Reader “Nariah” was kind enough to take my rather bland condition tokens and create colored versions of them, to really make them stand out at the table.
Nice work!
If you aren’t sure how to use these, they are meant to be placed under your miniature or token when a condition affects them. Very simple to use and effective. I use them with my games all the time and they make tracking conditions a breeze. Each player has a stack of them available, and when they cause a condition, they know to place the marker.
Thanks Nariah!
samvdw
December 9, 2008
Our GM uses something similar. In D&D has has a little skull you can stick on your miniatures head to know when he’s bloodied. If you’re blinded or something else, he gives you a card with the mods. I believe those tokens would work pretty much the same way. They actually really help.
Questing GM
December 9, 2008
Nice work!
Mike Lee
December 9, 2008
We use small elastic hair bands for marks, and to indicate bloodied (http://www.totallyfashiontrendy.com/v/vspfiles/assets/images/copy%20of%20copy%20of%20poly%20bands.jpg).
We use cards with the condition effects to indicate conditions. There are some nice ones for download, or you can put a stack of 3×5 cards in your printer, format a Word document, and pop out a bunch of condition cards in a couple hours.
Swordgleam
December 14, 2008
We use mini poker chips. The players love it when one enemy has so many status effects, hunters’ quarries, etc, that they’re half an inch off the table.
Craig Andrie
January 28, 2009
These are nice and they are similar to tokens we made by cross-cutting wooden dowels and using markers to color the disks. That lead to us thinking about a stack of markers that would stat together and stick to the miniature as we moved them around the board. Which lead to our magnetic marker product line – check them out at http://www.aleatools.com
pinteresting
March 6, 2013
i am impressed by you site, will surely put up like yours soon