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- #CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON SOFTWARE#
- #CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON PLUS#
- #CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON FREE#
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I got GIMP and.Īnd I got proficient with it.
#CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON FREE#
I beleive they both have limited free options (I know Inkarnate does), and those might fit your needs. I have also heard a lot of good things about Wonderdraft and Inkarnate.
#CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON PLUS#
Plus some of the purchase goes to Doctors Without Borders. But the bundle has a bunch of additional stuff that any one of would make it the better price. There is a large community collection of free maps - which since they include both images and the files means that I can edit them to remove signs of civilization.ĬC3+ (by itself) is on sale for $22.xx (under the $30 of the bundle) directly from Profantasy if you want to get in as cheap as possible. Much of what I find online (and lots of good people on patreon as well as general web) are already settled continents. So I need good maps, and maps that are not already populated by cities, roads, etc. I'm starting a new campaign tonight, part of which will be exploration of the new world. CC does have a very active and supportive community. This is still an unknown I can't give much feedback on. Which says nothing about my own personal ability. So, a friend who loves making maps has been using CC for well over a decade and really likes it. It has more tools for doing bitmap polygon fills for doing dungeon floor tiling and can also do cool bitmap brushes for quickly laying down house layers along streets.Īll in all, my thought is if you're going to fight through a learning curve to do digital mapping, better to go through that learning curve in a way that will develop actual transferable digital design skills.ĭisclaimer: I picked up the bundle last night. If your focus is primarily going to be dungeon / city mapping, you might want to start with Affinity Designer (the vector editor) first. Stuff you'll spend hours fighting with in GIMP are literally 2 mouse click fixes in Affinity. Obviously you could spend $0 and just use GIMP as well, but I personally find the $50 for Affinity Photo's amazing interface, speed, and live filters to be infinitely worth the investment. Affinity Photo is close enough functionally to Photoshop that most of the Photoshop tutorials should be pretty easy to follow along. You'll be much, much better off in the long run. Then go over to and go through as many tutorials as you have time for. If I was going to spend money on a program for digital mapping and didn't want to pay Photoshop's exorbitant subscription price, $50 for a copy of Affinity Photo will be the best money you can spend.
#CAMPAIGN CARTOGRAPHER 3 NAPOLEON SOFTWARE#
I don't regret that time spent using the software for the most part, because it taught me a bunch of tricks I could later apply using actual image editors (Photoshop / Affinity Photo), but I would literally never use it again. I spent a lot of time learning CC3 when I bought it way back in 2009, only to realize that the results you could get from it were wholly dependent on which of their tile sets / map style assets you had available.