Quick note on scales. More or less accepted by the historicals, who are much bigger on it than RPG gamers.
1/72 = 20mm
!/64 = 25mm
1/56 = 28mm
Many WWII gamers use 1/64 or 1/56 troops and 1/48 vehicles. Works OK as long as everybody does the same.
The biggest problem for xxmm is that it is not a very exact scale as what exactly does it mean? Many use it as a hight to a persons eyes. Others place it at a different spot.
If you ever game 15mm WWII you can find figures from 12 mm up 18 mm all claiming to be 15mm. There is no true mm because there is no universal standard. Now if everybody went to a numeric scale, where you went off of the size of a rifle, which is a known size, instead of a person, this might disappear. But mm scales allow a figure maker to get it a bit wrong, and still be OK within the current system.
1/72 = 20mm
!/64 = 25mm
1/56 = 28mm
Many WWII gamers use 1/64 or 1/56 troops and 1/48 vehicles. Works OK as long as everybody does the same.
The biggest problem for xxmm is that it is not a very exact scale as what exactly does it mean? Many use it as a hight to a persons eyes. Others place it at a different spot.
If you ever game 15mm WWII you can find figures from 12 mm up 18 mm all claiming to be 15mm. There is no true mm because there is no universal standard. Now if everybody went to a numeric scale, where you went off of the size of a rifle, which is a known size, instead of a person, this might disappear. But mm scales allow a figure maker to get it a bit wrong, and still be OK within the current system.