City of Tarok is a 3D printable medieval and fantasy village set with buildings that were great at their height, but after a huge war, they are just crumbling remains of the gorgeous buildings they once were. The area is still populated, but the inhabitants have fallen on hard times. As people come back, the once-abandoned buildings are getting new life, the mill, blacksmith and mine are working again and there is new light where once, there was only darkness.
This is the Medieval Home from the series. More buildings are coming!
This set includes the next variations:
– parts cut into pieces with working doors for easier printing
– merged parts for rescaling and resin prints
– normal roof
– damaged/fixed roof
– thatched roof
– optional fireplace
Our goal was to offer you unique buildings that can be a cheaper alternative to casted models, but still visually pleasing on your tabletop. To achieve this, we modeled all the cracks and every detail individually. You’ll find few repeating patterns on the models.
No slicer support needed!
Our models do not need slicer support, we designed the parts to print well without them. The time for printing will be faster and you don’t have to throw away your support material.
We’ve cut bigger parts into smaller pieces that you can attach easily with our hinge system. Minimum printer bed-size is 16x16cm
Scale them for wargaming!
You can change the size of the models in your slicer software before you print them, so it is very easy to print them at any scale from 6mm to 40mm. (Larger is also possible but you’ll need a printer with a large bed.)
You can see the first 10mm test-prints below printed on a stock Ender 3 pro:
In resin, printed on an Anycubic Photon at 7mm scale.
Printed and painted by Guy Hauldren, Tabletop Tribe:
Working doors and windows.
You can open and close the doors to make your tabletop more alive.
Add glass to your windows:
These windows have a slot where you can place transparent plastic foil or you can print out glass images with your inkjet printer. Use small tea lights to imitate the light inside while your players are adventuring in this area.
How to print them:
You’ll need a printer at least with a 16x16cm sized bed to print out these pieces. These files work well with most of the popular printers, like Prusa MK2, MK3, Creality Ender 3, 5, CR10, TEVO Tarantula and other machines. We have a TEVO Tarantula and a Creality Ender 3 machine, both producing great quality at the $220 price range.
Time for printing and the quality of the final product is highly dependent on your printer and slicer setting. We printed these models at 0.16 layer height so we could show you a mid-range quality. One piece of the levels took around 8-12 hours to print, but printing time can be lowered if you print the models at 0.2 mm layer height. Some of the parts were printed at that quality and we could not see any differences, especially on painted models.
You can resize the files for wargames but you have to use glue at a smaller scale to assemble the pieces as you’ll lose the hinges.
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