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Who We Are

Casey Benincosa

Owner, 3D Printer, Artist, Game Master

I fell in love with Tabletop Role Playing Games (TTRPGs) in 2019, when a group of old friends decided they wanted to try DnD. I volunteered to be the Game Master for a campaign, and I am thrilled to report that we are still playing that same campaign to this day. I've always enjoyed game pieces and terrain that are as immersive as possible, so began 3D printing and painting my own collection in 2020. While doing that, I developed a method of painting to maximize speed without sacrificing detail or quality. I also discovered that hearing everyone say "WOAH!" when I reveal the game table covered with painted terrain and miniatures would never get old. I hope you enjoy my work as much as I enjoy creating it. 

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What to Expect from a Bugbear Armory Miniature

Game pieces are meant to be on the table, picked up, moved about, occasionally knocked over and dropped. It isn't ideal to spend tons of money or time on a gorgeous display piece that you or someone else spent days on, only to have it dropped and shattered into pieces. The alternative is to have a table populated with hastily painted miniatures (or unpainted miniatures) that don't have the same "wow" effect for the players at the table. That's where Bugbear Armory can help. Let's get some affordable, beautiful, and durable miniatures on your table.​

High Quality

Craftsmanship

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Unique, finely detailed models -- meticulously finished for professional results.

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Precision 3D Printing

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Produced on high-end MSLA printers for razor-sharp detail and smooth, clean surfaces.

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Premium Resin

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Printed with Anycubic Tough Resin for exceptional durability without sacrificing crisp detail.

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twenty-sided die vector image

Tabletop Ready

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From printer to play -- fully cleaned, cured, and painted so you can dive straight into adventure.

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Orc Chieftan Tent with three Orc miniatures

Our Painting Process

While there are fast techniques that are popular among miniature painters ("slap chop," "wash/dip," etc.) that can get a painted miniature on the table, I felt those methods left the model looking flat and unfinished. Layering acrylic paints and painstakingly highlighting coat after coat looks great, but takes forever, and we're trying to populate gaming tables here! So I decided to find the middle ground between these two approaches. The result is a miniature that has shadows, highlights, intricate details, and feels complete, and you won't have to wait months to get it or spend all your party's gold to buy it.

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Image: Orc Chieftan Tent with Orc Chieftan and Snow Orc Miniatures, all sculpted by Epic Miniatures and 3D printed and hand painted by Bugbear Armory.

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