City by the Sea, a new offering from Tommi Salama cartographer for Adventure Quartelry, gives you a new local to use in any campaign! This elegant, coastal city is anything but simple with labeled and spoiler-free unlabeled versions, gorgeous color maps, plus a version split for larger printing in Letter pages so you can lay it across the table.
Pages: 16
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This map pack depicts a City by the Sea on 16 pages, 1 page front cover, 1 page editorial, leaving 14 pages for the maps, so let's take a look!
The first map depicts a massive, walled city by the sea, with streets connecting organically gates with the area around the harbor and one section of the city on a hill. It should be noted that unlike Port Shaw, Freeport etc., there is no huge harbor here, but rather the harbor can be considered just one part of the city, not one of its defining, center features.
The second page also has the city, this time depicted horizontal - with a truly jarring white box of text on the parchment-like header and a similarly jarring list of important buildings. Layout-wise, these white, angular boxes on a background of parchment are a total disaster that thankfully only mars this one rendition of the map - until you click on it, when the white box disappears. Printing it out, the boxes disappeared, but for those of you aiming to use this incarnation of the map online or via tablets should be aware of that.
EDIT: I've been made aware by two sources that I seem to be the only one stuck with this weird glitch - probably due to some personalizer issue or something like that. So ignore that portion.
6 pages each, both in b/w and full color, depict the city in a larger version.
Conclusion:
Tommi Salama is a glorious cartographer, and he obviously is just as at home with city maps as with battle maps - and this one comes beautiful indeed - craftmanship-wise, there's nothing to complain. A minor downside would be the lack of bookmarks to e.g. the b/w-version -while a marginal gripe, it still would have been nice to see. The pdf is also accompanied by an array of 4 cool high-res jpegs with and without labels. Internal logic-wise, I also have a minor gripe - for a city constructed so all roads lead towards the harbor, said harbor is VERY small when compared to the size of the city. My final verdict will clock in at 4.5 stars.
If you love designing cities for your campaign world but are handicapped by the inability to draw city plans this is something to pounce upon.
It's quite a big sprawling city - at least by the cod-mediaeval standards appropriate for a fantasy game - set on a coastal plain. It's a little unusual in that there is no natural harbour nor is it at a river mouth, but if those are in short supply in the area the nice flat land it sits upon is probably what attracted those who founded the city to build here.
It is all set up to make customisation easy too. The PDF includes an unmarked single sheet version and a series of pages that you'll have to stick together to make a poster-size map. With good use of 'form fillable' technology, there is also a labelled map where you can enter in your own city name and the names of selected numbered locations ready to show the important places to your players once their characters start to find their way around (or purchase a map).
The ZIP file that also comes with your download contains large JPEG files which can be worked on in your favourite graphics package, used in a virtual table top or even printed if you have access to poster printing facilities.
All you need to do is decide who dwells there and what adventures will take place when the party visits town!
This city is ready for adventurers. It is quite detailed, and could be a hive if villainy or a bastion of goodness.
For this product, the price is also quite good, and you get close ups and larger views of the city. I only wish that page 4 with its 15 landmarks had a lot more listed - which always provides ideas and places for a dm.
I really appreciate cartography and fantasy maps, and I liked this: 4/5.
Thank you for your great review! The white boxes you see are a result of fillable form fields. It depends on the pdf reader used that how it handles said fields. I have set the fields transparent, but it doesn't seem to work how it's supposed to with all pdf readers. If you're getting the white boxes with the newest version of Adobe reader there must be some kind of glitch...
Yeah, I do, but as mentioned, updated the review accordingly. I'm a HUGE fan of your cartography - seriously. You'll go far in that field. Your name by now for me is in the same category as Jonathan Roberts and Todd Gamble. :)