Dude, you fuckin killed it with this. I don't even want to think about the time investment. I almost dont like the video because you've shamed me so thoroughly. When you said what the challenge was I honestly figured you had cut some corners and still used those styrene stairs and some greebles... Here I am trying to work up the gumption to work on my table while I've got a hoard of crafting supplies, bits, 3d printed greebles, and a die cutter. Meanwhile you go and build something indistinguishable from your other builds with just cardboard. It was so unexpected I'm just staggered. I think there are only a few hobby youtubers than bring as much a combination of skill AND effort to their builds as you do. Fuckin well done man and regardless of how the facebook thing goes I hope you're proud of this one because to me you nailed it.
I love this comment! Thank you. There is no shame in feeling hobby inertia I get it all the time. I have remind myself i can always pull something apart or repaint if I need to. Just go for it! It almost always works out and progress will turn to inspiration
I really liked how he didn’t cut corners, I’m just looking for a cheap (no matter how time consuming) way to pursue a hobby. In fact, I think I’m going to go attempt to make something like this. At a smaller scale, of course
14:00 This is my favourite part. By recessing that detail box you really sell the depth and scale of this structure. Now I can't un-see the roof as a thick, pipe-laden metal slab. Great work.
Fantastic job Eric. That's the kind of tutorial which help the community to see that's you don't need a ton a supply or money to build something great!!
This is a great build (and video)....reading the comments made me realize I was right about your accent. I was always confused by your mentions of NY when I was sure you sounded like you were from Ontario!
Eric, man, this is on another level. Best build video so far, and that's saying a lot! Everything you do is great but you still manage to get better every time, even your editing is getting really good! At the end with the lazy susan shot, the timing of the zoom and the speed-up with the music hit was perfect! As far as the build, man, where to start. A lot of build videos I can pay half-attention to and get everything they're doing, but literally you have so much information coming through so seamlessly all the time, I can't help but stay rapt. I think with a build like this especially, but even just when scratch-building generally, being able to have time-savers is absolutely critical, not only because time is limited, but it's easy to get frustrated when things take forever, or don't go together well, so having tricks to make a great bit quickly really helps re-energize, and I think that the railing with the hole punch and the q-tips was an absolute winner as far as that goes. I really like your attention to depth and dimensionality, with the recessed door, the vent & pipe box sub-assemblies, and the support girders. Every piece you make always looks plausible, like it's not just built as a gaming terrain piece, but hints strongly at initial function, as well as a story of usage after the fact. Anyway sorry for casting Wall of Text but in summary, 10/10 grand slam! Keep up the good work!
Thank you! Plausibility and function is something i think about a lot. I was careful not to have pipes feeding into the overhang and not appearing on the other side for example. I appreciate your comment a lot, its gratifying to see people noticing all the little things
For sure, making a project and doing a video at the same time and editing it to flow well, take a lot of practice and work, he does a great job, my channel still has a lot to learn haha.
Standard Setting. Everything that should be in a crafting vid. Awe Inspiring work, as pointed out by every single youtube crafter I follow has already pointed out. That is one hell of a bar setting. Bravo Zulu!
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop right, sry. Basically it's a flag code (Bravo Zulu) that means "Well Done" as in "Extremely Well Done" done rather than the normal confirmation.
This is amazing! Came here from the painting phase interview. I'm returning to the hobby after like 15 years. When I was a kid I always loved people's terrain craft projects, but never really did anything proper myself. This is inspiring me to try it out!
As somebody who used to be heavily into papercraft some years ago i love this build in so damn many levels! Every terrain builder should watch this even if they never plan on doing anything on these lines :D The only thing i'd change if i ever decided to make something like this for me (and i had the storage space, right now i'm instead in need to free up a lot of it), would be to give it a different, cleaner, less super-rusty paintjob, because the rest looks so damn professional that i honestly can find no fault at all, there's commercial terrain that doesn't look this good!
Your projects keep getting better and better. I found this episode particularly inspiring though. Getting the results you do from household items and a stack of chipboard is absolutely top quality. A+ planning went into this and it shows. As always, looking forward to the next one!
Fantastic looking project Eric! As many have already commented, the attention to detail and creative use of materials is really inspiring. My particular favourite parts are the recessed details, it adds a whole extra dimension to the build IMO
Wow, when you brought out the toothbrush and started scrubbing that masking paint off to create the chipping effect... I was blown away. I have never even thought to do something like that, and it turned out to look so incredible! Got yourself a new subscriber in me, awesome stuff!
when people ask me where I get my ideas ad inspiration from I tell them to go and check guys like yourself out. to say this is all cardboard it's stunning well done Great build
I see something like this and looks at my cardboard structures and just think "heck". I think what really sets yours a league apart are all the small parts and perfect cuts. I see now the value in precise measurements.
Tbh im not great or consistent at measurement, but clean cuts is very important. This project went through a bunch of blades for my craft knives. A sharp blade is a must!!
I felt the need to leave a comment here, even though I hardly ever comment on TH-cam videos. I've seen the recommendation for this video on TH-cam for a few days now, and even though I often watch and always enjoy your videos, I didn't click on it until tonight. The reason was that seeing the finished product in the thumbnail, I did not believe that you could possibly have made all this from cardboard, and that it was therefore clickbait to a degree. I am very happy that you proved me wrong and I am deeply impressed by this build. I flatter myself that I know a thing or two about crafting, but I would not have believed such a result to be achievable with only cardboard. Your best video so far, in my opinion!
I’ve said this once before, but after years of terrain videos from dozens of creators, I think this is THE BEST build video because using only cardboard and still achieving amazing details shows how creativity triumphs. Aspire to do this, and then use things like 3D printed assets to take it to the max! Remember kids: Mod Podge is your best friend!
Awesome piece of terrain sir. Amazing that it's just paper! You need to do a video showing us a full table setup sometime with all your custom pieces. Take care!
Awesome piece of terrain sir. Amazing that it's just paper! You need to do a video showing us a full table setup sometime with all your custom pieces. Take care!
This is still by far one of my favorite build videos. It literally served as the inspiration point for me to start collecting junk around my house for some builds of my own. I cannot thank you enough, when my son is older, I should have enough terrain for endless Slum wars :D
I feel like this is the kind of project that would benefit grratly from some LED lights, nonetheless, a great build Eric, and I hope you won the contest!
Hey Eric, been subscriber for awhile, and love the vids. Alene's tacky glue is all I ever use personally, and IMO it's much better than Elmer's white glue. It's tackiness helps keep mess down, isn't too runny, and has been sucked right up by foam board and especially chip board. So I say use it up, bud! 💪
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop thanks for the reply! :) I'll remember your tip, I've done not very much ground cover applications. Also, I watched this vid in fits and starts this weekend. May I suggest for ladders you cut stock width of rails from the chip board, cut your long rails, then rapid fire cut your rungs to then glue them onto the rails? It will give you an alternating texture to the ladders, and save you the effort of cutting tiny square boxes. Either way I know you'll do cool shit later! 💪
As a student industrial design I have to make a lotttt of models out of cardboard and a small tip I would give you: get one of those paper cutters or paper guillotines. You can get them quite cheap and thinner cardboard can be cut with it, it’s a huge help in getting perfectly squared cuts. They also come with a folding piece instead of a knife that makes perfect folding lines. There’s a ruler on the cutter to make sure your cutting at the right dimensions. That thing has saved me hours of work, I can’t put into words how much I appreciate that invention.😅😂
Wow. You nailed it. You nailed it hard. I am playing Tabletop Games since Warhammer 40K 2nd Edition. I watch all them TH-camrs: Wyloch, Tabletop Engineer, Black Magic Craft, Terrain Tutor, ... I have seen lots of stuff in my time but what you did here... AWESOME! This is just awesome. How long did that take you?!
I have borrowed heavily and been inspired tons by all those you listed. Legends, each one of em. I try to capture a bit of a 40k from the 90s vibe, as you can see i love the Necromunda sculpts from that era.
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop And you did capture the vibe. I played Necromunda back then. Your builds are fantastic but this one, just made from Cardboard, really flashed me. All the Details... I am glad I subscribed. Keep on going mate!
So... thank you for making easily the single most comprehensive cardboard construction video I've ever seen. I've come back to this video more time than I can count for a small bit of info and always end up watching the whole thing.
Yeah, my wife made my pare back my junk collection significantly during lockdown; she says, we're always generating food box trash, so there's no reason to save extra boxes . . . 🤣
This is astounding. It's like the early "how to make wargames terrain" book projects I started with as a kid grew up with a serious glow up! Inspiring stuff. I'm curious, do you have plans (well, let's be real; ideas) for all that foil now that you've separated it from the roll?
Every video you make, and every build you create just seems to get better and better. This was an obvious time-sink, but the results are just spectacular. Well done, mate.
This was the first video of yours I watched and I was immediately hooked. I've watched all your videos now and they're all so great. Not only are you such an inspirational scratch crafter but you're also a super kind person. Thank you for making such great content
I’ve just been deep-diving all of your videos the last couple days. I have so many boxes from my last move and this is definitely the best damn terrain tutorial out there.
This video is absolutely awesome. I've always built terrain out of cardboard i've had lying around and i never realized just how far i could take it before i saw your video! incredibly inspirational, love the video so much
I know I already commented, but this video was really inspirational for me. I've been following tabletop Crafters for the past 5 or 6 years, starting with DM Scotty, and have been crafting terrain off and on for the duration. I recently was running into some major stumbling blocks, between renovations being done on my apartment, as well as other life factors, and was becoming very discouraged with crafting. After watching this video and the techniques you used, using nothing but paper products, I once again became inspired to jump back into the hobby. I'm currently working on a large piece for our Starfinder game, and plan on taking another stab at some Fallout-inspired set pieces. Thanks for doing what you do. Keep up the great work.
As a fellow craftsman I can honestly say that this is such an inspiring and awesome example of patience, skill and ingenuity, well done brother, keep up the great work, saved this to recreate and you got yourself a subscriber
This. THIS VIDEO IS AWESOME!!! THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME MAKING IT!!!!! PLEASE DO MORE!!!! I think I learned more from this than I have in a while from other terrain builders. You employed so many different techniques. Very awesome and VERY educational (as far as cardboard terrain building goes anyway)
Really nice work Eric! This is easily as impressive as the work of any of the other gaming crafters on TH-cam. Really nice looking, hugely inventive, meticulously detailed and showing a lovely balance between plausibility, aesthetics and play-ability. And best of all it's a really cheap build that anyone could have a go at. Kudos.
Wow man, that work is amazing!!. I used to work with foam and plastic, but your work with cardboard is awesome and looks realistic!!. Keep the good work!!
So i have recently started to get back into Wh40k (last i played was 3rd edition) and have found this channel. I will say this much; watching you work is a real joy and i already have learned a lot. Thank you for the really detailed Tutorials. (also that most of it is actually doable without an actual hobby workshop like most of these other guys have^^)
I love those futuristic sliding doors. Some day, people will be kicking themselves for throwing away pocket doors from old buildings. This is awesome, and I like how you just roll with whatever comes up, like covering that cylinder.
This is one of the coolest builds I have seen! The cardboard limitation definitely looks like it adds a lot of extra work, but it is worth it! The final details look every bit as good as plastic terrain imo. I am for sure going to be using some of these techniques.
I've never seen something so free-form yet so precise.
Thanks! Precision is not my forte but i tried on this one
This has to be the most inspirational hobby project on youtube.
the girders are a game-changer. So simple and so effective.
So I was watching the beginning of this video, and said "there's no way that is all cardboard".... holy cow!! it is only cardboard! Great job.
Except for some plastic tubing yes.
@@MrMaltavius Where's the plastic tubing?
@@StatisticsIUofTye exactly
Q-tips are not cardboard. He's bastarding the Process.
I'm Building An Entire House out of this 💩
Dude, you fuckin killed it with this. I don't even want to think about the time investment. I almost dont like the video because you've shamed me so thoroughly. When you said what the challenge was I honestly figured you had cut some corners and still used those styrene stairs and some greebles...
Here I am trying to work up the gumption to work on my table while I've got a hoard of crafting supplies, bits, 3d printed greebles, and a die cutter. Meanwhile you go and build something indistinguishable from your other builds with just cardboard. It was so unexpected I'm just staggered.
I think there are only a few hobby youtubers than bring as much a combination of skill AND effort to their builds as you do. Fuckin well done man and regardless of how the facebook thing goes I hope you're proud of this one because to me you nailed it.
I love this comment! Thank you. There is no shame in feeling hobby inertia I get it all the time. I have remind myself i can always pull something apart or repaint if I need to. Just go for it! It almost always works out and progress will turn to inspiration
I really liked how he didn’t cut corners, I’m just looking for a cheap (no matter how time consuming) way to pursue a hobby. In fact, I think I’m going to go attempt to make something like this. At a smaller scale, of course
"There's no way you made this out of only--
oh wow."
Haha i know right.
You are one, if not the best scratch builder on TH-cam. I love low-cost scratch builds. This is excellent! Thank You!
Thank you!! Its a talented community so thats very kind!
Your creativity is mindblowing.
I was just thinking the same! This build was amazing and looks so lore fitting!
14:00 This is my favourite part. By recessing that detail box you really sell the depth and scale of this structure. Now I can't un-see the roof as a thick, pipe-laden metal slab.
Great work.
Yeah! Thats my favourite part too
18:40 "I cheeto-blast my entire project here"- hahahahahhaahah
😂
Fantastic job Eric. That's the kind of tutorial which help the community to see that's you don't need a ton a supply or money to build something great!!
Exactly!!
making this stuff is something but painting it is really pure ART.
Good job man. every time i whatch your videos i amazed.
keet it up
This was beautiful mate!
Thanks Emil, I’m glad you liked it
This is why I like youtube ❤️
SO many great little ideas packed in here....
Thanks man. The limitation really got the ol noggin joggin
This is a great build (and video)....reading the comments made me realize I was right about your accent. I was always confused by your mentions of NY when I was sure you sounded like you were from Ontario!
Thanks! Yeah, I grew up in Toronto. You have a good ear!
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop Dude, i'm from poland and i still guessed you sound like canadian xD
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop i thought you were Swedish
Wow. That is really impressive. Nice to see that inexpensive materials can look absolutely amazing when a lot of skill and effort is applied.
Eric, man, this is on another level. Best build video so far, and that's saying a lot! Everything you do is great but you still manage to get better every time, even your editing is getting really good! At the end with the lazy susan shot, the timing of the zoom and the speed-up with the music hit was perfect!
As far as the build, man, where to start. A lot of build videos I can pay half-attention to and get everything they're doing, but literally you have so much information coming through so seamlessly all the time, I can't help but stay rapt. I think with a build like this especially, but even just when scratch-building generally, being able to have time-savers is absolutely critical, not only because time is limited, but it's easy to get frustrated when things take forever, or don't go together well, so having tricks to make a great bit quickly really helps re-energize, and I think that the railing with the hole punch and the q-tips was an absolute winner as far as that goes.
I really like your attention to depth and dimensionality, with the recessed door, the vent & pipe box sub-assemblies, and the support girders. Every piece you make always looks plausible, like it's not just built as a gaming terrain piece, but hints strongly at initial function, as well as a story of usage after the fact.
Anyway sorry for casting Wall of Text but in summary, 10/10 grand slam! Keep up the good work!
Thank you! Plausibility and function is something i think about a lot. I was careful not to have pipes feeding into the overhang and not appearing on the other side for example. I appreciate your comment a lot, its gratifying to see people noticing all the little things
For sure, making a project and doing a video at the same time and editing it to flow well, take a lot of practice and work, he does a great job, my channel still has a lot to learn haha.
Standard Setting. Everything that should be in a crafting vid. Awe Inspiring work, as pointed out by every single youtube crafter I follow has already pointed out. That is one hell of a bar setting. Bravo Zulu!
Thanks Guy! What do you mean by zulu though?
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop right, sry. Basically it's a flag code (Bravo Zulu) that means "Well Done" as in "Extremely Well Done" done rather than the normal confirmation.
I really love that Eric started adding more colour to his builds! Really love how they look!
This is amazing! Came here from the painting phase interview.
I'm returning to the hobby after like 15 years. When I was a kid I always loved people's terrain craft projects, but never really did anything proper myself. This is inspiring me to try it out!
This is witchcraft. Best crafting video i ever seen
Years later this remains one of my favourite videos you have ever done. I keep coming back to it for reference.
As somebody who used to be heavily into papercraft some years ago i love this build in so damn many levels! Every terrain builder should watch this even if they never plan on doing anything on these lines :D
The only thing i'd change if i ever decided to make something like this for me (and i had the storage space, right now i'm instead in need to free up a lot of it), would be to give it a different, cleaner, less super-rusty paintjob, because the rest looks so damn professional that i honestly can find no fault at all, there's commercial terrain that doesn't look this good!
WOW Just WOW!!! You are one talented man!
Your projects keep getting better and better. I found this episode particularly inspiring though. Getting the results you do from household items and a stack of chipboard is absolutely top quality. A+ planning went into this and it shows. As always, looking forward to the next one!
Thanks ravichos. Its nice to know that this material adds so much to the toolbelt
OMG!!!!
You do It again.
That is the BEST crafting proyect I have never seen.
Great Job
Fantastic looking project Eric! As many have already commented, the attention to detail and creative use of materials is really inspiring. My particular favourite parts are the recessed details, it adds a whole extra dimension to the build IMO
That's the way you roll ... excellent work. Thank you for detailing the challenge, and your work to achieve a solid entry.
The non-slip grip on the steel ruler is a cool idea.
The terrain piece is amazing.
lol. But it lifts the ruler juuuust enough that may screw up the cut.
@@element4studios He's using it with the cork side upwards, I think, to increase the grob for his fingers.
reaching god tier sir. even the video itself and glamour shots at the end were above par
Thanks! I really like doing those end segments
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop probably a major pain but definitely do more builds like this.
Wow, when you brought out the toothbrush and started scrubbing that masking paint off to create the chipping effect... I was blown away. I have never even thought to do something like that, and it turned out to look so incredible! Got yourself a new subscriber in me, awesome stuff!
I love that you use your ruler cork side up too!
when people ask me where I get my ideas ad inspiration from I tell them to go and check guys like yourself out. to say this is all cardboard it's stunning well done Great build
Was pulled in by the cool thumbnail. was sold by the refferance to wylock. Love the work dude
I see something like this and looks at my cardboard structures and just think "heck". I think what really sets yours a league apart are all the small parts and perfect cuts. I see now the value in precise measurements.
Tbh im not great or consistent at measurement, but clean cuts is very important. This project went through a bunch of blades for my craft knives. A sharp blade is a must!!
Holy hell... new appreciation for cardboard! Great build!
Dawm Eric, this terrain is awesome. I cant get enough from this Videos. Please more!!!!!!!
Thanks christian
Hands down the best scratch built terrain video I have ever seen. The creativity in this piece is amazing.
It takes unbelievable talent to see so much potential when you look at an old cereal box!
I felt the need to leave a comment here, even though I hardly ever comment on TH-cam videos. I've seen the recommendation for this video on TH-cam for a few days now, and even though I often watch and always enjoy your videos, I didn't click on it until tonight. The reason was that seeing the finished product in the thumbnail, I did not believe that you could possibly have made all this from cardboard, and that it was therefore clickbait to a degree. I am very happy that you proved me wrong and I am deeply impressed by this build. I flatter myself that I know a thing or two about crafting, but I would not have believed such a result to be achievable with only cardboard. Your best video so far, in my opinion!
Thanks Emmanuel! Glad you were pleasantly surprised. It was difficult to restrain myself from using bits but im glad i did!
This is truly some insane, next-level creativity. Truly inspirational! Great vids.
I’ve said this once before, but after years of terrain videos from dozens of creators, I think this is THE BEST build video because using only cardboard and still achieving amazing details shows how creativity triumphs. Aspire to do this, and then use things like 3D printed assets to take it to the max! Remember kids: Mod Podge is your best friend!
You are an artist in every sense of the word. Amazing!
so awesome. i love the light at the end
Crazy good project! Looking at the old thumbnail I would not have guessed it is all cardboard!
Thats why i put the cardboard stock image in the thumbnail! Lol
You just showed me, with enough time given we couldnt set a big enough challenge. This was mindblowing in its creativity and resourcefulness.
Una vez más, un trabajo increible.
Fácil de hacer, materiales económicos y un resultado espectacular.
Muchas gracias amigo! :)
Eric is the best at rust on TH-cam.
Another solid build from a solid guy! Keep the builds coming Eric!
Eric it is refreshing to watch every video you share with us. Keep up the great job!
Awesome piece of terrain sir. Amazing that it's just paper! You need to do a video showing us a full table setup sometime with all your custom pieces. Take care!
You could have shown the end result and claimed it was mdf/lasercut terrain and I would have believed you. Absolutely mindblowing work on this!
Eric knocking it out of the park again!
I hope you have a lot of storage space for your amazing builds.
New viewers to this channel may think the video is sped up, but in actual fact he's slowed it down so we can see the techniques used.
This is your best build yet, totally smashed it and looks incredible =)
Gotta keep improving! Thanks
Awesome piece of terrain sir. Amazing that it's just paper! You need to do a video showing us a full table setup sometime with all your custom pieces. Take care!
Man that is another awesome piece! Cant believe that is all cardboard! Mindblowing in some parts. Great job!
This is a little masterclass, thank you for sharing it you magnificent bastard
Master level ACHIEVED!!!! Wow, just fucking WOW!
Man, consider my hat well and truly doffed. Looks so damn awesome.
💁🏼♂️🎩
This is still by far one of my favorite build videos. It literally served as the inspiration point for me to start collecting junk around my house for some builds of my own. I cannot thank you enough, when my son is older, I should have enough terrain for endless Slum wars :D
Blue yeti, stepping up in the production value! Nicely done!
Now if i can only learn how to use it properly! Haha thanks commander
I feel like this is the kind of project that would benefit grratly from some LED lights, nonetheless, a great build Eric, and I hope you won the contest!
The temptation to use other bits was nearly overwhelming at times hahaha
Yes, that would be cool!
Another great master piece!! If you ever get into Star Wars Legion I'd love to see what kind of terrain youll do! I truly am a fan of your work!
This is way awesome! Well worth the time you put into it.
Also I love the idea of using masking fluid. I need to try that.
Hey Eric, been subscriber for awhile, and love the vids.
Alene's tacky glue is all I ever use personally, and IMO it's much better than Elmer's white glue. It's tackiness helps keep mess down, isn't too runny, and has been sucked right up by foam board and especially chip board.
So I say use it up, bud! 💪
White glue was still used to put the sand on, the runniness was useful there. The tacky glue is great for lots of applications though, i love it
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop thanks for the reply! :) I'll remember your tip, I've done not very much ground cover applications.
Also, I watched this vid in fits and starts this weekend. May I suggest for ladders you cut stock width of rails from the chip board, cut your long rails, then rapid fire cut your rungs to then glue them onto the rails? It will give you an alternating texture to the ladders, and save you the effort of cutting tiny square boxes.
Either way I know you'll do cool shit later! 💪
As a student industrial design I have to make a lotttt of models out of cardboard and a small tip I would give you:
get one of those paper cutters or paper guillotines. You can get them quite cheap and thinner cardboard can be cut with it, it’s a huge help in getting perfectly squared cuts.
They also come with a folding piece instead of a knife that makes perfect folding lines. There’s a ruler on the cutter to make sure your cutting at the right dimensions.
That thing has saved me hours of work, I can’t put into words how much I appreciate that invention.😅😂
Wow. You nailed it. You nailed it hard. I am playing Tabletop Games since Warhammer 40K 2nd Edition. I watch all them TH-camrs: Wyloch, Tabletop Engineer, Black Magic Craft, Terrain Tutor, ... I have seen lots of stuff in my time but what you did here... AWESOME! This is just awesome. How long did that take you?!
I have borrowed heavily and been inspired tons by all those you listed. Legends, each one of em. I try to capture a bit of a 40k from the 90s vibe, as you can see i love the Necromunda sculpts from that era.
@@EricsHobbyWorkshop And you did capture the vibe. I played Necromunda back then. Your builds are fantastic but this one, just made from Cardboard, really flashed me. All the Details... I am glad I subscribed. Keep on going mate!
So... thank you for making easily the single most comprehensive cardboard construction video I've ever seen. I've come back to this video more time than I can count for a small bit of info and always end up watching the whole thing.
"Cheeto-blast" is now my favorite term... :)
You sir, are a God of crafting!
Now I can show my wife why I've been saving cereal boxes and tp tubes for 12 years...
Hahaha
Haha 12 year, you're going to make it 1:1 scale!
Yeah, my wife made my pare back my junk collection significantly during lockdown; she says, we're always generating food box trash, so there's no reason to save extra boxes . . . 🤣
What an absolutely Incredible build !!! Amazing work
This is astounding. It's like the early "how to make wargames terrain" book projects I started with as a kid grew up with a serious glow up! Inspiring stuff.
I'm curious, do you have plans (well, let's be real; ideas) for all that foil now that you've separated it from the roll?
Yes, as a matter of fact i do! There will even ben some left over for full body protective garb from harmful rays
DUDE! You are extremly talented!! I love your vids!
Nah man that’s the rust map from MW2 😂🤣😂🤣😂
I can't unsee it. Best for pistols and knives matches.
Every video you make, and every build you create just seems to get better and better. This was an obvious time-sink, but the results are just spectacular. Well done, mate.
This was the first video of yours I watched and I was immediately hooked. I've watched all your videos now and they're all so great. Not only are you such an inspirational scratch crafter but you're also a super kind person. Thank you for making such great content
I’ve just been deep-diving all of your videos the last couple days. I have so many boxes from my last move and this is definitely the best damn terrain tutorial out there.
This is INCREDIBLE! man so many amazing ideas! just WOW! Bravo
This video is absolutely awesome. I've always built terrain out of cardboard i've had lying around and i never realized just how far i could take it before i saw your video! incredibly inspirational, love the video so much
Awesome work man that's all I can say ..it is truly amazing that it is completely constructed out of cardboard!
Thanks tj, glad you liked it
I know I already commented, but this video was really inspirational for me. I've been following tabletop Crafters for the past 5 or 6 years, starting with DM Scotty, and have been crafting terrain off and on for the duration. I recently was running into some major stumbling blocks, between renovations being done on my apartment, as well as other life factors, and was becoming very discouraged with crafting. After watching this video and the techniques you used, using nothing but paper products, I once again became inspired to jump back into the hobby. I'm currently working on a large piece for our Starfinder game, and plan on taking another stab at some Fallout-inspired set pieces. Thanks for doing what you do. Keep up the great work.
Masterclass right there. Bloody brilliant.
a real nice job! some eye opening techniques here!
Dude you are awsome with some master skills
So rad! I love that little streetlight LED too!
As a fellow craftsman I can honestly say that this is such an inspiring and awesome example of patience, skill and ingenuity, well done brother, keep up the great work, saved this to recreate and you got yourself a subscriber
You...
Absolutely....
Crushed it...
This. THIS VIDEO IS AWESOME!!! THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME MAKING IT!!!!! PLEASE DO MORE!!!!
I think I learned more from this than I have in a while from other terrain builders. You employed so many different techniques. Very awesome and VERY educational (as far as cardboard terrain building goes anyway)
Really nice work Eric! This is easily as impressive as the work of any of the other gaming crafters on TH-cam. Really nice looking, hugely inventive, meticulously detailed and showing a lovely balance between plausibility, aesthetics and play-ability. And best of all it's a really cheap build that anyone could have a go at. Kudos.
Wow man, that work is amazing!!. I used to work with foam and plastic, but your work with cardboard is awesome and looks realistic!!.
Keep the good work!!
Jeebus. Not sure if I'm feeling inspired or thoroughly disheartened but either way I'm impressed. Crushing it.
One of the most amazing crafting videos I have seen for what it is made from.
So i have recently started to get back into Wh40k (last i played was 3rd edition) and have found this channel. I will say this much; watching you work is a real joy and i already have learned a lot. Thank you for the really detailed Tutorials. (also that most of it is actually doable without an actual hobby workshop like most of these other guys have^^)
Beautiful work. I’m impressed that you are making such interesting terrain without creating a bunch of microplastic waste.
Excellent work, again you nail it!!!!! Great work
I love those futuristic sliding doors. Some day, people will be kicking themselves for throwing away pocket doors from old buildings.
This is awesome, and I like how you just roll with whatever comes up, like covering that cylinder.
Incredible. If this doesn't inspire someone to go and attempt this themselves then there is no hope!
WOW! Just WOW MAN! I am without words....
This is one of the coolest builds I have seen! The cardboard limitation definitely looks like it adds a lot of extra work, but it is worth it! The final details look every bit as good as plastic terrain imo. I am for sure going to be using some of these techniques.
Thanks! I am glad if it inspired you