MartinTheActor said: Wow, sorry I've come over from Owlbear Rodeo which is just so much more intuitive a system to use, even with all its extensions! Yeah, Owlbear Rodeo is a bit more intuitive, but it is also not as complex. Each VTT is going to have its Pros and Cons - Owlbear certainly has a lower barrier to entry and ease of use than Roll20. So, the map images just get added as a small image and you have to size them to each 'page'. Do I have that right? If you add an image to a blank map layer, where the size of the VTT is smaller than the size of the image, then the Smart Sizing feature should automatically help you size the page to the image. Otherwise, yes, you have to resize the image to the size of the page. I've found that many free battlemap images that are available from various sites often do not have a consistent size for the border of the image versus the grid. That's why the third bullet point says "The feature works better with gridless map images.". If each grid on the map image is 70px, but there is a border around the edge that is only 25px, then the Roll20 grid cannot automatically line up with the map image - you have to intentionally offset the edge of the map image to line up correctly. I almost always have extra space around the map image as well, so that I can move extra tokens to a space where my players can't see . Or for combat I may have several similar monsters (such as a group of goblins) that are all going to share initiative, so I'll have a generic 'Goblin' token off of the map that I used to represent that group's collective initiative in the Turn Tracker. I assume then that a standard DPI isn't used here to take some of the workload off the user? What I mean by this is that if 70px x 70px is the standard grid size, Roll20 doesn't see a 700x700px image as a 10 by 10 grid automatically? 70px x 70px is the default size for Roll20's grid , but there are other VTTs that use a different standard, and many mapmaking softwares use a different default. So it's typical to find images that do not follow that standard. I've found that 140px x 140px or 175px x 175px is the best for image quality on Roll20, because you can zoom in to the image, and you don't want to lose quality when zoomed in.