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Author Topic: $650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders  (Read 555 times)

Offline SgtSlag

  • Librarian
  • Posts: 167
$650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders
« on: July 18, 2025, 04:58:35 PM »
I found this video review on a $650 hardwood Gaming Table:  YouTube Review

It is not inexpensive, but if it suits your needs, check it out.  It is available from Amazon.

Some things of note:

Board Game Table with Removable Table Top (included), seats 4 to 6 Players (chairs not included) with 57in x 33in Play Area, includes Play Mat, detachable Cup Holders (four included) and Dice Trays (ordered separately), minimal assembly required (screw in four legs to tabletop, hex tool included); the Topper is not sealed against leaks, but those which are, are of dubious engineering -- the water may just sit in the sealed channels, until you remove the topper, then it will fall into the well...

Note that this table is solid Malaysian Oak wood, not sawdust and glue.  As gaming tables go, this is a very reasonable option, and it is made of solid hardwood!

If interested, check it out.  Be sure to watch the video review, and be sure to tabulate the extra's you will want to make it work best for you, to get an idea of the total cost for your preferred setup.  Cheers!

Offline Pattus Magnus

  • Scatterbrained Genius
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Re: $650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders
« Reply #1 on: July 18, 2025, 05:24:50 PM »
Maylaysian oak makes me chuckle, as it’s actually rubber tree wood and in no way related to oak (production from the rubber trees in plantations decreases after a while, so they cut them down and plant new ones- the cut trees become “oak”). Not a slam against rubber wood furniture, it’s quite good (my kitchen table and chairs are made of it) especially compared with particle-board trash. I just find the marketing amusing.

The table itself seems like a great setup for skirmish games and role-playing games. It’s a bit small for mass battle games, but there’s no reason you couldn’t easily make a 6x4 tabletop (or larger) to fit on top.

The only thing that gives me pause (aside from not having $US 650 in the budget, and the seller doesn’t ship that product to Canada), is having a dining table over the recessed playing surface. I cringe at the thought of using it for a dining table and then someone spilling something sticky (just part of normal dining table duty), which then flows toward the edges and down into the play area …

If I ever bought something similar, there’s no way any of the jokers in my household would be eating supper on my gaming table!
« Last Edit: July 18, 2025, 06:26:09 PM by Pattus Magnus »

Offline SgtSlag

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  • Posts: 167
Re: $650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders
« Reply #2 on: July 18, 2025, 10:39:51 PM »
Yep, I agree.  I worked with a local carpenter to design custom gaming tables.  My first table design included a gaming well, with removable flat tabletop pieces (not shown); this design utilized pull-out drawers, on rails (with hinged doors to hide them when not in use -- see photo), for gamer's books, dice, etc.  This table is made of solid Hickory wood, clear coated w/o stain.

The carpenter came up with a simplified version of my pull-out drawer design, which he sold a few copies of.  He still sells this design.  This table is made of solid Hickory wood, clear coated w/o stain.

I came up with a flat-top with pull-out drawers design, which I ordered from him, for myself.  Mine has an electronic lift system, as shown in the photos (no sound system, no USB ports, no wireless phone chargers, no rail system for hang-off trays, dice towers, etc.).   I had it stained, with some fancy laser engraving of art designs done, and a clear plastic overlay for my end station's pull-out drawer.  It is solid Hickory wood.  I love it, but if I could do it over, I would just buy a couple of Ping Pong Tables, replace their under-carriages with folding table leg assemblies, and keep thousands of Dollars in my bank account (see below).

I discovered, after several months, that my table was sagging from the middle, as it lacked proper support in its structure.  The carpenter refused to fix it, so I spent around $300 out of pocket to add metal support struts, screwed to the underside of the tabletop -- I came up with these with the help of some friends.  These struts fixed the issue, and I've been happy with my modifications for 3+ years now -- rock solid, works flawlessly.

Truth is, it is too small for my games!  I took two folding tables, side-by-side, tacked onto the end of my 5-1/2 foot by 9-1/2 foot custom table, to make it 15-1/2 feet long, for my last big fantasy mass battles game.

My Wife loves to use my Gaming Table as a Cutting Table for her fabric crafts:  she elevates it to a comfortable height, and cuts fabrics as needed.  This was one of my selling points to get her to agree to my getting the table...

I've since purchased a Ping Pong Table top, attached four sets of folding table leg assemblies to that, to tack onto the end of my custom table, for future mass battles games (I also play war games with classic 54mm Army Men figures, so a huge tabletop is necessary).

My highest recommendation for a gaming table for mass battles, is to:  get a Ping Pong Table topper for a Pool Table (<$150); attach sets of folding table leg assemblies beneath it (use four sets @ $68/set=$280); attach the four segments of the Ping Pong Table together using hasps ($8 for a set of 8 hasps), to keep the table sections held solidly together as one table surface.

I used a Ping Pong Table for 20 years, both for mass battles games, and for my RPG games:  5 feet x 9 feet.  When the surface got hashed, I covered it with burgundy vinyl from the local fabric store (the photo shows the folding legs beneath, and in the bottom right corner, you can see the burgundy vinyl):  I had to seam two pieces together down the middle, and for this, I used carpet tape to hold them together; I wrapped the vinyl around the edge of the tabletop, employing a common utility stapler to secure the vinyl underneath, after I pulled it taut.  That vinyl covering was removed and re-purposed after I retired the Ping Pong Table.

The nice thing about a Ping Pong Table, is that you can use it for RPG and miniature gaming, as well as playing Ping Pong on it!  After the particle board surface gets hashed, you can cover it with vinyl, and it will last another 15+ years...  The total cost for this type of 'gaming table', is around $400 (without the vinyl).  If you really need space, like me, for bigger games, an investment of <$800 will give you a table size of 5 feet x 18 feet, or 9 feet by 10 feet!  Ping Pong Tables are hard to beat for cost effectiveness and utility.   ;)  Cheers!
« Last Edit: July 18, 2025, 10:51:21 PM by SgtSlag »

Offline HerbertTarkel

  • Mastermind
  • Posts: 1176
  • Canadian, eh 🇨🇦
Re: $650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders
« Reply #3 on: July 19, 2025, 12:07:04 AM »
I’d definitely be able to make a really nice table with $650USD - heck, I’d be able to buy a few tools, too! I guess it depends on skill level to make your own.

But for an off the shelf option, it looks good.
2025 painted model count: 338
@ 15 September 2025

Offline Mammoth miniatures

  • Mad Scientist
  • Posts: 824
    • Mammoth Miniatures
Re: $650 Gaming Table: Well-Topper-Cup Holders
« Reply #4 on: July 19, 2025, 11:30:27 AM »
Maylaysian oak makes me chuckle, as it’s actually rubber tree wood and in no way related to oak (production from the rubber trees in plantations decreases after a while, so they cut them down and plant new ones- the cut trees become “oak”). Not a slam against rubber wood furniture, it’s quite good (my kitchen table and chairs are made of it) especially compared with particle-board trash. I just find the marketing amusing.


I imagine someone somewhere tried marketing "rubber wood" to people and found that most people thought it meant wood made of rubber, and after some frustrating back and forth a marketing department somewhere decided to save everyone a headache by just calling it Maylaysian oak.  same thing as "Chilean seabass" being not actually seabass.

 

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