Reddit Reddit reviews EXPO Low Odor Dry Erase Markers, Chisel Tip, Assorted, 16 Count

We found 5 Reddit comments about EXPO Low Odor Dry Erase Markers, Chisel Tip, Assorted, 16 Count. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Office & School Supplies
Writing Supplies & Correction Supplies
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Dry Erase & Wet Erase Markers
Office Products
EXPO Low Odor Dry Erase Markers, Chisel Tip, Assorted, 16 Count
Consistent, skip Free marking and brilliant Color OptionsLow odor ink formula erases cleanly and is ideal for classrooms, offices and Home officesVersatile chisel tip allows for Broad or fine writingFor optimal results, use on non porous surfaces such as porcelain or melamine Whiteboards and glassIncludes: Orange, Brown, Plum, Purple, Turquoise, Light Brown, Pink, Lime, 2 Black, 2 Red, 2 Blue and 2 Green dry erase markers
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5 Reddit comments about EXPO Low Odor Dry Erase Markers, Chisel Tip, Assorted, 16 Count:

u/jhc1415 · 25 pointsr/pics
u/microseconds · 9 pointsr/networking

Start with the underlay.

Got your underlay in position? Awesome. Now add the overlay materials. Use /u/the-packet-thrower's stencils in conjunction with your overlay and underlay tools.

Need to back out a change? Use the standard change management tools prescribed by the underlay/overlay technologies..

u/Jurph · 1 pointr/DungeonsAndDragons

You should probably hop on Amazon and order a pound of dice so that you'll have enough d20s, d10s, and d8s for everyone.

If you play around a table, the Paizo dry-erase mat is the best bang-for-your-buck map; even with a deluxe pack of dry-erase markers it's still cheaper and far more versatile than any five actual map packs you might buy. The grid is one-inch squares. Your players can use almost anything for miniatures: toy soldiers, chess pieces, Lego minifigs on pedestals, etc. You can use expensive minis for big showcase bad guys, or cheap plastic knights from a dollar store. You can even cut 3/4-inch-wide strips of index cards, tape them into triangles, and write "ORC" on them. (Write "BIG ORC" on the leader in extra-dark sharpie, to really scare your players.)

If you have a projector or a tablet that the players can use to see the action, then you can use MapTool to make all of your maps ahead of time and do everything on a screen. The map and token creation tools are simple to learn. If a player has to remote in then Google Hangouts, Skype, or any other audio+video conference tool can be matched up to your MapTool session to create a virtual tabletop that the players can share.

u/mrthirsty15 · 1 pointr/DnDIY

I've found these to work fairly well. The only thing I haven't been too thrilled about, is that after maybe a dozen sessions, some of the edges are fraying. A little bit of superglue fixes it though, so I'm still quite happy with them.

The advantage is it let's you draw things up ahead of time, and you can keep portions of the floorplan/dungeon concealed until the players actually enter the room.

Combine them with a good multi-colored set of dry erase markers, and you can prep some decent looking maps ahead of time, while still keeping things as surprises for the players.

u/PolitelyDenies · -1 pointsr/pics

i bolded the link so people with bad vision can see: here



ninja edit: if you still have trouble seeing the link please dont downvote.