Thursday, 17 April 2025

Necropolis Board Build

Making a board!

In this post I am documenting the steps I took to put together a necropolis board for FRINGE SW which was a very very fun event that I would like to make a whole post about at some point.

It all starts with a 16" x 16" board, this is some kind of plywood - I asked if there were any spare bits lying around at work and they very kindly cut it for me. Cash in them favors.

I measured out some rough levels, and what height they would be from base level. I kiiiinda ended up using these, but it was very loose.

All of the base construction was done out of standard packing polystyrene. This sucked - do not recommend. However it was free, so i'd do it again. I cut it using a box cutter and had a hoover close at hand to get all the little straggly bits as they went flying across my room.
 


The levels came together quite nicely, but at this point I should have been much more careful about removing the very obvious moulded polystyrene look. I thought they would be hidden with the texture paste, but that didnt really work and they became impossible to remove later. Just don't use polystyrene.

The little tower base on the top is the base of an old dreadstone blight tower that I was going to use as the centerpiece. This didnt end up happening for reasons i'll get into later, but it served as a good scale checker regardless.


I bought some XPS foam from the lovely modeldisplayproducts and used it to make some large stone steps. This was my first time doing this, and im not suuuuper happy with the texture, but hey I rolled a stone on it so it can't be too far off.

 

I secured the steps in place with little wooden toothpicks and some wood glue.

 

I was actually very suprised at how sturdy they were when all set up!

 

I thought I had better start planning some gameplay, and the routes that models could take around the board. I wanted play to be able to happen low ground to high ground AND level to level through the valley.

 

And of course because it's necropolis I needed a big drop. This isn't as big as some, but still a decent threat for any archers camping up top!

 

To protect the foam and add some texture, I mixed up some texture paste. This is a couple of different stone grits, bird sand, baking powder, pva glue and brown paint. When dry the different grits would add some texture, and the pva would seal all the foam in making it nice and sturdy. The brown was so that any gaps I left through to later wouldnt go through to white, but to be honest the warm brown shown here wasn't much better.

 

The brownie stage...

 

As the PVA set, the grit became more pronounced, making a nice stony texture.

 

At this point all the slopes and steps I would need to play were in place, so I tried a test game! It went well overall, the middle sections with lots of elevation changes were really fun and engaging. The tower on the top though, didn't work. It took up too much space and make it incredibly difficult to navigate the top flat section. I pretty much decided at this point the tower had to go.


 

 
I got some gravestones printed for me by Tidewater 3D, they did a lot of the original necropolis sculpts and these were amazing quality. The sculpts are by Ryan, Blightbones, and are designed for necropolis. A lot of boards use them, so I like how they make everything feel unified between different peoples builds.
 
 
I added cork tiles over all the high footfall areas, this was inspired by matt, totally not panicking, who had recently put up a post on his patreon about doing something very similar. I had some cork, so why not! It looked great. I mixed in some smaller pieces and rough edges to look like broken bits.  


I wanted a bit of "organic" matter in the build. There is nothing living in the world of necropolis, but trees can be undead too!

The are a couple of broken bricks scattered around as well, to look like old walls and crumbling ruins.

I clustered the graves into little groups for areas of added interest (and to hide some of the particularly agregious polystyrene holes) 


I had collected some acorn caps recently in the woods, and thought they looked like cute little urns, so stuck them on under this little overhang.

I primed the whole thing with black craft paint. This was kind of a mistake. I didn't want to use rattlecans because I was worried about the foam, but in reality it probably would have been ok because most of it was sealed. What ended up happening was because of all the gritty texture, there was no way I could get into all the nooks and crannies with a brush. I did th best I could, and it looked ok in the end, but im still considering spraying the whole thing black and starting the paint job over because I hate seeing the brown in the recesses.



This step was really fun, I slopped on a load of bright coloured craft paint over the black to be an undertone to the stone work. This came out really cool.

I did a black wash over the whole thing to tie it together.

The final steps was a couple of grey drybrushes, starting dark and getting gradually lighter.





Overall the board came out really well. It's fun to play on and definitely looked cool on the table at fringe SW. I learned a ton, and unfortunately didn't get time to build anything different to replace the building on the top. At the event I used a bit of warcry terrain, but I still plan to make some ruined corner walls or standing stones to hang out up there. Thanks for reading, love ya.

-Aden

Necropolis Board Build

Making a board! In this post I am documenting the steps I took to put together a necropolis board for FRINGE SW which was a very very fun ev...