- Brand: WizKids
- Animal theme: Dragon
- Toy figure type: Action Figure
- Color: Blue,black
- Material: Plastic
- Arveiaturace is enormous – crouched over and standing at 7.5 inches tall, 16.5 inches from nose to tail with a wingspan of 17 inches!
- Whether intimidating your party of adventurers or standing guard on your shelf as a display piece, the ancient white dragon is hand painted, showing the detail of the sculpt and accentuating every jagged scale.
- Our largest dragon figure released to date, the ancient white dragon lives up to her grand size and demeanor. Arveiaturace is ready to take soar through the icy peaks, complete with removable rider and saddle.
- Manufacturer: WIZKIDS






























anon –
Do you play D&D, and have you tried “PaperCraft” brand paper housing/castle terrain for your battles? These are SO much better. Full stop. WizKids delivers again… as always.We’re knee-deep in a solid “Rime of the Frostmaiden” campaign (7 or so sessions). I can tell this one will stick around – you know what I mean? Players are having fun, I’m having fun, and D&D is doing everything it does best. Battles are a big piece of that.I have had decent luck with “Papercraft” brand housing terrian, but… it’s a bit flimsy, they fall apart in storage, you have to poke it out with toothpicks, and I’ve ruined a couple pieves while putting them together. It serves it’s purpose, but… it wasn’t taking my RoTFM campaign to the next level. In steps WizKids, like always.I bought the WizKids minis for RoTFM, and as usual… they rock by the way. All pre-painted by the way, most encounters covered. Then I bought this set, and holy moley – dear god these things rock. If you look closely at my pics, you’ll see a few minis and how they scale compared to these babies. They’re huge! Much bigger than PaperCraft (and better built). 3 of these are plenty to dominate a battle mat – add “the lodge” set, and you can map out pretty much any IceWind Dale city battle with a simple “snow” battle mat. They tower over your minis – the scale is impressive.The cardboatd perforations are divine on these, especially compared to PaperCraft. You don’t need a toothpick, you don’t worry about tearing/ripping – they pop out like butter. This is the standard WizKids quality is at play here. Not only that, but they are extremely well-labeled – match the numbers printed under each piece to their counterparts – no guesswork. I built mine without referencing the instructions.The pieces are thick and well-built, but they also fit quite snugly – enough to compose into a solid finished product that won’t fall apart in storage I would label the quality as 2x that of PaperCraft, and I can actually see myself using these in lieu of my PaperCraft sets simply due to their scale and level of detail. Not just for Icewind Dale snow campaigns mind you, but my other campaigns as well.If you’re running a RoTFM campaign… dude, I’m telling you, just do it. You will not regret it, I guarantee. Quite the opposite actually.I hate to say this, because I’m not some shill who sucks up to brands, corporations, or the like. But… hot damn WizKids, you did it again. I’m starting to develop something akin to brand loyalty here, simply because you be rockin’ it. I’m not entirely sure how I feel about that, but keep it up. And send me some products if you ever need an honest review from a bona-fide DM, lol.
Austin Sumlin –
The majority of the minis in the packs were good quality, very well painted and detailed, especially the bigger minis. The tiny ones lack detail but that’s expected, and since they’re tiny it won’t be noticed at the table. However some of the biggest minis came with some pretty big flaws that made it not worth the $100 in my opinion.Firstly and most disappointing, I got the Tomb Trapper mini I was hoping for, but its hammer was packed incorrectly and bent, making it look goofy and curved rather than straight as the art shows. I was excited to get it, but that one flaw made an otherwise impressive figure look silly and would kill the intimidation factor it would give otherwise if set on the table. The painting on the figure is great and I’m impressed the hammer bent rather than just outright snapping so its clearly durable and well made, but that packing failure was very disappointing.This next error is too minor to take any points off, but if you’re a stickler for detail like me it may be a problem. The abominable yeti figure I got looks great and is probably my favorite one, but its left eye is painted incorrectly. The right eye looks awesome, but the left eye’s blue paint was done just a bit above the eye of the mini, which makes it look cross eyed. It won’t be an issue at the table since this mini is huge and the error is so tiny, and its covered in shadow most of the time anyway and my players definitely won’t notice it. But for me it again makes the figure look goofy and takes away that scare factor. It’s easily fixable with my own paint, but it contrasts so much with the otherwise stellar quality of the rest of the mini.Aside from those two issues, the rest of the minis are very well painted and look fantastic. The crag cat and werebear minis I showed in my photos are great examples of how detailed the painting can be when done correctly. I got the exact same unpainted duplicate as another reviewer but I honestly just assumed it was a slightly different coloring and am still not convinced it’s unintentional. Opening up the booster packs was a lot of fun, but the issues listed above took away from some of that excitement.Personally I think the price is a bit steep, but you’re paying for the experience of opening up the booster packs and seeing what you get more so than the minis themselves. If you need minis for your campaign, don’t care much about detail, and don’t mind dropping $100 on a gamble rather than buying the minis directly, go for it. If you’re a stickler for detail, you’re probably better off just getting unpainted minis and painting them yourself or buying specific pre-painted minis, as the errors might kill the fun. If money is tight, there are cheaper places to get minis en masse.
Robert Hanley Tortora –
It just so happens to be winter in my Eberron campaign. Mid-Zantyr. So these houses are perfect additions for my non-Sharn city scenes.5 Tentacles Up!โ No Eyes the Beholder
LilStabbyHana –
My players were wowed when I pulled these guys out. I absolutely love them, theyโre very detailed, lightweight, and easy to put together. Well worth the price!
JR –
Before I purchased this, there were several questions about the product in the reviews. Here is the down and dirty on the 8 box pack. In this 8 box pack I got 1 duplicate large and 3 duplicate small items. These are exactly as the description states BOOSTER boxes. You will get a random selection of the 45 items in the set. If you are trying to achieve a full set DO NOT do it here. I was pleased with the quality although a few had bent weapons. Totally understandable for what they are. They are PLASTIC not resin, so things will be bent instead of broken. The painting all seemed acceptable. You can tell they are mass painted and that is ok for what they are. The price is kind of high for plastic mass painted variety pack, but they will get you though the adventure. Happy gaming and hopefully this helps someone making the decision to purchase this item.
Larissa Lee –
We wanted to beef up our miniature collection, especially as one of my players is considering a run as DM for Icewind Dale. These bricks are a great option, if you can swing the cost. We saved about $4-6 per box by getting them as a brick – and you get 32 painted figures for the price. We follow up with our local game shop for any missed pieces from the collection.