Thank you ever so much for putting in the time to support Models for Heroes and ultimately our beneficiaries. Using your talent to raise funds and importantly - awareness of our cause is massively appreciated. Well Done Luke.
Being UK Ex-Forces and just getting back into the hobby I really appreciate shops like Grim Dice doing the models for heroes thing, I know its a good vessel for guys like myself to chill out and get things out in the open, So to this end I decided to jump in with both feet, by using the wife's shop ( IN Ongar, Essex) to get a GW franchise and start painting a and eventually gaming and painting sessions for ex-Mill (and everyone else too), seeing another tutorial for gaming boards has sparked the motivation in me to get this done!!........... Thanks Geek Gaming Scenics great work!
In the US in hardware stores I can get this cool wall moulding that is one inch tall and comes in 2 foot lengths. Perfect for squares of XPS. An easy and effective method for putting hard edges on a gaming table.
Really badass table, Luke! Such a PHENOMENAL table definitely looks like you spent tons of quality time. It's amazing that your cranked this out in a single session and within 24 hours! Keep up the great work! ~ Wolfbrother Methos
Our Grimsby - in Ontario has great wineries and distilleries near Niagara on the Lake -- on the far west end of Lake Ontario -- oh ya breweries as well -- so libation and terraine building -- that would be great
Impressive board, with a minimal input. I'm not into gaming but your techniques have taught me a lot for the armor and aircraft dioramas I'm getting into building now. I like the bark idea, at least for certain scenes. Having a basic knowledge of geology, this bark method wont fit well in mountain terrain where the rock is mostly igneous rather than sedimentary. But it does portray sedimentary rock quite well. I'm about due to make up a desert scene for the DAK models I've built, so thanks for the pointers.
Spanking board Luke lad. I've recently started to use bark more as rocks for scatter and stand alone pieces. Time cut and the formations from nature give it so much more of a realistic look. Your videos have really helped me crank it up and work differently cheers fella look forward to the next one
Awesome! I did a similar thing using your products. I used a GW realm of battle, Stuck bark over the rocks, compound-ed then covered it in grout, covered up the skulls. Its such a good looking board now, the plastic makes the edges super clean and tidy and its modular. So thanks Luke! Great products!
Love this Build, but sadly I went to there website and the things I was most interested in are always sold out. And man the cost for shipping to the US kills us. And takes forever. But I will Sit and injoy Your Videos as per I ALWAYS DO! And I Learn Something New ALL THE TIME! THANKS LUKE GREAT BUILDS YOU GUYS!!
Another great quick build. The main issue for me is the cost of the materials. You've done a great job in finding substitutes to make things a bit easier and cheaper, but it looks like you've used about a dozen packs of grass tufts which add up quickly.
Haven't even finished the video and I signed up to OPR. Good value for this month and I could use some of the models immediately. Even the weird spider things, I can use for Elder Scrolls as Dwemer machine replacements (and the terrain too).
I'm really cautious person when it comes to subscriptions. I got a resin printer last christmas and i finally decided to pull the trigger on the OPR subscription and I could not be more satisfied. Amazing miniatures and a lot of fun! The only problem I'm having now is actually painting as fast as I'm printing lol
There was a War on that Post. I was playing I believe Grobbulus, and Alliance Attacked Horde. One of thems, but I'm poor so I couldn't record the footage
Hi friend! Following your steps we make a tabletop in 6 hours! We've uploaded a video with all process, Thanks for share your tips and greets from Spain! ✌️✌️
Oh man this might be my favorite video of yours lately. I always enjoyed watching your channel but I always felt intimidated by the power tools (I mean I don't have any of those you use), but this videos really falls more into my current perspective as a Brazilian hobbyist trying to get by with internship salary : P
Awesome results and very impressive that you got it done in 24hrs (ish) The bark is great stuff and I’m a big fan of the tropical sand, I actually need to order some more.
Great video Luke. It's sure given me some ideas of the way I want to build a upcoming 1 :35 scale Armor diorama I want to do. Yeah it's not miniatures but with your products and techniques it should make a killer base. 👍😊
Been looking forward to this video since the tickets to win it were announced. Brilliant work again and hopefully I’ll have the issue of transporting and storing it soon 👍😂 Keep up the great content and stuff for the good causes.
Just in case there are any confused americans in here. When Luke says he lays the bark down 'like a dry wall', he means a dry stone wall. A traditional type of wall that is common in parts of the UK, and is made by stacking stones tightly on top of eachother without using any mortar to hold them together. He is not talking about drywall that you line the walls of your house with. In the UK we call that plasterboard.
Thanks! We call them dry walls here in the US as well. Or dry stacked wall. They are all over the place in many regions of the US in both rural and urban areas, especially the south, the north-east, and the very edge of the west along the Pacific ocean. Here in Nashville they are common in neighborhoods, midtown, and surrounding rural area. I think there may be a few in greener areas downtown, but they are less common where you have modern high-rise buildings and skyscrapers. In the wide expanses of the western US the sheer size of land makes them uncommon, with wire fences more common.
@@EvanEdwards Thanks, that's actually very interesting! I always thought they were something we only had in the UK (and maybe some rural parts of Europe), but I did a quick Google and I see that you do indeed have a lot of them in Tennessee, and they are just like the ones we have here. Unfortunately I've only ever visited the big coastal cities in the US, so I guess that has skewed my perception a bit. I've always wanted to visited the south though. Maybe one day!
Hey! Theres nout wrong with Grimsby... once you get past the knife crime... and the bad weather... and the general layout of the place... but other than that is just like Whitby! 😄
One page rules and 3d printing has got me back into wargaming and I have you to thank! I've just finished 2 10mm armies for age of fantasy and got the gaming table to do this weekend. Thanks for the great content and being an incredible resource moving forward with some wargaming! ( quick question when removing supports on minis using the hot water method should it just be hot from the tap or using boiling water?)
I've always struggled to find a spray bottle that doesn't clog up with scenic cement. Have I just been unlucky? Bad ratios in the mixture? Or is there a specific go to spray bottle to make the cement in or decant Geek Gaming cement into 😉
I always like these gaming boards, but at the same time I think: They are so impractical for the "at home" wargamer (massive, hard to store, heavy, bulky). I would like to see some builds for more "day-to-day" use gaming "tables".
Great board! I've been wanting to build something similar for Star Wars using the desert sand and stone, but now I think I'll need some of that beach stuff too.. What's meant by engineered supports on the One Page Rules files? Does it just mean pre-supported?
1 day board eh? I might have to give this a go and see if I can't force myself to work faster 😅 Stunning board Luke.
Haha, better hurry up, Neil! Awesome board, Luke!
I know Canadians say "eh". Didn't know they type it as well :)
Thank you ever so much for putting in the time to support Models for Heroes and ultimately our beneficiaries. Using your talent to raise funds and importantly - awareness of our cause is massively appreciated. Well Done Luke.
I was working in grimsby recently and stumble on this awesome shop. Great place to pick up hobby stuff :)
Being UK Ex-Forces and just getting back into the hobby I really appreciate shops like Grim Dice doing the models for heroes thing, I know its a good vessel for guys like myself to chill out and get things out in the open, So to this end I decided to jump in with both feet, by using the wife's shop ( IN Ongar, Essex) to get a GW franchise and start painting a and eventually gaming and painting sessions for ex-Mill (and everyone else too), seeing another tutorial for gaming boards has sparked the motivation in me to get this done!!........... Thanks Geek Gaming Scenics great work!
11:52 It even has tumbleweed! 😂 Awesome build!
This is the sort of content that tickles my pickle!
One of my favorite Citadel paint colors! Baby Diaper Peas Yellow.
Can’t believe you ended up in my hometown. All comes full circle! Be glad you escaped!
Such a splendid and promising table...many battles and adventures to come! Love the subtle vegetation...👍👍
In the US in hardware stores I can get this cool wall moulding that is one inch tall and comes in 2 foot lengths. Perfect for squares of XPS. An easy and effective method for putting hard edges on a gaming table.
Really badass table, Luke! Such a PHENOMENAL table definitely looks like you spent tons of quality time. It's amazing that your cranked this out in a single session and within 24 hours!
Keep up the great work!
~ Wolfbrother Methos
Way to go, all three of you. Support your local shops!
(not local to me, I'm across the pond, but you get it)
Grim Dice is great shop and an asset to Grimsby. Miss your videos Luke!
Our Grimsby - in Ontario has great wineries and distilleries near Niagara on the Lake -- on the far west end of Lake Ontario -- oh ya breweries as well -- so libation and terraine building -- that would be great
Impressive board, with a minimal input. I'm not into gaming but your techniques have taught me a lot for the armor and aircraft dioramas I'm getting into building now. I like the bark idea, at least for certain scenes. Having a basic knowledge of geology, this bark method wont fit well in mountain terrain where the rock is mostly igneous rather than sedimentary. But it does portray sedimentary rock quite well. I'm about due to make up a desert scene for the DAK models I've built, so thanks for the pointers.
Stunning build. The fact that it was constructed in such a short time makes it even more impressive. Got so many ideas out of this. Cheers!!
Spanking board Luke lad. I've recently started to use bark more as rocks for scatter and stand alone pieces. Time cut and the formations from nature give it so much more of a realistic look. Your videos have really helped me crank it up and work differently cheers fella look forward to the next one
yessss OPR!
The new terrain releases are so good!
very exciting to see what's possible in a weekend.
Awesome! I did a similar thing using your products. I used a GW realm of battle, Stuck bark over the rocks, compound-ed then covered it in grout, covered up the skulls. Its such a good looking board now, the plastic makes the edges super clean and tidy and its modular. So thanks Luke! Great products!
Love this Build, but sadly I went to there website and the things I was most interested in are always sold out. And man the cost for shipping to the US kills us. And takes forever. But I will Sit and injoy Your Videos as per I ALWAYS DO! And I Learn Something New ALL THE TIME! THANKS LUKE GREAT BUILDS YOU GUYS!!
Wonderful! Super comfy battlefield
Another great quick build. The main issue for me is the cost of the materials. You've done a great job in finding substitutes to make things a bit easier and cheaper, but it looks like you've used about a dozen packs of grass tufts which add up quickly.
I really appreciate how easy to understand and follow your videos are. Thank you for the upload.
that elephant skeleton was a very cool idea
Haven't even finished the video and I signed up to OPR. Good value for this month and I could use some of the models immediately. Even the weird spider things, I can use for Elder Scrolls as Dwemer machine replacements (and the terrain too).
Awesome trick with the bark. Will def use this!
Always amazed at the quality of work you are able to do.
I hope one day, when o have space, time, etc, I can make things half as well as yours
"A not so lovely place" 🤣 Love how the board turned out man
Excellent video, really makes it look super easy and achievable for everyone!
Great video man! I’m amazed you got it finished after procrastinating for so long in the morning!
Excellent board and video, thanks Luke.
I'm really cautious person when it comes to subscriptions. I got a resin printer last christmas and i finally decided to pull the trigger on the OPR subscription and I could not be more satisfied. Amazing miniatures and a lot of fun! The only problem I'm having now is actually painting as fast as I'm printing lol
That looked like real fun. And reasonably easy!
That looks really good man! Something anyone could have great games on.
Awesome job Luke!!
Good job Luke and team! I watched the live streams and now seeing the finished project is awesome. Thank you for the content.
Spectacular table with awesome terrain! Pretty neat! 😍
Love to see OPR content! Great Patreon, great models, great board you've made!
" Throwing a few tufts around." If you call that a few I'd hate to see what you call alot. Excellent work though. Love your boards Luke.
That's where I gave up at. StoneTalon. You're right there. Next Level, but you afraid it gonna be wack
Fantastic table!
Thanks for the inspiration, board turned out great. That would go nice for some OPR or Legions
Really efficient work, it seems from the result that you have spent weeks on it. Very impressive !
Cheers Luke ,
well done bro .
~Luv~Luv~Luv~
🐺
another excellent board thanks Luke
Luke getting his juices flowing in Grimsby? 🧐
That's a great looking board; with a mental amount of tufts.
There was a War on that Post. I was playing I believe Grobbulus, and Alliance Attacked Horde. One of thems, but I'm poor so I couldn't record the footage
You make it look so easy 👍
Hi friend! Following your steps we make a tabletop in 6 hours! We've uploaded a video with all process, Thanks for share your tips and greets from Spain! ✌️✌️
Great video...love your style gives us amateurs confidence to give it a go.....and the modelling compound is so good to work with.👍👍
Oh man this might be my favorite video of yours lately. I always enjoyed watching your channel but I always felt intimidated by the power tools (I mean I don't have any of those you use), but this videos really falls more into my current perspective as a Brazilian hobbyist trying to get by with internship salary : P
Epiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiic.
Really love (love love!) your stuff! Got a big box of your products and they really are great. 👍
Awesome results and very impressive that you got it done in 24hrs (ish)
The bark is great stuff and I’m a big fan of the tropical sand, I actually need to order some more.
A great looking board! Inspires me to make one soon.
Really interested in giving this ago at some point - thanks for the demo
realistic tumble weed at 11:53
Great video Luke. It's sure given me some ideas of the way I want to build a upcoming 1 :35 scale
Armor diorama I want to do. Yeah it's not miniatures but with your products and techniques
it should make a killer base. 👍😊
Just found this channel and it’s awesome definitely subscribed
Love your terrain project Luke
Wow that looks fantastic well done 👍👍🤠
Been looking forward to this video since the tickets to win it were announced. Brilliant work again and hopefully I’ll have the issue of transporting and storing it soon 👍😂
Keep up the great content and stuff for the good causes.
Uluru is the correct name for Ayers rock, just some Straya facts.
Nice job mate, need to make something similar for my ww2 North Africa.
Just in case there are any confused americans in here. When Luke says he lays the bark down 'like a dry wall', he means a dry stone wall. A traditional type of wall that is common in parts of the UK, and is made by stacking stones tightly on top of eachother without using any mortar to hold them together.
He is not talking about drywall that you line the walls of your house with. In the UK we call that plasterboard.
Thanks! We call them dry walls here in the US as well. Or dry stacked wall. They are all over the place in many regions of the US in both rural and urban areas, especially the south, the north-east, and the very edge of the west along the Pacific ocean. Here in Nashville they are common in neighborhoods, midtown, and surrounding rural area. I think there may be a few in greener areas downtown, but they are less common where you have modern high-rise buildings and skyscrapers. In the wide expanses of the western US the sheer size of land makes them uncommon, with wire fences more common.
@@EvanEdwards Thanks, that's actually very interesting! I always thought they were something we only had in the UK (and maybe some rural parts of Europe), but I did a quick Google and I see that you do indeed have a lot of them in Tennessee, and they are just like the ones we have here.
Unfortunately I've only ever visited the big coastal cities in the US, so I guess that has skewed my perception a bit. I've always wanted to visited the south though. Maybe one day!
Turned out nicely
This is brilliant! Love the feel of this!
That looks awesome.. cracking work bud.
Great looking board and nice to have a more terrain focussed video :) 3D figures are nice but it's more like window shopping for me :D
Fantastic work!
Absolutely fantastic as ever!
When you are so good you finish a whole table in one day.
Awesome board! Good work as always!
So beautiful 🎉
Hey! Theres nout wrong with Grimsby... once you get past the knife crime... and the bad weather... and the general layout of the place... but other than that is just like Whitby! 😄
Looks great.
Love it when you do these!
You make it look easy enough to give it a try. I'm always scared to do stuff just in case I end up making a mess..
@@GeekGamingScenics Haha you got me, I will stop making excuses and I will make terrain, even if just simple things..
Brilliant! Spot on!
nice results dude
Great table!
Hight lvl ,awesome! Very like it.
I'd ask why you do this to yourselves, but clearly it's for a good cause! Looks awesome, as usual. :)
Lovely! 😍
Cracking work sir. 👍
One page rules and 3d printing has got me back into wargaming and I have you to thank! I've just finished 2 10mm armies for age of fantasy and got the gaming table to do this weekend. Thanks for the great content and being an incredible resource moving forward with some wargaming! ( quick question when removing supports on minis using the hot water method should it just be hot from the tap or using boiling water?)
@@GeekGamingScenics cheers mate! Haha
As much as the lack of sleep isn't appealing, it looks like you guys had fun and managed to pull a board out of it 😁
Nice, I need to get a board build done, any tips on making a neoprene mat?
@@GeekGamingScenics true but I cant pop a board in my bag to go to a mates house.
Pickle in the background at the end looking like the Walking Dead! ☠️☠️☠️
Hey Luke, big fan from Australia here. Just wanted to let you know that the traditional name of Ayers Rock is Uluru. Board looks incredible!
I was surprised how far down I had to go to find someone mentioning this information.
This motivates me so much
This makes me consider trying to make a board for the Necron tomb
Love your channel name! That's great! Oooo, Necron tomb. Interesting.
Grate looking board can I ask where you got your spray bottle from looks a decent one
Cracking video (and table)
glorious :-)
I've always struggled to find a spray bottle that doesn't clog up with scenic cement. Have I just been unlucky? Bad ratios in the mixture? Or is there a specific go to spray bottle to make the cement in or decant Geek Gaming cement into 😉
Love the table! How does one create the spray glue?
I always like these gaming boards, but at the same time I think: They are so impractical for the "at home" wargamer (massive, hard to store, heavy, bulky). I would like to see some builds for more "day-to-day" use gaming "tables".
Great board! I've been wanting to build something similar for Star Wars using the desert sand and stone, but now I think I'll need some of that beach stuff too.. What's meant by engineered supports on the One Page Rules files? Does it just mean pre-supported?
@@GeekGamingScenics thanks mate, the board looks great