From £15.99
What It Is
This centaur is kitted out for serious business. Full plate armour covering the torso, a proper shield, and a sword at the ready. The pose suggests mid-charge or holding a defensive line — weight forward on the front hooves, upper body twisted to bring the blade to bear. Artisan's Guild sculpts tend toward clean, heroic proportions, and this one's no exception. The detailing on the barding and armour plates gives you something worth painting if you're into that.
At The Table
Centaurs occupy an interesting space in D&D 5e and Pathfinder 2e — not quite beast, not quite humanoid. This armoured variant works perfectly as a veteran warrior from a centaur clan that's learned to forge its own gear rather than relying on tribal aesthetics. Drop one of these into a wilderness encounter where the party expects savage raiders and instead meets disciplined cavalry. The cognitive dissonance alone is worth it.
For a longer campaign, consider a centaur paladin or fighter NPC who serves as a regional protector — someone the party hears about before they meet. When that meeting finally happens, this mini delivers the visual impact. In Shadowdark or OSE, a centaur knight guarding a forest shrine or ancient standing stones makes for a memorable mid-level challenge, especially if the players try to negotiate rather than fight.
In Dolmenwood, this could be one of the fae-touched centaurs from the deeper woods — perhaps a former member of the Summer Court's honour guard now exiled and wandering the mortal realm. The plate armour tells a story of crossing between worlds. For Pathfinder, it's a solid fit for centaur NPCs in nations like Kyonin or the River Kingdoms, where martial tradition meets frontier life.
Printed in high-quality resin. Supplied unpainted. Fits a 2" base (50mm).