Paizo Launches Official 3D Printable Pathfinder Miniatures Through Paizo Printables
Paizo's new subscription service on MyMiniFactory offers official Pathfinder STL files starting at $5 per month
Paizo Launches Official 3D Printable Pathfinder Miniatures Through Paizo Printables
Paizo has officially entered the 3D printing market. The Pathfinder publisher launched Paizo Printables this week — a subscription service on MyMiniFactory, built in partnership with Titan Forge, offering official STL files for Pathfinder miniatures at $5 and $10 monthly tiers. It's a significant strategic shift for one of TTRPG's biggest publishers, and it signals that the line between digital and physical tabletop products is blurring fast.
What You Get
The service launches with a welcome pack of 28 miniatures spanning iconic Pathfinder creatures and characters. Subscribers also receive adventure PDFs and stat blocks integrated with the miniatures, giving the service value beyond just printable files. The $5 tier covers a curated selection, while the $10 tier unlocks the full catalog.
The partnership with Titan Forge — a well-known name in the 3D printing miniature space — gives Paizo access to production-quality sculpting and a distribution platform that the miniature printing community already trusts. MyMiniFactory handles the file delivery and community features, so Paizo can focus on content rather than building infrastructure from scratch.
The One Page Rules Connection
Perhaps the most surprising element is Paizo's partnership with One Page Rules, the streamlined wargame system that has exploded in popularity as an alternative to Games Workshop's offerings. Paizo Printables minis will be compatible with One Page Rules games, bridging TTRPG and wargaming audiences.
This is smart cross-pollination. One Page Rules has a massive, engaged community of players who are already 3D-printing armies. Giving them official Pathfinder creatures to use in skirmish games expands the addressable market well beyond the traditional RPG table. It also positions Pathfinder minis as useful across multiple game systems, increasing the value proposition for subscribers.
Why This Matters for the Hobby
The 3D printing miniature market has been growing rapidly, but it's been dominated by third-party creators and unofficial proxies. When a major publisher like Paizo starts offering official files, it legitimizes the space in a way that Patreon creators and independent sculptors can't.
This also puts pressure on the traditional miniature pipeline. Companies like WizKids and Reaper have long been the go-to for official TTRPG minis, sold through retail at $5-15 per figure. A $5-10 monthly subscription for unlimited printable files is a fundamentally different value equation — especially for players who already own a resin printer.
The broader trend is clear: TTRPG publishers are embracing print-on-demand and digital distribution for physical goods. Wizards of the Coast has experimented with digital tools, and now Paizo is pushing into the actual production space. The question isn't whether other publishers will follow — it's how fast.
Getting Started
Players interested in Paizo Printables can subscribe through MyMiniFactory. The welcome pack provides an immediate collection to print, and monthly drops will keep the catalog growing. For those new to 3D printing, the service pairs well with entry-level resin printers that have dropped below $200 — making the total cost of entry surprisingly accessible compared to buying pre-painted minis at retail.
Paizo Printables is live now, and early reception from the Pathfinder community has been enthusiastic. Whether it becomes a core part of Paizo's business or remains a niche offering, it's a bold move that acknowledges where the hobby is heading.