• Boxed items are listed as 'code/code' where the first code represents the box, and the second code describes the contents. When only one condition is listed, then the box and contents are in the same condition. • A 'plus' sign indicates that an item is close to the next highest condition. Example, EX+ is an item between Excellent and Near Mint condition. A 'minus' sign indicates the opposite. • Major defects and/or missing components are noted separately.

The left screen will show you the actual output of the webcam and different functions to capture from it. Cyberlink youcam 5 free download full version with crack for windows 7.

• Boardgame counters are punched, unless noted. Due to the nature of loose counters, if a game is unplayable it may be returned for a refund of the purchase price.

• In most cases, boxed games and box sets do not come with dice. • The cardboard backing of miniature packs is not graded. If excessively worn, they will be marked as 'card worn.' • Flat trays for SPI games are not graded, and have the usual problems. If excessively worn, they will be marked as 'tray worn.' If you have any questions or comments regarding grading or anything else, please send e-mail to.

The Hex Chart is a digital download designed to show the visual color relationship between Copic marker colors. The ability to compare light tints of similar colors, or dark shades of them, is now at our fingertips!

I'm working on a hexcrawl RPG map,and figured BGG DIY was the best place to ask. After a LOT of research, I think that the best solution for what I need is something like the old GMT blank hex map sheets (specifically, numbered, 19mm short grain hexes, 22 x 34).

These have been out of print for a very long time, and surviving examples are about $25 a sheet if you can find them. I suspect I could get Fedex Kinkos or Staples or someone to make a large-format print.

The problem is, I'm not sure how to create the hex grid, being terrible at graphics programs and unsure of how to do this in e.g. Incompetech so it will turn out right. (Also Incompetech doesn't do hex numbering.) I'd try Hexographer, but can't get it to print properly for reasons that are mystifying. Any links to a file I could take to an office supply store and have printed?

Any other advice? Blank hexsheets are really easy to generate. If you need one, geekmail me and let me know. Overall dimensions Size of hex Direction of hexgrain, (with length or against?) Numbered or not? If numbered what's the format of the numbering?

Can do squaregrids, triangles, circles. Any tessellation anyone needs. And deliver as PDF.

Would there be an appropriate place to post such things, if these are things people are needing? You could either upload them elsewhere such as Google Docs or Dropbox, or try to get them approved as BGG files on one of the miscellaneous/out-of-scope item pages, and then make a thread linking to them. Regardless of where the PDFs are stored, I'd suggest also uploading an image of each to use as a preview in the thread (and on the file page if applicable). Thanks for the suggestions everyone! I ended up buying some from GMT, who offer but do not advertise them. That said, this turns out to be a surprisingly knotty problem.

Most commercial print shops (FedEx Kinkos, Staples) either charge a fortune for 'poster-sized' prints or use a weird kind of vinyl/banner material in their 'large format printer' or both. If anyone reading this is capable of producing maps like I described, e.g. With a blueprint printer? I don't even know--you might consider advertising on Amazon or whatever. These were *surprisingly* difficult to find. I'm well aware of numerous hex generators. Those were trivially easy to find.

Printing them turns out to be another matter entirely. There's no substitute for a bitchin' huge hand-drawn map, the kind you can pore over, the kind you can put on the wall for everyone to gape at, and it seems many in the hobby don't do this as much anymore. Given the more episodic nature of RPG play nowadays, this isn't surprising, but also destroys a lot of truly awesome play options.

I also think that producing such a map by taping a bunch of pages together kind of ruins the whole point. I wanted to make a Greyhawk-style campaign map. Part of my requirements were aesthetic; part were to support my true hexcrawl system, which allows any hex on the big map to be represented by a smaller (:what map of 25 1-mile hexes. (That 1-mile megahex turned out to be best on a 12' by 12' scrapbook page.I managed to get THAT printed by a company in Utah, although they used photo paper stock and it wasn't ideal. Or cheap, per page.