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A Trio of Licenseable Fate Dice Products

Steven TrustrumNew Products, Stock Art 1 Comment

A Veritable Festival of Fabulous Fate Dice

Elizabeth Porter Presents: Fate Dice 2

Fate Dice 2

Elizabeth Porter Presents: Fate Dice 1

Fate Dice 1

For publishers and gamers alike looking for Fate Dice images, Misfit Studios now presents a trio of useful products!

First, there is a duo stock art release from Elizabeth Porter through Misfit Studios in the form of the Fate Dice Pack 1 and Fate Dice Pack 2.

Both includes one JPG and TIFF variations of each die colour, with an image to represent each possible die result per colour, all at 300 dpi. An EPS vector version of each is also included.

Fate Dice Pack 1

This stock art pack includes Fate Dice in black, white, dark grey, dark blue, and dark green.

Fate Dice Pack 2

This stock art pack includes Fate Dice in yellow, purple, light grey, pink, and light green.

And a Fate Dice Font

FATEdDice FontRounding out this trio of Fate Dice related products is a new font, FATEdDice, created by Steven Trustrum, that allows you to insert FATE die results into your products or game materials easily. Now, you no longer need to rely on carefully aligning die images into your layout — you can do it easily by employing this font!

Stock Art License Summary

All stock art is licensed for use in professional publications. Misfit Studios (or, in some cases, the third-party artist) retain ownership of the work, meaning you cannot resell the art in your own art packs or the like, and may be required to post an artist credit.

You must include the artist’s copyright statement in all publications using the art under certain terms and conditions. You obtain a license to use the art, but do not own any rights to it beyond that.

Enjoy Misfit Studios’ new range of licenseable Fate Dice products.

Steven Trustrum has been writing in the RPG industry since the end of the '90s and publishing via Misfit Studios since 2003. Aside from writing and publishing role-playing game content, he ... dabbles ... in content and social media marketing.

Comments 1

  1. (I intend this to be constructive criticism, not a complaint)

    I think the dice images would be more useful if they (each color) were in groups of 4, not 3 … and if their shadows all went in a similar direction.

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