Your fat, sweaty mitts would wear the map off the surface of the pad in no time. ![]() ![]() Perhaps we shouldn’t have to note this, but please don’t actually use it as a mousepad. It’s not clear why they didn’t just create an original design.īroken Ground board on left, official board 10a/b on right Some terrain changes were made to the original design, but the derivation is clear once one does a board-to-board comparison. Rather, it is a modified reproduction of the center of official board 10a/b. However, though the artwork is different, this board is not original. Naturally, it is not geomorphic and does not connect to standard ASL geoboards. Somehow this Hervé Villechaize of boards manages to have wood and stone buildings, a church, orchards, fields, hedges, walls, woods, brush, and even hills on it. ![]() This board, then, less than half the size of a standard 8″ x 22″ geoboard, is probably the smallest ASL board ever released. ![]() It is also certainly one of the odder.ĭesigned mostly as a promotional idea by then-new third party publisher Broken Ground Design (whose main thrust was the printing of alternative countersets for ASL, but wanted to get something out quicker), the Map Pad Pack is centered around an actual mouse pad, onto which a small ASL board was printed. Commentary:īroken Ground Design’s so-called Map Pad Pack may, if it is not reprinted, end up being one of the rarer pieces of ASL gear out there. 1 9.25" x 7.75" board printed on top of a mouse pad 4 scenarios on 2 half-pieces of cardstock.
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