It's the August '23 release from my Patreon/Tribe, where you can embark on an unforgettable journey in search of your new scenery items!
Subscribe for $3.5 to unlock interactive adventures, where YOU make the story happen. Together with your fellow adventurers, you will discover new and ancient treasures each and every month, and the choices made will determine the rewards you will uncover!
And if you want to have only the new models, you can get them for just $1.5!
Come, join the adventure!
NOTE: Pre-Supported files are preliminary and might be re-uploaded for beter printing within the next 24h.
WHAT'S INSIDE:
The perfect addition to your new campaign - healing plants your players can COLLECT! 7 modular parts:
- SAGE - extremely detailed, TEXTURED model.
- PERIWINKLE - the plant itself and the flower that can be attached to the top of the plant and 'collected' afterwards.
- AMERICAN GINSENG - the plant, its berries (that can be attached and later 'collected') and the ginseng root (separate, can be glued to the plant if needed)
- SOIL patch, that serves as a base to hold the plants if you want to use them without glueing them to the surface.
HEALING BENEFITS:
SAGE is used for the relief of pain, protecting the body against oxidative stress, free radical damages, angiogenesis, inflammation, bacterial and virus infection. (source)
Dried sage is burned to heal, protect, increase wisdom, and boost defense against disease. (source)
MADAGASCAR PERIWINKLE
The plant has been widely used in tropical folk medicine. Decoctions of the plant have been used for maladies ranging from ocular inflammation, diabetes, and hemorrhage to treating insect stings and cancers.
Periwinkle alkaloids have been used in the treatment of leukemia, Hodgkin disease, malignant lymphomas, neuroblastoma, Wilms tumor, Kaposi sarcoma, mycosis fungoides, to improve cerebral blood flow, and treat high blood pressure. (source)
European herbalists have used periwinkle for headaches, vertigo, and poor memory since medieval times. It was also considered a helpful remedy for conditions with a watery or bloody discharge such as diarrhea, bleeding gums, or menorrhagia. (source)
AMERICAN GINSENG
Long before North America was colonized, various Native American peoples used ginseng in medicine. Ojibwe Midewiwin, spiritual leaders skilled in medicine, used the root for digestive troubles and pain relief. Muscogee people used a poultice of the root to staunch bleeding and a tea to treat respiratory conditions and fevers. The Meskwaki people of the Great Lakes region have used it as both an aphrodisiac and as a panacea, a “universal remedy for children and adults,” Daniel Moerman writes in Native American Medicinal Plants. (read more)