Friday, April 26, 2013

CSM to produce Tome of Horrors Complete miniatures range


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 25, 2012


CENTER STAGE TO PRODUCE MINIATURES BASED ON "TOME OF HORRORS COMPLETE" BY FROG GOD GAMES

Center Stage Miniatures signed a 5-year contract today with Frog God Games to produce 28mm Heroic Scale fantasy miniatures based on the award-winning "Tome of Horrors Complete." The line will launch with a new Kickstarter from Center Stage Miniatures on May 1st.

"There are over 800 monsters possible in the Tome of Horrors Complete," said Matthew Solarz, owner of Center Stage Miniatures, "including many iconic creatures from old-school fantasy and some newer monsters as well. This Kickstarter will help get as many of these miniatures as possible into gamers hands as quickly as we can."

Bill Webb, CEO of Frog God Games, said that partnering with Center Stage for the Tome of Horrors Complete range was the next logical step after discussing Razor Coast. Frog God Games announced earlier this week that Center Stage would be producing a line for the Razor Coast mega campaign based on the works by Nicholas Logue.

"Center Stage Miniatures is a leader in the production of old-school fantasy miniatures," said Rachel Ventura, VP of Sales & Marketing, "Their commitment to quality and to the old-school feel of fantasy RPGs made them a natural for this project."

Tome of Horrors Complete miniatures will be sculpted in 28mm Heroic scale so that they are compatible with the largest possible selection of miniatures on the market today, Solarz added.


An initial 17 monsters from the Tome of Horrors Complete have been selected to be made into a miniature at the initial funding goal of $12,000. That leaves more than 793 to choose from for stretch goals! Until the Kickstarter launches, Center Stage will reveal one of the initial miniatures each day. CSM is sharing pictures only - so give us your best guess (or whip out your Tome of Horrors Complete) and tell us what will be soon made into metal with your support!

For April 26, here is one of the humanoid sized creatures that's being sculpted by Tim Prow. We've got stretch goals plotted out to $30K - and if we reach that level - we'll collaborate with our backers to determine what comes next!


Sunday, April 21, 2013

CSM to Produce "Razor Coast" Miniatures

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Poulsbo, WA, (April 21st 2013) – Center Stage Miniatures signed contracts with Frog God Games, LLC this week to produce a range of 28mm heroic scale miniatures based on Frog God Games’ Razor Coast campaign setting. Razor Coast, created by Nicholas Logue, is a dark fantasy pirate campaign setting laced in gothic horror and nautical nightmares.

“Center Stage has been looking into options to create pirate miniatures for years,” said Matthew Solarz, president of CSM, “and Mr. Logue has been one of my favorite contemporary RPG writers since his Crown of the Kobold King (by Paizo Publishing). Being able to produce miniatures for a pirate setting – and one created by Nick in particular – is a dream come true.”

Rachel Ventura, VP of Sales & Marketing for Frog God Games, said “several fans have asked for more miniatures for Razor Coast. Some backers were equally disappointed we weren’t able to add on more miniatures during the Razor Coast Kickstarter. Center Stage Miniatures presents us with a solution to offering high quality miniatures for this mega-campaign”.

Legendary fantasy artist Jennell Jaquays will be penciling concept sketches of all forthcoming Razor Coast miniatures, Solarz said. The first two miniatures in the Razor Coast range will be available at GenCon 2013.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Keeping quiet is sometimes tough

Even at the tender old age of 40, there are things that excite me to the point where I can't stop thinking about them.

Sadly, though, it's not acceptable to jump up and down like a 10 year old at Christmas when your oldest is a sophomore in college and your youngest will be finishing high school in 18 short months.

That's exactly how I feel right now, though, about Center Stage Miniatures. Thanks to all of you - our friends, our customers, the sculptors who made CSM happen in the first place,  our investors, and our affiliate game companies.

In a few short days I can let one of the cats out of the bag...and on May 1st, I can let the big one out, too. 


Stick around and see what I'm talking about - if you love fantasy RPGs and quality miniatures, you'll be glad that you did.




Wednesday, April 17, 2013

A Gift for Swords & Wizardry Appreciation Day



When we started the Demons & Devils Kickstarter, I asked Matt Finch, creator of Swords & Wizardry, to create a storyline for our new demon lord, Tyranthrax, Lord of the Guardian Demons.

In honor of Swords & Wizardry Appreciation Day, here is Tyranthrax, in all his evil glory, to massacre players on your tabletop. The stats are in .PDF format and can easily be downloaded to print and add to your manual of monsters.

Thank you, Matt, for adding a fascinating backstory to a very cool miniature.

Enjoy!



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Setting the OSR Pace in Milford

As a member of the flourishing OSR (old school renaissance, for those newbies out there) community, it amazes me to see all of the "new" old products for RPG gaming that are released every day.

Some people release via LuLu. Others release small, home printed runs of their own product. And increasingly, publishers are taking to Kickstarter and Indiegogo to "crowdfund" their latest brainchild.

Much like the d20 glut following the release of Dungeons and Dragons 3.0, with much material comes the need for a buyer to pay attention.

Let's face it - the easier it becomes to "publish," the more "garbage" that hits the market. I'm just being a realist. A writer friend of mine who spent a decade before "breaking in" still drives the bitter bus to this day. "If you own a PC and you can type, you think you're a f***ing writer," he said.

Don't let my tone get you down! There are plenty of diamonds in the OSR rough. And one of those cases will be talked about here - Pacesetter Games & Simulations, based in Milford, MI. According to owner Bill Barsh, the name of the company is a tribute to the Pacesetter game company of the 70s.

As you can see from the image above, Pacesetter's products look good from the outside. In the four or five short years that Pacesetter has been open, owner Barsh has released dozens of products for old school D&D/AD&D (each is marked to be fully compatible with 1st Edition Rules. Which first edition rules? Guess. Saying so on the cover wouldn't be highly recommended, so use your noodle!)

Not only has Bill tackled the dungeon crawl, but he also offers some very "retro" adventure kits, which allow DMs to create one-off dungeons and populate them with treasures and monsters for a quick evening of adventuring. Much like the official  Monster & Treasure Assortment of the 70s, his packages are called - hold your breath - Monster and Treasure Assortment. I believe there are four of them available as of this blog (1st - 4th level).

Solo Adventures? Pacesetter has them too. Boxed sets? Pacesetter is in the process of releasing their first boxed set called The Blood Cult, and another called Cataclysm at the Acaeum (Kickstarter funded). There are even some adventures designed to be played in one evening.

My personal favorite, called "Eruptor's Vengeance" pits a beginning level party against a DRAGON. Seriously. Bill has figured out how to incorporate a "slay the dragon" quest into a 1st-2nd level game that is BALANCED. And if you don't believe me, buy it and see. It's a keeper, along with many other products Pacesetter has on sale.

Many OSR modules are done POD or (worse) in .PDF. I hate .PDFs. They have no value. They are not old-school. And Pacesetter modules are printed by a real-honest-to-goodness 4-color printer. Just like in the old days. Now THAT is keeping it "truly" old-school.

NOW THE BAD - And there isn't much. It wouldn't be a fair review if all I did was gush, right?

I'm pretty certain Bill is a one-man show (with the exception of some great artists and a good printing company), so that means EDITING. As an English major, typos are one of my worst pet peeves (now watch as someone points out a typo in my review...GRRR!). You'll find those occasionally in Pacesetter products - sometimes they're minor grammar errors, occasionally it's a sentence that ends without punctuation. Regardless, they don't detract from the storyline and I've noticed plenty of these mistakes cleaned up in later printings of the same module.

All in all, the majority of the Pacesetter projects I've received deserve 4 1/2 out of 5 stars. The half-star is for the occasional missing comma or period that makes me put down the module and take a sip of Earl Grey before continuing.

You can purchase Pacesetter Games & Simulations products at their website, www.pacesettergames.com.