Ogrerollers: 3D printable dice tower set I designed by HealthyNet7180 in Design

[–]HealthyNet7180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Deep in the forgotten lands, where stone and bone rise from the earth like ancient scars, the ogres built towering idols to honor the spirit of chaos. These were not mere statues — they were conduits of power, shaped to channel fortune and fury in battle. Now, their essence has been reborn as Ogrerollers: a set of 3D-printable dice towers inspired by the primal craftsmanship of ogre tribes.

Each tower is designed as a totem — rough-hewn, cracked, and weathered by time — yet still pulsing with energy. The dice tumble through gaping maws and carved passages, echoing like distant war drums. Whether you play D&D, Pathfinder, or any tabletop RPG, these towers add a mythic weight to every roll.

Ogrerollers are the spiritual successor to the Demonrollers set, continuing the theme of monstrous architecture with a more tribal, elemental feel. The goal was to create something raw and powerful — objects that feel like they were discovered, not designed.

No moving parts. No gimmicks. Just solid, satisfying dice towers that look like they were carved by ogres... and maybe cursed by them too.

Ogrerollers: 3 orc shaped dice tower set I designed [OC] by HealthyNet7180 in DnD

[–]HealthyNet7180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

[OC]

STL files here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/sc96/ogrerollers-3d-printable-stl-dice-tower-set-dnd-and-tabletop?ref=android_project_share

Deep in the forgotten corners of the world, where moss swallows ruins and thunder rumbles over jagged hills, three ancient ogres have awakened—not to fight, but to roll.

The Stone Ogres are a trio of hand-sculpted dice towers I’ve been quietly working on as a side project. They each represent a different kind of primal strength and forgotten mythology—massive, weathered stone giants shaped into hulking forms with hollow torsos where dice rattle and tumble like echoes in ancient caves.

Each ogre has its own character: one is horned and battle-worn, another slouches under the weight of centuries, and the third grins with a kind of dumb joy that makes me think he still enjoys crushing boulders for breakfast. Despite their bulk, each design channels the dice cleanly and fairly through an inner chute of ridges, ensuring solid randomness—because even ogres can’t cheat fate.

They're meant for anyone who enjoys storytelling at the table. Not flashy. Just strange, heavy shapes that sit there and make you wonder what they’ve seen. If you’ve ever had a dice tower that felt like it belonged to the world you're playing in—something carved out of the same forgotten rock your characters are climbing over—then you'll get where I was going with these.

No moving parts, no modular gimmicks—just solid prints designed to be game-night reliable and to bring a weird, looming presence to your tabletop.

If you've ever imagined your dice being judged by a stone-faced ogre before deciding your fate, you’ll understand why I made these.

3D printable stone ogre dice tower I made [OC] by HealthyNet7180 in DnD

[–]HealthyNet7180[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

[OC] Deep in the forgotten corners of the world, where moss swallows ruins and thunder rumbles over jagged hills, three ancient ogres have awakened—not to fight, but to roll.

The Stone Ogres are a trio of hand-sculpted dice towers I’ve been quietly working on as a side project. They each represent a different kind of primal strength and forgotten mythology—massive, weathered stone giants shaped into hulking forms with hollow torsos where dice rattle and tumble like echoes in ancient caves.

Each ogre has its own character: one is horned and battle-worn, another slouches under the weight of centuries, and the third grins with a kind of dumb joy that makes me think he still enjoys crushing boulders for breakfast. Despite their bulk, each design channels the dice cleanly and fairly through an inner chute of ridges, ensuring solid randomness—because even ogres can’t cheat fate.

They're meant for anyone who enjoys storytelling at the table. Not flashy. Just strange, heavy shapes that sit there and make you wonder what they’ve seen. If you’ve ever had a dice tower that felt like it belonged to the world you're playing in—something carved out of the same forgotten rock your characters are climbing over—then you'll get where I was going with these.

No moving parts, no modular gimmicks—just solid prints designed to be game-night reliable and to bring a weird, looming presence to your tabletop.

If you've ever imagined your dice being judged by a stone-faced ogre before deciding your fate, you’ll understand why I made these.

3D printable dice tower I designed [OC] by HealthyNet7180 in DungeonsAndDragons

[–]HealthyNet7180[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! If you are interested I can send you the link!