Question - Miniatures for the game?

I've never played with actual miniatures before. I've always felt that they were too expensive and not worth the cash.

But, for my new campaign, I've conisidered buying a few.

For you miniature lovers out there, a question: Is there a brand that would go well with the Conan game? Maybe a company that does historical minis? Vikings--barbarians, stuff like that?

I'm not interested in painting, so if they're already painted, that's good (otherwise they'll stay not painted). Also, I'd want them to have a base that will fit in a one inch square.

Any recommendations?
 
I was thinking about it some time ago, and the best option is plastic historical miniatures of Warlord Games, Immortal or Wargames Factory, with some metal individuals for the PCs. Take a look ;)
 
As a mini-fan, I base my collection around the HeroQuest boardgame. I would buy game sets just to cannibalize it into a large HQ set. I am also not a snob with what I use, as I would use metal and plastic figures of different sizes, as well as plastic toy army-men (medieval troops, Indians, cavemen, M.U.S.C.L.E.s, and so on), fold-up paper standees, flat cardboard chits (the counters used in hex-based wargames), and such. I even found a site that has some really good 3D paper furniture and floor tiles. It gets quit elaborate!

As for RPGs, I find that the same setup vary distracting - having to pause the game while I sort through figures and place the right ones on the table. Unlike HQ, RPG rules tend to more complex and I like to keep the action flowing. When I use miniatures in an RPG, I use a simple grid mat, and I use chess pieces for NPCs. The type of "battlemat" I use is a vinyl mat by Chessex, with whiteboard markers (if you use this type of mat, rub-off all the ink before putting it away so it would not stain). I use chess pieces so I can quickly set them up, but the players still use normal figures for their own character. For some special features (tables and chests), I just use d6s (which I have a ton of on the table), and hope the player don't mistakenly use them for rolls.

As for miniatures, I highly recommended Reaper Miniatures, as they have a wide range of quality miniatures (they even produce the best Conan figure I had ever seen). I used to use Foundery before they got really expensive, but good stuff no less. If you like old-school D&D art (and dont mind male genitalia) then I would recommended Otherworld Miniatures. This site is like a museum of of old figures (there are a number of producers that still make the old stuff, but you would have to do your homework). I found a number of paper figures online, but this - Creatures of Tekumel - is my favorite (Soldiers of Tsolyanu, the Mihalli, the Mrur (undead), and the Temple of Dlamelish sets has humans).
 
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