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2 January 2026
Let’s usher in the New Year with another round of Scatter Chatter! Often in a terrain board setup, it’s the little things that make or break one’s final presentation. We believe today’s featured DnD STLs are worthy of your DM’s consideration!

Let’s start by sticking that perverbial sword in the sand with this fun legendary sword by STL Miniatures. This mysterious weapon is part of their Falconry Ladyhawke Set and certainly creates more questions than it answers. Plus, anything that gives old school gamers those 1963 The Sword in the Stone movie vibes can only be a good thing.

DM Ben colored this mighty sword up over the holiday break. He primarily used ASP Broadsword Silver and Citadel Stormhost Silver for the metals and ASP Pallid Bone for the wrap. The base was a little tricky because the ground plants were surprisingly delicate, and several snapped off during painting.

Our next two pieces are these adorable Wolf and Goblin cutouts from Embernell Studio’s fun Target Practice set. This STL creator produces quality designs and sturdy files. We love 3D-printing their work, and their Welcome Pack is nothing to sneeze at when you join their Tribe.

DM Ben was the brush meister here and kept things simple — good ol’ ASP Dark Wood for the wooden stands and some darn green and yellow highlights for the arrows. We also felt a simple flock treatment here could do no wrong. We plan to use these in a bandit camp encounter or our Hostel setting.

Our final featured TTRPG scatter terrain is frickin’ fantastic and works well in either a traditional boat/airship encounter. Or, you could even use it as a grappling hook in a wild climbing scenario!
Despite our best efforts, we weren’t able to source it. All signs pointed towards Aether Studios or STL Miniatures, yet we couldn’t find a direct link to the file. This happens more often than you think because creators don’t realize how good some of their individual pieces are, and they don’t label/list each one for sale separately on MMF. That’s unfortunate, as the oversight could lead to a loss of sales when DnD blog sites like ours feature their work. We couldn’t even get it to show on a Google image search.
Sometimes a creator reaches out to us on Instagram and identifies their work, though (and then we circle back and link it accordingly).
Until next time!
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