1-866-fnord23 Contact Us
WARNING: You must use Adobe Acrobat 6+ in order to use all the features of this product.
The Blueprints product line offers you old-fashioned blueprinted maps for using in your adventures and campaigns. For each map you get a blueprint version and a standard black-and-white version. The maps are all vector-based so you will get maximum print resolution. Despite their old-fashioned appearance, each map offers you a degree of customization, using the PDF technology at its best. A button (which will not be printed) on each map allows you to turn the grid on and off, eliminate the room numbers, get the walls filled, don't show doors and furniture, and many other options, depending on the kind of map.
Each product features a classic fantasy adventure location: a dungeon, a keep, a temple complex, a thieves' guild, and so on. You can use these maps as references to build your own adventures or simply take them at hand in case your players go in an unexpected direction during the campaign.
While offering you the best quality, these products are really inexpensive.
Cutthroats' Alley is one of the most infamous places in the Great City. No other place has such a concentration of evil and depravity. One who dares to enter the alley does so at his own risk. An occasional visitor who enters the alley during the day can see only a normal city alley, with a small church, a bakery, a locksmith, and a tavern. True, some bad-looking guys wander the alley, or stay in clutches playing card games over crates or barrels, but this is all one can see.
The truth is far more dangerous, as the baker is a known fence, the tavern is owned by a guy who tortures people, the locksmith is a prohibited weapons dealer and owner of a pleasure house, the church's crypt is the meeting place of evil summoners, and finally, in the sewers below is the lair of one of the most wanted smugglers in the city.
A short list of featured buildings follow (more bits of information available inside the products):
Grid Style: This map product features both a square grid and a hex grid.
Written by Mario Barbati