Miniature Scale Guide

The scales 28 mm, 32 mm, 54 mm and 75 mm always refer to a standard human (eye-to-foot height). All other creatures are made maintaining their natural proportion.

📏 How it works

When you choose a scale, you are choosing the height of the human.

Other creatures will not have the same height, but will be scaled according to their stature relative to the human.

Scale reference

Ratio relative to the human

The human is always the reference point. All creatures are scaled relative to him.

📊 Size categories

Categories apply to all scales and indicate the proportion relative to the human.

  • Tiny (25% – 40%)
    Tiny creatures like familiars, spirits and very small magical beings.
  • Small (50% – 75%)
    Gnomes, halflings, goblins and creatures shorter than a human.
  • Medium (100%)
    Standard human, elves and similar humanoids. This is the reference scale.
  • Large (125% – 180%)
    Orcs, massive beasts and creatures more imposing than a human.
  • Very large (180% – 300%)
    Trolls, ogres and large-bodied creatures.
  • Huge (300%+)
    Giants, dragons and colossal creatures.

🔎 Practical examples

Scale 54 mm

  • Human → 54 mm
  • Gnome (~65%) → approx. 35 mm
  • Orc (~150%) → approx. 81 mm
  • Giant (~300%) → approx. 162 mm

📐 Scale comparison

Creature
32 mm
54 mm
75 mm
Gnome
21 mm
35 mm
49 mm
Human
32 mm
54 mm
75 mm
Orc
48 mm
81 mm
112 mm
Giant
96 mm
162 mm
225 mm

✔ In short

The scale always refers to the human. All other miniatures maintain their natural proportion relative to him.