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Release the Kraken! On a general purpose workshop and store?

Every month we go through our back catalog of maps and the many amazing supporters of the blog over on Patreon vote on which two should be re-released under the free commercial use license. Today we are bringing back a workshop design meant as a fill-in for various shops in a fantasy city.

Here we have a floorplan for a typical fantasy city storefront – a store to do your shopping in front, a workshop behind it to produce the goods being sold (with a small strong room for storing finished goods and expensive components when the shop is closed) and residential space for the shop owner(s) upstairs. There’s also a basement (accessed through a trap door in the workshop) where generic stock, overstock, and extra materials are stored. This is distinctly a fantasy setting design, where there is a lot more space for both goods and for the workshop space itself than you would find in a typical structure of this kind in a more realistic setting.

While this is the standard assumption for most fantasy storefronts – the majority of actual medieval and Roman era storefronts didn’t include the front room where shopping could be done. They would open their shuttered windows when they open and customers would shop through those windows, never entering the building proper. Workshops where this wouldn’t work well (blacksmiths for instance) would have the customers walk into the workshop directly to deal with the smith.

Normally I just make up store structures on the fly instead of mapping them out like this, but there’s been a lot of requests for these because of my monthly series of Inns & Taverns.

https://dysonlogos.blog/2021/04/01/release-the-kraken-on-a-general-purpose-workshop-and-store/

Release the Kraken! On a general purpose workshop and store?

Comments

No, the majority of people who use my maps never inform me or give me a free copy, so I have no clue what maps are being used out there. There are currently 409 products on DTRPG that list me as an artist (and at least another hundred that use my maps but don't list me on the site database as the artist, but where I'm credited in the product proper; and a further 216 products on DMsGuild (again with another hundred+ that don't have my name in the database). Heck, the RPGgeek database has me listed as the artist in 40 products so far this year.

Dyson Logos

This is great, thanks. Do you keep stats on which of your maps get the most commercial use? I could see something like this being tossed into all sorts of starting adventures.

Nathan Kellen


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