This is a set of 8 different sets of dungeon tiles! It really is the "kitchen sink" set of tiles. 1) Dungeon Tiles; 2) Cave Tiles; 3) Wilderness Tiles; 4) Junction; 5) Inn; 6) Winter Ice; 7) Dungeons Lava; 8) Underground Rivers.
This PDF is 215 pages long... If you want/need 2D tiles, this is the only set you will likely ever need. Seriously.
Now, for the one negative aspect of this awesome set: the designers used black borders to denote negative space, or solid rock spaces on the tiles. On most pages of printed text, the ink/toner coverage is only 5%, but printing these pages, the ink/toner coverage will be from 80%-90%! This is a negative aspect, as it will suck up a massive amount of ink/toner in the printing! What I recommend, is taking this PDF to a local office supply/print shop that offers to print documents for you -- they charge by the page, not how much ink/toner is printed on every page. Printing these pages will drain the ink/toner at a very rapid rate...
I suggest applying these to peel-n-stick vinyl floor tiles, the least expensive you can find (typically $1-$2 per 12-inch square). Apply the printed pages to the glue side of the tiles, then cut with a utility scissors. They will be heavy, but they will also be extremely durable. These finished tiles can be butted against one another, to form your dungeons, as necessary. I've done this with other similar sets purchased prior to this set.
If you want to save money, use chipboard, the 2mm-thick cardboard used as backing for pictures, available at framing shops. Apply the printed pages using a glue stick. For greater durability, cover the printed sides using clear vinyl shelf liner, available in Wal-Mart and similar stores. Said shelf liner makes a wonderful, incredibly long lasting, book cover material -- I covered my 1980 RPG books with it, and today, 45 years later, they still look nearly pristine, with minimal cover wear.
Again, this is the one, and only, 2D dungeon tile set you will ever need to purchase -- it has everything! Cheers!
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