Exciting, Final Stages

Wooden Wall with Knock Out Wood Pannel

Exciting Progress

Things are starting to get properly exciting with Clicky Walls.

As of today, all of the digital STL files are finished and test printed. Every wall, connector, and component has been through real-world prints to make sure everything fits, connects, and behaves exactly as intended during play.

The final piece to fall into place today was also the most challenging: the wooden wall.

This wall is a bit unusual by design. At its core, it’s the same structural framework used across all Clicky Walls, which ensures every wall stays uniform and connects precisely with every other piece in the system. On most walls, that internal section is a solid brick infill. On the wooden wall, however, that infill is removable.

The wooden section is printed as a support piece that looks like planks of wood. Once printing is finished, you have a choice. You can leave the wooden planks in place and use it as a standard wooden wall, or you can apply a bit of firm pressure and pop the wooden section out entirely.

That gives you two wall types from a single print.

What’s left behind is an open framework wall, which is ideal for interiors, multi-level buildings, or attaching external areas. Because it’s open, it also helps fill gaps cleanly when used inside structures alongside floors.

The removed wooden section doesn’t go to waste either. It has its own small attachment points, allowing multiple pieces to be joined together. These can be used to create fences, bridges, ramps, or anything else you can imagine planks of wood being used for — a raft to cross a river, makeshift walkways, or improvised defences. It was a tricky STL to get right, but it opens up a lot of creative flexibility.

With that piece finally completed, the entire tavern bundle is now finished.

I’m currently in the process of printing all the parts needed to build the tavern in its entirety. Once that’s done, I’ll be able to start filming videos showing how to print the pieces and how they all fit together in practice. At the same time, I’ll be working on promotional material, photography, and general marketing to help flesh out the website and make everything feel more complete and professional.

While that side of things is underway, development doesn’t stop.

The next project is already lined up: the Tudor Walls bundle.

These will be similar in structure to the walls used in the tavern set, but with plaster finishes and exposed oak beams to give a more authentic Tudor look. Not only will this allow the tavern to be styled more accurately, but it will also massively expand the range of wall types available for building villages, towns, and street scenes.

Alongside the walls, the Tudor bundle will include a handful of additional objects — things like shop or vendor windows, ladders, and a few other surprises that I’m keeping under wraps for now.

There’s a lot happening, and this is very much just the beginning.

Wooden Wall with Knock Out Wood Pannel

Exciting, Final Stages

Exciting Progress Things are starting to get properly exciting with Clicky Walls. As of today, all of the digital STL files are finished and test

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clicky-walls modular tabletop-terrain

My First Post

Hello, and welcome to Clicky Walls. If you enjoy tabletop games like Dungeons & Dragons, building immersive worlds, or designing modular terrain for your gaming

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