Sci-Fi Battered and Damaged Landspeeders (Curufin 3D Prints)

A pair of Landspeeders today, for use as terrain for Star Wars Legion and possibly Shatterpoint.

Sure, the scale may be off a little for Shatterpoint, but as terrain pieces that have very little to do with gameplay, I feel like they’ll still work okay.

These were quick and easy to paint. Spray paint a base colour then a zenithal of a lighter spray.

Next was a bunch of sponge highlighting for both the green and then the blue to give them a sun-bleached look.

The racing stripes on both were done by masking off the stripes and then simply stippling on the yellow/red.

I finished them up with more stippling using a couple of shades of metallic paint, as well as painting in the other details like the vents and seats. The windscreen is a piece of cut out plastic just slotted in there. I need to cut out another piece at some stage for the second speeder as well as I’ve just passed it back and forth for the photos here.

These models, digitally sculpted by artist Curufin can be found for free on Cults3D, along with a bunch of other models inspired by fantasy and sci-fi.

Some protocol droids provide scale for us here.

Yet again, these models were printed before December (during November, in fact!) and cleaned up & assembled in January so they count towards both Anne’s 2026 Miniature Assembly Challenge and also Dave Stone’s Paint What You Got Challenge 25-26.

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops & Crates

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops & Crates

A bit of terrain today – some more scatter-ish bits from the Star Wars Shatterpoint Core Set and Take Cover Terrain Pack add-on that I decided to get done quickly during early January. They’re not super exciting by any means, but they are now assembled and painted!

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops

There’s these rocky spire-things. I guess they work as movement/LOS blockers in Shatterpoint. My understanding is that Shatterpoint uses a lot of verticality and these don’t really have a lot to do with that, but then I’d rather have an interesting and attractive looking table than a tedious 40k 10th-edition collection of L-shaped ruins.

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops

I sprayed them with the same texture paint that I used on the 20th Century Fox logo that I printed and painted some time ago, as they were a bit too smooth. They’re actually pretty scale-agnostic overall. I don’t have any Shatterpoint figuresactually painted at this point, but (I think) they’re pretty similar to the Crisis Protocol stuff.

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops

They also work pretty well alongside the mechs…

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Rocky Outcrops

…snd also alongside both 1/100 (15mm) and Legions Imperialis tanks.

Star Wars Shatterpoint Terrain: Crates

The other half of this post are these crates. When stacked, they’re pretty tall, regardless of whether they’re next to the smaller Imperial Assault minis or oversized Crisis Protocollers. Now I painted a set of these things quite awhile ago, and so I wanted to do something else with these ones. After all, I’ve certainly painted enough generic looking individual paints to last me more than a lifetime. In fact, if I ever find where I put that first set, I’ll probably glue a few of them together as well to turn them into small barricades instead of bits of full-ignorable decoration.

Anyway, they’re a good example of “it is what it is” in hobby form, and they’re now assembled, painted and about to be shoved into some sort of storage container until I need them again. The spires are all January models, while these were completed yesterday, though all of this stuff was built in January. As such, they all count towards both Dave Stone’s Paint What You Got Challenge 25-26, and also Anne’s 2026 Miniature Assembly Challenge.