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Frostpunk: The Board Game - Timber City Expansion
A set of 80 wooden meeples representing buildings (15 mm thickness, varied height and width), containing 18 large buildings (12 different shapes) and 62 small buildings (23 different shapes), to be placed on cardboard buildings tiles from the Core Game.
Frostpunk: The Board Game - Dreadnought Miniature
Contains 1 plastic miniature. Besides being an awesome collector’s piece (190x70x50 mm size!) it will be used in one of the setups and one of the scenarios as an element that will increase the immersive aspect of the game. This expansion is purely of aesthetic nature and does not in any way influence the mechanics of the game.
Frostpunk: The Board Game - Resources Expansion
Contains 98 plastic miniatures. It is a set of beautiful plastic resources that match other plastic components in scale. It simply enhances the overall impression you will get if you play with the Miniatures expansion. This expansion is purely of aesthetic nature and does not in any way influence the mechanics of the game.
Frostpunk: The Board Game - Miniatures Expansion
Contains 120 plastic miniatures in 41 different sculpts, bringing the ultimate look of Frostpunk\'s last city of Earth to the tabletop. This expansion is purely of aesthetic nature and does not in any way influence the mechanics of the game.
The Red Cathedral
Autumn is not the best time to climb up on a scaffold in Moscow, but it is still far better than doing so in the winter. Tsar Ivan wants to see results and our team will prove to him that we are the best builders in the city. We are sure to finish off those decorative arches with the brightest shining stones and ensure our place on the list of the government’s trusted workers.
Chocolate Factory
Make the best chocolate you can and sell it all to corner shops and department stores. Earn the most profit to become the champion chocolatier!
Stone Age
The "Stone Age" times were hard indeed. In their roles as hunters, collectors, farmers, and tool makers, our ancestors worked with their legs and backs straining against wooden plows in the stony earth. Of course, progress did not stop with the wooden plow. People always searched for better tools and more productive plants to make their work more effective.