by a large brown border, which I assume
is supposed to be the earth and the outermost wall of the dungeon.
The problem is, those large brown borders aren't necessary to tell
me that they're at the edge of the map, and really all they've done
as far as I'm concerned is remove a great many squares of play area
for me to design larger rooms with.
Now, you can just
tell your players to ignore those large brown borders on the floor
pieces if you need a few more squares to a particular room, of
course. But it's a shame that you'd need to, considering having the
floor tiles without the borders seems far more useful and
logical than having so many floor tiles with borders. It's
odd that Fiery Dragon/ Skeleton Key went with that less-useful tile
design to such an extent. (The box and website don't indicate that
this is a random-tile sort of product, so I have to assume that
every tin comes with the same selection of tiles. Meaning that
buying more tins won't practically improve my useful-to-annoying
tile ratio any.)
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The good side is that some of the
squares have altars, or torches, or fountains, or other furnishings
to visually add to the imaginations of your players as they poke
about in the dark places. There are odd corners, smaller tunnels,
and light effects on some tiles to enhance your descriptions and
give ideas of line of sight, where hiding in shadows may be
effective, or other tactical considerations.
There are also
smaller-block cut-outs of pits, stairs, grates, caskets, barrels,
ladders, walls, pillars, tables, coins, corpses, etc, which can be
used to spice up the environs of a room.
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As a bonus, not
only is the tin a secure and sturdy place to store your flooring
tiles, but the manufacturers include a large 20 by 30 inch single
sheet of empty floor tiles, for those mass combat situations that
may pop up and require a large map space. (Before you say that this
solves my earlier gripe about not having enough five-square tiles,
note that this large sheet is in black and white, regular paper
format, and not the cool cardstock full color that goes with the
rest of the product. Sure, you could cut it up and use it for
smaller floor space, but it's not the same quality and look.)
I like these
things. I'm a sucker for miniatures anyway, even though I rarely get
to use them during actual games. The $20 price seems right, for the
professional look, sturdiness, and reusability of the product, and
considering that I have a nice tin to keep them organized in.
Downloading them as a PDF is even way cheaper! Of course,
printing them onto cardstock may not be everyone's cup of grog, but
there's no reason you can't print them on heavy paper and laminate
them, or simply reprint them every time your friend Ralf gets
excited about a d20 roll and spills his Kool-Aid on your dungeon.
So if you're
looking for something quick and detailed to add color to an
otherwise dry room description, whether you like to use mini figures
or not, I'd recommend these. Even if you just plop them down during
combats, they make the use of miniatures fun and keep everyone
visually on the same wavelength with such info as the archers'
locations, strategic exits, or who's gonna be standing in the area
of effect when the chain lightning spell goes off.
OK, ok. Yes, I
know it's really just glorified graph paper, but it's nifty
graph paper! So go buy some.
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