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Colony 19 - Doors (28mm)

This document provides an overview of the Colony 19 tile sets and door assemblies for roleplaying games and wargames. The tiles are scaled to 1 inch grids and have gaps between them to represent walls when placed together. Door assemblies in an A-frame style can be placed in the gaps to indicate doorways. The tile sets come with door assemblies. Token counters for open, closed, and glass doors are also included and work the same way by placing in gaps. An example map shows how the tiles and tokens can be overlaid.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views9 pages

Colony 19 - Doors (28mm)

This document provides an overview of the Colony 19 tile sets and door assemblies for roleplaying games and wargames. The tiles are scaled to 1 inch grids and have gaps between them to represent walls when placed together. Door assemblies in an A-frame style can be placed in the gaps to indicate doorways. The tile sets come with door assemblies. Token counters for open, closed, and glass doors are also included and work the same way by placing in gaps. An example map shows how the tiles and tokens can be overlaid.

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spoliti.paolo
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© © All Rights Reserved
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COLONY 19

DO O R S
Copyright © Kristian Richards 2012
Permission is granted to print this material for personal use only

The Colony 19 product range provides a


number of sci-fi/near-future floor tiles that
are suitable for use in most RPG’s and
wargames of that genre. The tiles
themselves are scaled at 1” per grid square
(i.e. for use with 28mm miniatures), and
have been designed so that when you place
several of the tiles together, you are left
with a narrow gap between each room or
passage (representing walls, bulkheads,
airlocks, etc.), as shown in the diagram
opposite.

To connect any of these rooms or


passages together, you then place an
(A-frame style) door assembly in the gap
between the relevant room/passage to
indicate the position of a doorway (as
shown in the diagram below).
This has the benefit of allowing you to
place the doors in an area that does not
interfere with the placement of any miniatures
that you are using - while also allowing you to
only place doorways in the specific areas that
you require them (though you do have to
ignore this imaginary gap between the rooms
and passages when determining a miniature's
movement and/or weapon range).

As such, each of the Colony 19 tile-sets


comes complete with a number of these
‘A-frame’ style door assemblies, in addition to
those found within the pages of this booklet.

Figures shown are from em4 miniatures (used with


permission) and are available from www.em4miniatures.com
In addition, this booklet also contains several pages of simple 2D counters/tokens that can be
used instead of (or in conjunction with*) the aforementioned door assemblies. These counters
depict the doors in both an open and closed position, as well as a third option for a glass
partition/window (as shown below).

*For example, you may opt to use a 3D door assembly to indicate a closed door, and an ‘open door’
counter if/when it is opened.

All of these tokens work in exactly the


same fashion as the previous (3D) door
assemblies (i.e. just place them in the gap
between rooms/passages to make doorways
into any rooms or passages that require
them), thus allowing you to choose
whichever method suits your needs (or
tastes) best.

Shown opposite is the same example map


from the previous page, but this time it has
several of the above tiles overlaid upon it to
represent various doorways.

For more information on current and upcoming products from


Crooked Staff Publishing be sure to visit the blog at
crookedstaff.blogspot.com

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