Thibault’s Sind, 8 miles per hex v2
This fragment of Sind is our earliest surviving fragment of Thibault’s Hexmapper works. As early as April 2001 he posted to the Mystara Mailing List about trying it out — with the Great Waste — but that map is lost to us. Or, could this perhaps be it?
In any case, for whatever reason he never brought this one to completion, and it was overtaken by Heldann to become his first finished Hexmapper map. You can see slightly more polished versions in some of his later combined Hexmapper pieces, but none had labels or even finished coasts and rivers, unfortunately. Finally, he later abandoned the darker colour for rocky desert used in this map.
Fan-made Map by Thibault Sarlat (January 2004)
This is an original map created by one of Mystara’s excellent fan cartographers. For more information on the cartographer, including a gallery of all their maps, see also Appendix M: Mappers of Mystara.
Work in progress map: This map is incomplete. It appears here in the most recent state available, but it may be missing certain elements.
Sources
- The Voyage of the Princess Ark Part 16: Conspiracies within conspiracies, Dragon #169 (May 1991)
- Champions of Mystara (1993) (PDF at DriveThruRPG)
Fan Sources
- Thibault’s Sind, 8 miles per hex v1 (1999-2000)
References
- All of Thibault’s maps at the Atlas of Mystara
- Thibault’s entry in Appendix M: Mappers of Mystara
- Thibault’s author page at the Vaults of Pandius
Chronological Analysis
This is a fan-made map. It was published in January 2004. The updated Atlas version of this map is Sind, 8 miles per hex. See also Appendix C for annual chronological snapshots of the area. For the full context of this map in Mystara’s publication history, see the upcoming Let’s Map Mystara 2004. (Please note that it may be some time before the project reaches this point.)
The following lists are from the Let’s Map Mystara project. Additions are new features, introduced in this map; Revisions are changes to previously-introduced features; Hex Art & Fonts track design elements; and finally Textual Additions are potential features found in the related text. In most cases, the Atlas adopts these textual additions into updated and chronological maps.
Coming Soon