What does 6mm scale offer? Armor, infantry, artillery, and line-of-sight blocking ruins fit inside a single placemat. The scene in the photo measures less than a square foot. It still reads like a running fight across a devastated city block. That density changes how games play. You make real tactical decisions about flanking routes and fire lanes instead of pushing models across empty felt.
The hybrid printing approach is deliberate. Walkers, turrets, and barrel geometry came off the resin printer. Every heat sink fin and rivet survives priming. At this scale, detail disappears fast under a coat of primer. Fine mechanical texture needs that resin crispness to hold up after paint hits it.
Tanks and modular ruin plates came off the FDM machine in adaptive 0.12 mm layers. This keeps hulls durable for weekly club play. These pieces get handled constantly. They stack in bins, get tossed in bags, and take hits from stray dice. FDM gives them the structural strength to shrug that off. Layer lines disappear under drybrushing anyway.
Infantry strips are magnetized to 1 x 3 mm discs. They travel in one tin and pop straight onto mission markers. No more chasing scattered bases across the car floorboard after game night.
Everything keys to standard 6mm base sizes and works with any 6mm ruleset that wants objective markers with believable cover arcs. Your terrain investment keeps working when your group rotates systems.
Need a similar vanguard for your own table? Send the mission brief and I’ll queue it up.