Really wish wizards of the coast just had a mass miniature pack covering all the monster manual monsters. I get that It'd be pricey, but man do i want it.
Yeah, I highly recommend the Pathfinder pawns, actually. I own some and they are awesome. amzn.to/2ncG5SQ Still, I would prefer the 5e art so yes, WoTC making some would be great.
I just made some of these using a free online token maker, printed that image out on card stock, cut it out then glued onto 1” wood crafting circles which I painted black. Not heavy but easy to pick up and move around. (200 wooden discs for $6 on Amazon).
You could also make a duplicate of the monster with a red 'X' across it, paste that to the flip side, and use it to mark difficult terrain due to dead monster.
I've been doing this for a little while for my D&D group. I don't have loads of tokens, but if anyone was interested I could link PSD files for the correct D&D map/grid size tokens for all the different monsters, and some of the tokens I use myself.
both mediafire links for Rar and Zip stored versions: /file/4mtxj384jwaeodz/Tokens(dot)rar & /file/dibcn4glr85igvl/Tokens(dot)zip I hope it helps. Basically you paste and fit images beneath the PSD token layer outlines and remove the excess of the image for a full token. Then print a copy of those tokens off of an international or US A4 paper.
Thanks for the tutorial! I used your template and made about 90 tokens (I also made some generic ones for initiative order and inspiration), my only real complaint is that they are a little hard to pick up off the table since they are flat. I'm new to d&d so I'll be using these while I slowly build a collection of mini's, just wanted to drop a message and say thank you for your videos. They have been very helpful!
I know that this video is old, but instead of using the polyline tool, what you can do is click the tiny arrow beside the crop tool on the toolbar, to get the mask tool, and you can crop the image to be a circle.
Thank you for this tutorial. My son is 9 and just getting into D&D and I'm not ready to spend a ton on the game just yet. This will make our adventure a little more fun while still keeping some coins in my purse.
I've seen suggested the use of circular plastic coin holders for tokens. You can get some which are around an inch wide which would let you print out the tokens and stick them inside the coin holders. This has the added benefit of being easily reusable. You could even get some large ones for creatures which are larger than medium sized.
this is very easy to do once you get the hang of it and the trimmers you put into the linked token template make this a breeze honestly this is a DMs best friend
love these tokens there so cheep and versatile whats not to like. seen a few comments saying that a problem to these tokens was picking them up from the middle of a table is fiddly (because there flat) so just a small recommendation if your using metal washers and finding it hard to pick them up off middle of table grab a travel chess set and use the pieces like a magnetic handle to pick them straight up the reason i suggest the magnetic chess set is a fridge mag will probably be to strong and mark or damage the art or might grab multiple tokens at once . problem if you can call it that is solved
Nate, thanks so much man! This never occurred to me and its so bleeding obvious! I'm DMing on such a tiny budget but I wanted to give my new players visual aids to keep track in battle. You have just provided a solution to my problem. I've just made tokens for the entire starter set. Keep up the good work Sir!
Awesome video man. Thanks for showing me how to do this, ever since I learned this technique it’s my go-to for token creating when running tabletop games. Super fast, easy as could be. Best of all: FREE!!!!
Thank you very much for this video! Super easy guide to follow and great looking results ^^ My group just bought a battle map and I can't wait to make tokens for all the characters/monsters in our campaign! :D
I know this is a few years back, but YEAH!!! thanks a Bazillion times over!!! This is a genius idea, now to make some monster minis and not getting confused at who is the "good guy" and who is the monster! Thank you thank you thank you by the heavens thank you!!
I appreciate the simplicity of this. I use transparent peel-n-stick covers from Hobby story (concave design) that stick on the face side of the token and give a subtle round top to the token that protects it from damage. I get these fairly cheap and like the design. I'll have to make bases for these like you show to give them some heft and keep them from sliding about so much. Make a great room saver in my mini-case as well. I like that they set lower than my player's minis on the tabletop as well. Though I'll have to think about the "Dragon' token a bit more. The ferocity is kinda lost when the token is a flat piece compared to the PC mini. LOL !
Great video! I love the idea of using google drawings to make minis. I have a few tips and little things I would like to mention for those who would like to use this. 1) You can crop images in google drawings. If you double click on the image, you will be given the ability to crop the image. This however only works in a rectangular shape. 2) The reason why you can not click on the inner circle is that although you made the inside clear, the software still recognizes it as a full circle. If you wish to avoid this, I would recommend using the donut shape instead. This would allow you to click the inner circle, but you can not define the width of either circle with this method. I would also recommend you make the line transparent as the donut shape already acts like a circle and using the lines makes this method even less precise than it already is. I hope this helps some of you guys make your own cheap minis
Thank you for this video. I think the rainbow monsters would make it easy to know which "bad guy" a player was attacking. Especially since seeing tiny numbers on the token might be hard.
Extra tips: If you size the image to 1 inch by 1 inch, it will be sized perfectly in the document. Get some way to make a really consistent 1 inch circle. For example, a Fiskars 1" hole punch. After doing the previous one, oversize your tokens a little bit so you don't risk a little white along an edge when you miss by a tiny bit. "Laminate" your tokens to protect them a little. You can do this by actually laminating the sheet you printed, coating the sheet in clear packaging tape, or by doing a coat of Mod Podge over the entire token.
When he made the pic he chose 3x3 inches. And if you look at the ruler at 8:16 you'll see that the pic is still 3 inches big. Meaning that if you just set the original image to 1x1 inches, then you don't have to resize it later, right?
Wow, I was just looking at a local store to see what minis they had but I couldn't find it on the website. I was debating a 45 minute drive and then this video got recommended. Making my own, ftw
This video was a huge inspiration and help. Although I don't use this for the enemies as much as I would like to, easier to adjust combats on the fly if I don't have to have every enemy have a print out, it is great for the player characters and NPC's.
thank you so much i am new to D&D and i am running my very first game soon with a few friends and i have NOTHING but i wanted to use a map you are a lifesaver
Thank you for making this video, I am doing a podcast campaign using these types of tokens. We'll be using your circle template because we are on such a budget with 6 players.
I glue mine on 1" fender washers. After having a lot of them come apart when using Elmer's I now use Gorilla Suiper Glue Gel. Sounds excessive but it gets the job done.
These are much nicer than the ones I made. I printed out a bunch of images on card and then used 19mm fold back/bulldog clips (they were the smallest I could find in the shop) to hold them and then took the arms off the clips (they can be reattached later to remove the card cause those things grip hard) to use as bases so I had reusable bases. They're somewhat unwieldy when it comes to swapping over the bits of card though.
I don't have the patience to do this despite your guide being very helpful. I just ordered Hero Set Tokens from SidequestTTM. Worth checking out. (It is cool you are playing Sunless Citadel, one of my favourite modules)
Something that seems it would make this a bit easier is setting your image size to 1 inch by 1 inch at the start. This (theoretically) would cut out the resizing step when you add the image to the printing sheet. Also, if someone wanted to use the color changing tool more heavily, using a grey-scale monster image (and border color) would make the color change much cleaner.
@wasd20 Don't cut those by hand. Get a circle punch from the craft store. Comes in all sizes. www.michaels.com/recollections-lever-punch-circle/M10358843.html?dwvar_M10358843_color=White#q=circle+punch&start=1
Thanks so much for this video. Great looking tokens and so easy even i can do it. I'll probably use minis for the bigger monsters, but man these make for great cannon fodder.
Thanks for this one! I'm really a fan of this method, though as you say, GDrawings could be more helpful. I opted for beer bottle caps and quarters in lieu of card stock. Bottle caps for PCs and quarters for monsters and NPCs. Bottle caps from one session can be recycled into new monsters for future sessions!
I would use Photoshop mix & Photoshop Express for this instead. Both free apps on the App store, they have far more features and Functions. Great video!
How large are your token bases? I'm not from England so I'm having trouble looking for appropriate bases since I don't really know what is it that you use.
How will the tokens be used - physical or digital games? Where does the artwork come from? Do you have a license to use the copyrighted art work? Does anyone else?
Hi - late to the game (get it - game! Ha, I crack myself up) for this but THANKS! Quick question. After printing, how did you cut them prior to gluing to the painted washers? Looks like they are perfect circles, which I feel would be difficult with scissors or with an XActo knife?
Noob DM here. Where would you find the monster images themselves to put into the token circle? Google image searches haven't produced many great results
put the monster name and 5e or dnd after the name. i.e. "Giant Rat 5e" usually gets some good results. I've just done this today, and I've loved the result.
@wasd20 whenever I try to save or copy over my token file to the doc for printing, it always seems to cut off the right edge of the drawing making the circle edge flat on the right side. Any idea why that happens or how to fix it?
Hmm. I'm not sure - sorry! Maybe try downloading the doc as a PDF first before printing? Or try a different printer if you have one available. It could be that the token is just too close to the margin.
WASD20 thanks! I think it was a mix of them being too close together and also the background white overlapping with the black ring. I pulled the black ring in a little tighter and it was much better. I think it also made the color underneath more symmetrical. Thanks again!!!
Thanks for the video, this will really help me in my games! Hey what would you recommend as a base for a large creature, a bigger washer? And what screen capture software do you use? Any way thanks again!
Great video indeed! i was wondering what i could use as minis and this pops out, thanks man, i've only got one doubt, where can i glue this into? i know you say washers but do you have any other idea? Maybe even greater than 1-inch, you know, for huge monsters and stuff like that.
dear wasd20 i have made a token but i can't move it to a google docs it keeps on giving me this "the image you selected could not be uploaded" can you help me it real make me furious.
Make sure you download it as an image from google drawings first. PNG or JPG. If the 'add image' way isn't working from your Google Doc, try the drag and drop method. Just drag it into the doc. Good luck!
You spend a lot of time shuffling the circle around. Drive now (Jan, 2018) has a feature where you can right-click and "Center" => "Horizontally" or "Vertically". Likwise, if you "resize" the Kobold down to an inch (or 0.75) it should import at the correct size.
Lol this guy is like a brother to me known him since 6th grade. I've been trying to get into this d&d stuff but I struggle. I guess now that your here we need to play some d&d, I got like 4 people wanting to play but I just can't seem to wrap around the rules.
I also play Warhammer 40k but in process of adding Machnicus to my army of Space Marines and repainting my armies, so they are sitting in a bucket of 99% alcohol...
Really wish wizards of the coast just had a mass miniature pack covering all the monster manual monsters.
I get that It'd be pricey, but man do i want it.
Squishy Dew Is your profile pic from a certain game?
Naw, its custom made by a friend of mine, if you look on my channel you can see the rest of the piece on the banner :) (channels dead tho)
would be nice
Similar to the beastiary boxes for Pathfinder? That would be cool.
Yeah, I highly recommend the Pathfinder pawns, actually. I own some and they are awesome. amzn.to/2ncG5SQ
Still, I would prefer the 5e art so yes, WoTC making some would be great.
I just made some of these using a free online token maker, printed that image out on card stock, cut it out then glued onto 1” wood crafting circles which I painted black. Not heavy but easy to pick up and move around. (200 wooden discs for $6 on Amazon).
oh FINALLY, free minis for my campaigns, THANK YOU!!!
You're welcome.
You could also make a duplicate of the monster with a red 'X' across it, paste that to the flip side, and use it to mark difficult terrain due to dead monster.
Great idea!
This is a great idea. I may have to do this with mine.
@@rlmarin1968 I just did numbers with x'ed out numbers on the back, but keeping track of which number is which monster could be difficult to track.
@@leonielson7138 regardless, tokens are cool, they work for visual clarity, and they’re CHEAP…lol.
I've been doing this for a little while for my D&D group. I don't have loads of tokens, but if anyone was interested I could link PSD files for the correct D&D map/grid size tokens for all the different monsters, and some of the tokens I use myself.
xMaly28 Links would be great. Thanks.
both mediafire links for Rar and Zip stored versions: /file/4mtxj384jwaeodz/Tokens(dot)rar & /file/dibcn4glr85igvl/Tokens(dot)zip
I hope it helps.
Basically you paste and fit images beneath the PSD token layer outlines and remove the excess of the image for a full token. Then print a copy of those tokens off of an international or US A4 paper.
This is awesome. Knocked out around 40-45 distinct mini's today :D
That's rad!
I know this is old now but it was a huge help. I used Photoshop since I have it but the steps were easy to translate and simple to follow. Thank you!
Thanks for the tutorial! I used your template and made about 90 tokens (I also made some generic ones for initiative order and inspiration), my only real complaint is that they are a little hard to pick up off the table since they are flat. I'm new to d&d so I'll be using these while I slowly build a collection of mini's, just wanted to drop a message and say thank you for your videos. They have been very helpful!
Awesome. Thanks so much for the comment. Happy gaming!
Even 4 years down the line this is still a super nice and simple way of making pngs look a little more refined in play. Thanks for the assistance :)
I know that this video is old, but instead of using the polyline tool, what you can do is click the tiny arrow beside the crop tool on the toolbar, to get the mask tool, and you can crop the image to be a circle.
Thank you for this tutorial. My son is 9 and just getting into D&D and I'm not ready to spend a ton on the game just yet. This will make our adventure a little more fun while still keeping some coins in my purse.
I've seen suggested the use of circular plastic coin holders for tokens. You can get some which are around an inch wide which would let you print out the tokens and stick them inside the coin holders. This has the added benefit of being easily reusable. You could even get some large ones for creatures which are larger than medium sized.
Great suggestion, thanks!
This is a great idea. So much better than just printing off pictures of the monsters and cutting them out.
this is very easy to do once you get the hang of it and the trimmers you put into the linked token template make this a breeze honestly this is a DMs best friend
love these tokens there so cheep and versatile whats not to like. seen a few comments saying that a problem to these tokens was picking them up from the middle of a table is fiddly (because there flat) so just a small recommendation if your using metal washers and finding it hard to pick them up off middle of table grab a travel chess set and use the pieces like a magnetic handle to pick them straight up the reason i suggest the magnetic chess set is a fridge mag will probably be to strong and mark or damage the art or might grab multiple tokens at once . problem if you can call it that is solved
Nate, thanks so much man! This never occurred to me and its so bleeding obvious! I'm DMing on such a tiny budget but I wanted to give my new players visual aids to keep track in battle. You have just provided a solution to my problem. I've just made tokens for the entire starter set. Keep up the good work Sir!
That's great! Thanks for watching. :)
My husband and I played the sunless citadel. Thanks for the tutorial
Awesome video man. Thanks for showing me how to do this, ever since I learned this technique it’s my go-to for token creating when running tabletop games.
Super fast, easy as could be.
Best of all: FREE!!!!
Thank you very much for this video! Super easy guide to follow and great looking results ^^
My group just bought a battle map and I can't wait to make tokens for all the characters/monsters in our campaign! :D
I know this is a few years back, but YEAH!!! thanks a Bazillion times over!!! This is a genius idea, now to make some monster minis and not getting confused at who is the "good guy" and who is the monster! Thank you thank you thank you by the heavens thank you!!
Thank you for this tip. I didn't even know about Google Drawing until I see this video. Now I will have mini's for my campaign.
Big THANK YOU! We're just about to start playing and these Tokens will surely help us. Just tried it, and it's so easy!
I appreciate the simplicity of this. I use transparent peel-n-stick covers from Hobby story (concave design) that stick on the face side of the token and give a subtle round top to the token that protects it from damage. I get these fairly cheap and like the design. I'll have to make bases for these like you show to give them some heft and keep them from sliding about so much. Make a great room saver in my mini-case as well. I like that they set lower than my player's minis on the tabletop as well. Though I'll have to think about the "Dragon' token a bit more. The ferocity is kinda lost when the token is a flat piece compared to the PC mini. LOL !
Great video! I love the idea of using google drawings to make minis. I have a few tips and little things I would like to mention for those who would like to use this.
1) You can crop images in google drawings. If you double click on the image, you will be given the ability to crop the image. This however only works in a rectangular shape.
2) The reason why you can not click on the inner circle is that although you made the inside clear, the software still recognizes it as a full circle. If you wish to avoid this, I would recommend using the donut shape instead. This would allow you to click the inner circle, but you can not define the width of either circle with this method. I would also recommend you make the line transparent as the donut shape already acts like a circle and using the lines makes this method even less precise than it already is.
I hope this helps some of you guys make your own cheap minis
I use wooden circles. You can buy 1 inch to 2 inch.
Thank you for this video. I think the rainbow monsters would make it easy to know which "bad guy" a player was attacking. Especially since seeing tiny numbers on the token might be hard.
Extra tips:
If you size the image to 1 inch by 1 inch, it will be sized perfectly in the document.
Get some way to make a really consistent 1 inch circle. For example, a Fiskars 1" hole punch.
After doing the previous one, oversize your tokens a little bit so you don't risk a little white along an edge when you miss by a tiny bit.
"Laminate" your tokens to protect them a little. You can do this by actually laminating the sheet you printed, coating the sheet in clear packaging tape, or by doing a coat of Mod Podge over the entire token.
When he made the pic he chose 3x3 inches. And if you look at the ruler at 8:16 you'll see that the pic is still 3 inches big. Meaning that if you just set the original image to 1x1 inches, then you don't have to resize it later, right?
Wow that's pretty sick. I'll definitely have to make some of these if I decide to make any maps. Shoot might even just make them for the hell of it.
Wonderful tutorial! I bought some wooden discs and some epoxy resin dome stickers and my tokens look sturdy and expensive!
Thank you! I have very few minis and not enough money to buy more, this is extremely helpful!
Huge help! Literally. I don't have any huge sized creatures or tokens for my combat and I'm running Storm King's Thunder lol
Wow, I was just looking at a local store to see what minis they had but I couldn't find it on the website. I was debating a 45 minute drive and then this video got recommended. Making my own, ftw
This video was a huge inspiration and help. Although I don't use this for the enemies as much as I would like to, easier to adjust combats on the fly if I don't have to have every enemy have a print out, it is great for the player characters and NPC's.
thank you so much
i am new to D&D and i am running my very first game soon with a few friends and i have NOTHING but i wanted to use a map
you are a lifesaver
Great. Have fun!
Thank you for making this video, I am doing a podcast campaign using these types of tokens. We'll be using your circle template because we are on such a budget with 6 players.
I glue mine on 1" fender washers. After having a lot of them come apart when using Elmer's I now use Gorilla Suiper Glue Gel. Sounds excessive but it gets the job done.
Wow, randomly started this and I am running the sunless citadel for my group right now. I love it so far and I hope you will also!
Amazing! This helped me a lot with creating tokens for my upcoming campaign. Thumbs-up!
Thank you for this video! I needed miniatures for a D&D group I want to make at my school this is a really affordable option.
I got 3 sheets of cardstock and a 17 dollars worth of fender washers and made every mini for lost mines of phandelver this is great
These are much nicer than the ones I made. I printed out a bunch of images on card and then used 19mm fold back/bulldog clips (they were the smallest I could find in the shop) to hold them and then took the arms off the clips (they can be reattached later to remove the card cause those things grip hard) to use as bases so I had reusable bases. They're somewhat unwieldy when it comes to swapping over the bits of card though.
Wow! Using washers is ingenious!! Thanks so much :)
I don't have the patience to do this despite your guide being very helpful.
I just ordered Hero Set Tokens from SidequestTTM. Worth checking out.
(It is cool you are playing Sunless Citadel, one of my favourite modules)
Awesome video man! I'm a new DM, about to take my friends through there first adventure and this is going to help immensely!
Cool! Happy gaming!
What a great idea. I need some more "gribblies"... this is perfect!
I know its damn late, but I just used this today. Very easy and fast. Thanks for the great tip!
Something that seems it would make this a bit easier is setting your image size to 1 inch by 1 inch at the start. This (theoretically) would cut out the resizing step when you add the image to the printing sheet.
Also, if someone wanted to use the color changing tool more heavily, using a grey-scale monster image (and border color) would make the color change much cleaner.
I did think about that after I had filmed and edited! Starting at 1 by 1 in google drawings seems like it should work!
Thanks for the video!! Definiteley a help for someone who has neither the time nor the skill for minitures.
Glad you enjoyed it, Chase!
Absolutely genius, I don't know why I hadn't thought about this before
Glad you liked it!
A 1" circle punch makes the cut out process a Lot easier :-) seem to be at most any craft shop
@wasd20 Don't cut those by hand. Get a circle punch from the craft store. Comes in all sizes. www.michaels.com/recollections-lever-punch-circle/M10358843.html?dwvar_M10358843_color=White#q=circle+punch&start=1
Great video nate! Never knew about that google photoshop, totally going to take this advice
I used google images and powerpoint to make one inch wide minis that I cut out and glued to pennies!
amazing! Really useful, specially because minis are so expensive here and we need to get around that to create battles
This is excellent. I am trying to make something called a piecepack and this si just what I needed. Many thanks.
Great!
Great video. Kids and I used to make tokens. Thanks!
Thanks so much for this video. Great looking tokens and so easy even i can do it. I'll probably use minis for the bigger monsters, but man these make for great cannon fodder.
Congrats on 25k subs!
Thanks William. :)
Thanks for this one! I'm really a fan of this method, though as you say, GDrawings could be more helpful.
I opted for beer bottle caps and quarters in lieu of card stock. Bottle caps for PCs and quarters for monsters and NPCs.
Bottle caps from one session can be recycled into new monsters for future sessions!
I would use Photoshop mix & Photoshop Express for this instead. Both free apps on the App store, they have far more features and Functions. Great video!
thanks Nate you just made my life really easy, nice instructional
Cool! Happy gaming.
These would look really good on inkjet heat shrink paper. That would turn them into real plastic tokens.
Looks good, maybe add 1 inch round epoxy stickers to protect them
THANK YOU!!! I've been trying to find more token to fit with the default Edge of the Empire tokens and now I won't have to buy minis.
What size washer are you all using? Is it considered a flat washer?
Awesome and really useful! Thanks Nate!
Thanks for watching!
Is there an art file size that one should stay above so that the print quality can be good?
So here's a late question, could these same tokens be used for a virtual campaign (not roll20/fantasy grounds)? Say google slide?
How large are your token bases? I'm not from England so I'm having trouble looking for appropriate bases since I don't really know what is it that you use.
1inch. Just use Google to translate into your local measurement. Millimeters or however washers are measured.
@@WASD20 Thanks
I love you man. This is sooo effin useful!!!!
Thank you very very much! You are amazing and a life saver! And I love your channel!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed.
you are awesome, this saved my ass, i totally forgot about making enemy figures so thanks
How will the tokens be used - physical or digital games? Where does the artwork come from? Do you have a license to use the copyrighted art work? Does anyone else?
sorry if i write twice, but do you think it could be a good idea to just laminate the paper without using bases?
That could absolutely work. Personally, I like a little bit of thickness to them that you probably wouldn’t get through lamination. But it would work.
Where did you get those rounded stands for your tokens? Thanks.
Did you watch the video? I did explain.
Hi - late to the game (get it - game! Ha, I crack myself up) for this but THANKS!
Quick question. After printing, how did you cut them prior to gluing to the painted washers? Looks like they are perfect circles, which I feel would be difficult with scissors or with an XActo knife?
thank you sir
BRILLIANT!!! *Clinks beer glass*
Noob DM here. Where would you find the monster images themselves to put into the token circle? Google image searches haven't produced many great results
put the monster name and 5e or dnd after the name. i.e. "Giant Rat 5e" usually gets some good results. I've just done this today, and I've loved the result.
@wasd20 whenever I try to save or copy over my token file to the doc for printing, it always seems to cut off the right edge of the drawing making the circle edge flat on the right side. Any idea why that happens or how to fix it?
Hmm. I'm not sure - sorry! Maybe try downloading the doc as a PDF first before printing? Or try a different printer if you have one available. It could be that the token is just too close to the margin.
WASD20 thanks! I think it was a mix of them being too close together and also the background white overlapping with the black ring. I pulled the black ring in a little tighter and it was much better. I think it also made the color underneath more symmetrical. Thanks again!!!
Where did you get the pictures of the creatures from? the fact that they have a white background makes them very good looking in tokens
Google image search.
I'm gonna try to use round 1" magnets from staples for bases :)
Great video and super useful. Thank you.
Cool! Thanks for the comment.
Thanks for the video, this will really help me in my games! Hey what would you recommend as a base for a large creature, a bigger washer? And what screen capture software do you use? Any way thanks again!
Hi Jacob. I would use bigger washers or maybe a piece of black foam board.
I use OBS for screen capture. It's free and very customizable.
Awesome thanks! I really appreciate you answering my comment. Have a good one.
I appreciate the upload - good stuff thanks!
All I would need is a good base for the images, I wonder what other alternatives I should look for...
great video! excellent tip! Thanks!
Great video indeed! i was wondering what i could use as minis and this pops out, thanks man, i've only got one doubt, where can i glue this into? i know you say washers but do you have any other idea? Maybe even greater than 1-inch, you know, for huge monsters and stuff like that.
dear wasd20 i have made a token but i can't move it to a google docs it keeps on giving me this "the image you selected could not be uploaded" can you help me it real make me furious.
Make sure you download it as an image from google drawings first. PNG or JPG. If the 'add image' way isn't working from your Google Doc, try the drag and drop method. Just drag it into the doc. Good luck!
thanks WASD20 and after 3 hours of figuring it out i found out how to put it in to google docs thanks for the tip
Can it be any type of paper or does it have to be cardstock?
Any type of paper will do!
You amazing person! this is just what I needed.
You spend a lot of time shuffling the circle around. Drive now (Jan, 2018) has a feature where you can right-click and "Center" => "Horizontally" or "Vertically".
Likwise, if you "resize" the Kobold down to an inch (or 0.75) it should import at the correct size.
Those are 1/2 or 1 inch washers?
I inch
Great tutorial! Thanks a lot.
Where did you go to find all the monster photos?
Image search in your browser.
Any free or inexpensive 5e modules that you recommend?
There's some great inexpensive supplements here: absolutetabletop.com/ They also put out free stuff from time to time!
Cool !!! gonna try this! thnx for sharing sir. ;-)
Great! Thanks for watching.
This is awesome! Thanks a lot!
Great tutorial man
Thanks, amigo!
Whoa, what are you doing here? Nerd... lol
Lol this guy is like a brother to me known him since 6th grade. I've been trying to get into this d&d stuff but I struggle. I guess now that your here we need to play some d&d, I got like 4 people wanting to play but I just can't seem to wrap around the rules.
I also play Warhammer 40k but in process of adding Machnicus to my army of Space Marines and repainting my armies, so they are sitting in a bucket of 99% alcohol...
I think you might have I mention him when I can. Damn that's a huge collation of MTG cards!