Collectible Miniature Games

Collectible miniature games solved a problem that traditional miniature gaming never could by letting you walk into a game store, buy a booster pack, and be playing within the hour. Pre-painted, pre-assembled figures in randomized packs borrowed the thrill of the card game pack-opening experience and applied it to 3D miniatures. The format exploded in the early 2000s and produced some of the most creative game designs of that era before the market consolidated, which makes surviving figures, sealed product, and complete sets increasingly scarce and collectible.

The landmark titles defined the format: WizKids' Mage Knight launched the genre in 2000 and demonstrated that miniature gaming could reach mainstream audiences. HeroClix followed and became the longest-running CMG ever published. MechWarrior: Dark Age, Mage Knight Dungeons, Dreamblade, Crimson Skies, and dozens of other systems produced figures that are now genuinely scarce and actively collected. Noble Knight has sourced CMG collections for decades and carries individual figures, complete sets, and sealed boosters across the full history of the format including many out-of-print lines that disappeared from retail fifteen years ago


Frequently Asked Questions

Noble Knight stocks collectible miniature games from multiple publishers and eras including HeroClix (WizKids, 2002-present), Mechwarrior Dark Age (WizKids, 2002-2008), Mage Knight (WizKids, 2000-2002, plus later revivals), Pirates constructible strategy games (WizKids, 2004-2008), Star Wars Miniatures (Wizards of the Coast, 2004-2010), D&D Miniatures (Wizards of the Coast, 2003-2011), Axis & Allies Miniatures (Wizards/Avalon Hill, 2005-2011), and various discontinued CMGs. These games used randomized booster distribution similar to CCGs but with miniatures instead of cards. Many are out of print and collectible. Available as complete sets, booster boxes, singles, and lots. Product listings indicate game, set, and rarity.
Yes, Noble Knight stocks extensive HeroClix inventory, including current releases and out-of-print sets from 2002-present. You'll find singles (individual figures sorted by set and rarity), complete sets, booster bricks, chase figures, convention exclusives, prize support figures, promotional releases, starter sets, map sets, object tokens, and accessories. HeroClix has produced hundreds of sets covering Marvel, DC Comics, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Street Fighter, Yu-Gi-Oh!, The Walking Dead, and other licensed properties. We sort singles by set, character, point value, and rarity. Older sets (Infinity Challenge, Hypertime, Clobberin' Time, Indy) are collectible. Product listings indicate set, rarity, and point value.
Yes, Noble Knight stocks Star Wars Miniatures from the Wizards of the Coast collectible miniatures game (2004-2010, discontinued). You'll find miniatures from all released sets: Rebel Storm, Clone Strike, Revenge of the Sith, Universe, Champions of the Force, Bounty Hunters, Starship Battles, Alliance and Empire, Legacy of the Force, Knights of the Old Republic, The Clone Wars, Imperial Entanglements, Jedi Academy, Galaxy at War, Dark Times, and others. Available as singles sorted by set and rarity, complete sets, booster boxes when available, scenario packs, and starter sets. Many figures are highly collectible, especially very rare chase figures and powerful competitive pieces. Product listings indicate set, rarity, faction, and point value.
Noble Knight stocks Mage Knight products from multiple eras: original Mage Knight collectible miniatures game (WizKids, 2000-2006), Mage Knight 2.0 (2005-2006), Dungeons expansion, Dark Riders, Pyramid, and all original sets, plus WizKids Games' Mage Knight Board Game (cooperative board game, 2011-present). The collectible miniatures game used randomized boosters and is fully discontinued and collectible. The board game is a separate cooperative adventure game using similar themes but different mechanics. Noble Knight stocks original CMG miniatures as singles and lots, plus current board game releases, including expansions (Lost Legion, Krang, Shades of Tezla, Apocalypse). Product listings clearly distinguish between CMG game and board game.