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PS Miniatures Arcane Witch full set - 28/32mm resin dark fantasy character miniatures for D&D and TTRPG

PS Miniatures UK: Dark Fantasy Characters, Drow Warbands and Cyberpunk Minis for D&D

PS Miniatures builds worlds in miniature. Character artist Paul has been releasing focused monthly sets since mid-2022, and what has grown over that time is something distinctive: a dark fantasy universe with roots in the Underdark, laced through with Gothic spell-casters, exotic creatures and a sharp, unexpected cyberpunk thread running alongside the fantasy. Everything is sculpted at 32mm, pre-supported, and printed to order in high-detail resin. We stock the full PS Miniatures collection at TabletopXtra, shipped from the UK.

If you have been searching for PS Miniatures UK and wondering where to start, this guide runs through the core ranges, from the Drow warband ecosystem to the Nagas and Hawkhounds, and on into the cyberpunk ranges that make PS Miniatures one of the more versatile designers on our roster.

The Drow Universe: PS Miniatures' Most Complete Faction

The Drow ranges are the clearest expression of what PS Miniatures is as a designer. Paul has built an interconnected ecosystem across multiple monthly sets: the Drow Reapers, Drow Clerics, Spiritguides, Drow Sorceress, and Drow Legionnaires. The Phase Spiders serve as companion creatures, the obligatory arachnid muscle that any Drow force needs.

What makes this group worth collecting as a set is the visual coherence. The Drow Reapers are cloaked, assassin-style sculpts available in both cloaked and uncloaked variants. The contrast in silhouette between the two reads clearly at gaming distance. The Drow Clerics are more ceremonial, with flowing robes and ritual weaponry, while the Spiritguides push further into ethereal territory: pale, elongated and atmospheric, they would pass for spectral undead in almost any dark fantasy setting. Tie the Legionnaires in as the heavy infantry and you have a credible warband spanning front-line fighters to spiritual support.

For D&D players, this material is an obvious fit for an Underdark campaign arc: a spider-cult dungeon, a Menzoberranzan-inspired city-state, or a recurring antagonist faction in a long-running homebrew. The Drow Sorceress sets offer both a standard and an elite variant, with enough character variation to differentiate a main NPC caster from rank-and-file spellcasters. We stock each Drow sub-range individually, so you can build the faction gradually rather than committing to the whole lot at once.

Arcane Characters, Witches and Dark Fantasy Casters

Outside the Drow thread, PS Miniatures has built a strong cluster of spellcasters and arcane characters, the kinds of models that tend to get thin coverage in mass-market lines.

The Arcane Witch Miniatures are among the earliest and most popular PS Miniatures releases, and the quality shows: dynamic poses with swirling cloth detail, ideal for a warlock or sorcerer PC, a coven encounter, or a persistent campaign villain. The Witch Elves that followed add a more warrior-adjacent edge, bladed and aggressive, which suits a dark elf raider force or a proxy unit for games like Age of Sigmar. The Eldritch Elf Cultists from mid-2024 continue the thread, robed and conspiratorial, exactly right for a summoning ritual encounter or a cult boss fight with a proper circle of followers.

Two sets sit at the crossover between spellcaster and undead monster: the Cursed Elf Banshees and the Space Elf Wailing Phantoms. The Banshees are four distinct sculpts of wraithlike elf spirits, ideal for painting with a translucent wash approach, and noticeably different in silhouette from each other. The Wailing Phantoms lean further into a sci-fi gothic aesthetic with elongated, otherworldly proportions. Both work as summoned spirits, bound undead, or outright monsters depending on what your setting calls for.

For something more grounded, the Goblin Adventurers and Barbarian Battlemasters are chunky, characterful sculpts that sit comfortably alongside any D&D party. The Aztec Warriors from March 2023 add cultural specificity: detailed headdresses, ceremonial weapons, and enough visual distance from the standard dungeon backdrop to make a sun-temple encounter feel properly different.

Creature Sets: Nagas, Hawkhounds and Encounter Monsters

The creature sets are where PS Miniatures' background as a character artist really comes through. These are not static, one-pose beasts. Each sculpt has clear storytelling in its posture and surface detail, which makes a real difference once paint is on the model.

The Nagas range is the most ambitious creature offering in the catalogue. A Pureblood Medusa centrepiece pairs with four Elite variants: Sword, Battle Axe, Longbow and Mystic. That gives you a complete Snakekin warband or a multi-tier encounter structure, with the Pureblood as the boss, the Elites as lieutenants, and each weapon variant signalling a distinct combat role. For a desert ruin arc or a Medusa lair encounter, this is the kind of range that makes a session feel properly populated.

The Hawkhounds are a standout for DMs who need memorable beasts beyond the standard monster manual options. Three sculpts (A, B and C) make up the pack, with a Greater Hawkhound as an alpha or boss variant. Visually, they are hawk-headed canine predators with real mass and muscle behind them. They work well as ranger companions, pack-hunting encounter creatures, or mounts for an exotic cavalry unit. The full set is good value for four sculpts with this level of surface work.

The Phase Spiders round out the creature roster with a familiar D&D monster in a notably distinct sculpt. The Demonics range adds winged options: the Demonic Harpy and Valkyrie bundle and the standalone Greater Demonic Valkyrie are large winged models that work as major encounter pieces or flying boss monsters for a dramatic set-piece fight.

The Cyberpunk Side: Divine Order Deathmaidens and Sci-Fi Characters

The pivot into cyberpunk territory is unexpected in a catalogue otherwise rooted in dark fantasy, and it works. The Divine Order Deathmaidens, armoured warrior-nuns with a cyberpunk aesthetic, arrived in two volumes and are some of the more striking display pieces in our catalogue. The sculpts have a high detail-to-footprint ratio: elaborate surface texture, visible wear, and the kind of character work that rewards careful brush time. They suit Necromunda zealot factions, grimdark skirmish games, or any sci-fi TTRPG setting that needs religious military characters with genuine presence.

The Cyberpunk Scrappers from November 2022 offer a deliberately rougher contrast: survivalist characters with improvised armour and a street-level aesthetic. These are the low-tier gangers to the Deathmaidens' elite warriors, and the two sets complement each other well if you are building out a near-future campaign world with social stratification built into the miniatures.

Collecting PS Miniatures UK at TabletopXtra

We stock the full PS Miniatures range at TabletopXtra, printed to order in high-detail resin and shipped from the UK. Most sets are available both as full bundles and as individual character purchases, so you can pick up a single Arcane Witch as a PC miniature or order the whole Drow warband at once. Individual character models start from around £4.99, with full sets in the £15 to £20 range and larger creature sets up to £29.99.

For new buyers, the Drow faction is the natural entry point. It offers the broadest range of model types within a coherent aesthetic, and it scales well: start with the Drow Reapers and Clerics, and expand from there. From the creature side, the Nagas and Hawkhounds are the sets most likely to see repeated use across different campaigns. And if you want a single standout model for a painting project, the Arcane Witches and the Divine Order Deathmaidens both deliver the surface complexity that makes a centrepiece miniature worth the time.

Browse the complete PS Miniatures collection at TabletopXtra, or follow Paul's work directly on MyMiniFactory and Patreon to see new releases as they drop. If a range you want is not yet listed, get in touch; we licence the full catalogue and can usually print on request.

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