Sin's Miniatures launches 40-plus Daemonic Invasion STL collection
Sin's Miniatures released Daemonic Invasion!, a 40-plus STL drop with monsters, mounts and 5E stat blocks, giving painters showpieces and printable kits to explore decay palettes.

Sin's Miniatures rolled out a major January release titled Daemonic Invasion!, delivering more than 40 new 3D model STL kits aimed at tabletop wargamers and 5E role players. The collection foregrounds large, paintable sculpts built around thematic base sizes and includes ready-to-use 5E stat blocks so pieces work at the table as well as on the display shelf.
The release breaks down into clear casting and painting opportunities: three gigantic monsters, a trio of daemonic trees, three large heavy cavalry, three heavy mounts, roughly 15 medium monstrous creatures, three lesser daemonic heroes and about 10 foot warriors. The creator included multiple close-up images of sculpts and finished prints, plus pose and display variations that show how pieces read at different scales and from multiple angles. A planned rollout will continue with Plague Daemons and Disciples over the next three months, giving a steady stream of new sculpts rather than a single mass drop.
For painters this collection is a toolbox. The larger monsters and cavalry are ideal showpieces you can push with layered contrast and object source lighting. The medium monsters and foot warriors are excellent testbeds for textural techniques: try stippled flesh, organic weathering, and layered glazes to convey rot and plague themes. The sculpts’ skin and surface detail lend themselves to heavy drybrushing, pooled washes and targeted gloss varnish for slimy accents. Because the files are provided as STLs, you can print or cast copies to experiment aggressively without risking a single showcase model.
The inclusion of 5E stat blocks makes these models immediately useful for game masters who want visual variety for encounters. Thematic base sizes specified by the designer simplify basing choices and keep minis consistent with common wargame footprints. The post also shows how prints sit in dynamic groupings, which helps with diorama planning and table-top composition.
Access follows patron tiers, with download and printing permissions tied to backing level. That staged access combined with the three-month rollout means you can pace printing to match your painting queue and avoid a sudden spike in GAS. The availability of pose variations and multiple prints in the images gives insight into conversion and kit-bash potential for modders and terrain builders.
The takeaway? Treat this drop as both a painting playground and a table-ready toolkit. Pick one giant as a centerpiece, use medium creatures to practice decay palettes, and stagger prints across the three-month rollout so you have fresh projects and fewer unfinished minis crowding the desk. Our two cents? Load up a resin printer, reserve a showpiece, and let those plague tones teach you a few new tricks.
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