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Spell Area of effect cones

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Here is a collection of printer friendly area of effect templates for 1" grid (square or hex)

Templates included

  • 60° Cone (this is as close to 5e text as needed to correctly estemate area. )
  • 45° Cone
  • 90° Cone
  • Sphere 
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Discussions (7)
Customer avatar
Creed M December 26, 2018 10:11 pm UTC
PURCHASER
The Sphere is cut off in the download
Customer avatar
Neal B December 11, 2018 9:10 pm UTC
PURCHASER
I can't get the sphere to print correctly. And even in the download it is cut off. How do I fix that?
Customer avatar
William L September 19, 2018 1:22 pm UTC
PURCHASER
Why is the sphere cutoff at the 5 inch (25 ft) line?
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Customer avatar
Malcolm R November 23, 2020 10:41 am UTC
PURCHASER
The creator appears to have gone for making everything on an 8.5-inch x 11-inch page, as that is the paper size most people are able to print. The 5-inch (or 25-foot) line would require the sheet of paper or film to be 10+ inches wide which is a lot less accessible for most people. A workaround is to print out as is but turn the sheet around in use to enable complete visualisation. It might be helpful if the creator could produce a version on a larger page size as an option for those with larger printers. An alternative might be to do two half-circles which could slot together to make a full-circle.
Customer avatar
Jean-Marc C December 01, 2017 10:32 am UTC
PURCHASER
that's great ! thanks a lot for that. i think the correct cone in d&d 5e is the 90°. Could you do ligne spell like lightning bolt and ray of frost and squares like web?
I print your templates on transparent plastic paper, puting some transparent png flamme or frost effects on them. Then i use laminating pouch on them to make them durable. the effect is like the one of the Arcknight guys but for less than a thenth of the price i think.
I'm sure you can put these effects on your models then sell them here.
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Customer avatar
Jean-Marc C December 01, 2017 1:11 pm UTC
PURCHASER
I mean 60 degrees. And btw, if I do the maths properly the real angle is 53.13 degrees.
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Customer avatar
Rogue A February 26, 2018 2:49 am UTC
53 degrees is correct for a flat topped cone. If you include the arc, it's 60 degrees.
Customer avatar
Scotty M September 18, 2017 2:57 pm UTC
PURCHASER
Thank you so much for these.
Customer avatar
Matthew T November 03, 2016 2:49 pm UTC
PURCHASER
Thank you for taking the time to make and share this. I definitely know DMs that will be using it. But just so people understand, this does not match the 5e rule for cones. The rule is that the cone's width at a given point along its length is equal to that points distance from the point of origin. That is a very wide cone. The width on this cone is, as far as I can tell, 3/4 to 4/5 of the distance from the point of origin. Still useful to many, I'm sure.
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Customer avatar
Matt R November 14, 2016 12:27 am UTC
CREATOR
yup I realised it recently. I will be re-making this at a 60* much closer...to the actual math

One downside is I will not be able to fit as long of a cone and still fit it on a standard 8.5 x 11 page .
Reply
Customer avatar
Matt R November 19, 2016 2:30 am UTC
CREATOR
Should be fixed. I left the 45° cone still in for if it ever is needed....
Customer avatar
Andrew G October 14, 2016 5:13 am UTC
Finally someone else realizes that a spell cone should end in a radius, not a flat truncation.
Reply
Customer avatar
Matt R October 26, 2016 3:20 pm UTC
CREATOR
Glad I could help! I was however torn on weather it should be a 90deg angle how the book theoretically makes it sound or a 45deg which makes more sense and actually looks like a cone.
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File Last Updated:
November 19, 2016
This title was added to our catalog on October 13, 2016.