Throne - View 1
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Starter Dungeon Kit

Throne

A commanding throne prop that instantly marks power, hierarchy, and boss-room energy on your RPG maps. Perfect for courts, warlord halls, dark chapels, and any chamber where someone expects to be obeyed.

A throne turns any room into a statement: someone ruled here, or still does. Use it to create instant stakes—power, menace, or the kind of presence that makes players whisper.

Usage Tips

  • Make it the focal point: place the throne on a fancy floor or tile floor “platform” to frame the scene.
  • Stage the entrance: a large door leading into the chamber sets up a dramatic reveal.
  • Light it with intent: wall torches and braziers make the room feel occupied, ritualistic, or guarded.
  • Sell the setting: pair with stone walls for a keep, crypt-court, or ancient dominion vibe.
  • Add encounter geometry: position the throne with clear lanes for guards, cover, and flanking routes.

Great for: warlord halls, royal courts, dark temples, vampire keeps, and final-room showdowns.

Perfect For:

  • Map making and dungeon design
  • Campaign planning and world building
  • Creative journaling and art projects
  • prop
  • boss-room
  • authority
  • royal
  • dungeon
  • set-piece

Mix & Match Tips

Unlock the full potential of your stamps by combining them creatively

1

Layering & Detail Passes

Sketch your big shapes first (rooms, walls, terrain), then do a second pass for details like doors, props, and hazards. Light pencil lines under the stencil help keep everything aligned.

2

Rotate & Mirror

Rotate stencils to vary textures and break repetition—great for stone, wood, and rubble. Flipping the stencil (when possible) can create fresh angles for corridors, debris, and scatter.

3

Line Weight & Shading

Use a fine liner for clean edges, then add heavier outlines or quick hatching for emphasis. A soft pencil or gray marker through the stencil can suggest shadow, difficult terrain, or elevation.

4

Tileable Patterns

Repeat floor and wall segments to quickly fill larger areas. Work in a grid, keep consistent spacing, and periodically swap orientation so big rooms feel hand-drawn, not copy-pasted.

Related Stencils

Complete your collection with these complementary designs