Last month this article introduced me to Roll20. My group has been playing for a decade, and I have spent half that time looking for a tabletop mapping solution. While I did not employ a projector as shown in the article (and mentioned widely on the internet), Roll20 has proven to be exactly what I was looking for. Being geeks, we already had everything on hand we needed to make it work aside from a TV, and my wife gladly let me take ours from the living room when I replaced it with a larger one. Surprise! (The new TV was still less than the price of a projector) My setup: 42" LED TV, Apple Mac Mini (running Chrome), Laptop. I run the game from the laptop, while one of the players logs in thru the Apple using the TV as the monitor (I suspect any sufficiently powered PC could do the same). Either of us can control the PC tokens, while monsters and NPCs are controlled solely by me. At 80% zoom the grid is a perfect inch square; sizing the player tokens exactly to the base of our figures. We had our first full run last night, and, after a minor learning curve, were off and running. Game play was largely unaffected, and ran exactly as they had for the previous ten years, minus one key change - I didn't have to draw the maps. This one thing sped up the game significantly. The fact the map was now in full color, with lighting, and line of sight only served to take it well above the next level. You can see the results in the picture below. Aside from the epic-level quality of the maps, this should also allow players who are unable to attend physically to still play remotely by logging in and playing as Roll20 is intended. (This has yet to be tested, however) My questions to the community: Has anyone else employed this method for tabletop game play, and what were your results? Has anyone laid an LED TV on it's back before? There has been concerns raised about damage to the screen. (A piece of plexi will used over the screen next game to protect it from pressure)