Although the piecepack is available commercially (See Vendors page), it's also possible to download and print your own set. Some people have made their own graphics for their sets and a few have made these graphics available for others to use.
Printable Labels
These are the ones that are freely available right now (please, if you know of any other version add it to the list):
- Dingbats set: Created by DanielAjoy. uses color Yellow instead of Black; that way it can be used with other game components that use that color scheme (Uno, Pachisi, Sorry, Mexican Train, Rage, Ligretto, the GreenBox, etc). Two suits are "white" and the other two suits are "black" (the tiles are). The fronts of the tiles are divided into four sectors, for easy AlienCity playing, other games benefit from this, too. The Ace tiles and coins have a distinctive Ace symbol. The Null tiles and coins have a distinctive Null symbol which can also be used as a 6. Both of these are distinct from the numbers and both are kind of similar to each other (to play Evade for example). It also comes with the faces for a fifth die, with four faces corresponding with the four suits and the other two faces corresponding with the Ace and Null symbols. (I've used it to play Bazaar and Survive Escape from Atlantis with it)
- Vector Set: Created by Jessica Eccles. Uses vector images for smooth scaling and printing. Includes extensions to the astrological and rule themes inspired by the SensibleExpansions article. This set also includes seasons, playing card and other expansions and piecepack counters. This set is public domain and may be used and sold by anyone.
- Sharp Color Piecepack Design: Created by Evan Buskirk. A "modern" style graphic set for constructing a piecepack. Uses the traditional suits. Designed so that the whole graphics can be carefully alligned and adhered to a thin material, then cut apart, but the usual "cut, then paste" approach works well too.
- Maka's set: Created by JorgeArroyo (you can see pictures of it at his wiki page) and available from the Internet Archive. It started out as a personal design but later was adapted to black and white for the laser etched sets he produced under Ramalamas. The version available for download is the original color version and it includes both the regular suits and the Seasons expansion.
- Nathan's Hexpack also includes the HexPack extension as well as a standard piecepack. It was created by Nathan Morse and also includes playing card and season suits. Its design is quite photo-realistic.
- Very Colorful Piecepack by "Melody" hosted in the Boardgame Geek website. This has 7 tiles null to 6 plus letters & arrows. These match the cards better than the original set. This is a high color set.
- piecepackr, a piecepack graphics R package by TrevorLDavis has several pre-configured demo print-and-play pdf's. If you install it on your computer it can also be used to generate your own customized print-and-play piecepack set.
- Jeremy's 5 Suit Piecepack by Jeremy Sydik. Based on the PlayingCardsExpansion, adds a 5th suit with a Star symbol, in yellow. The backs of the tiles are checkered.
- IPG Piecepack Expanded from IcePack Games includes a standard set, their own expansion (purple Swords, light grey Arrows, orange Axes, green Maces), playing card suits and 5 elemental suits.
Mini piecepack
- The Mini piecepack is a regular 2D version and half the size of a standard piecepack. It also includes a set with playing card suits. It was created by Elena "of Valhalla" Grandi.
Non-free (requires money)
3D-printing assets
- 3D printable piecepack 3D printable STL models derived from the original anatomy of a piecepack hosted on Thingiverse.
- Dther's 3D-Printed Parametric Piecepack by Rudy "Dther" Dellomas. Includes all necessary .stl files to print a standard piecepack in multiple colours on a standard 3D printer. OpenSCAD files are included, for generating new expansions and suits.
- 3D printable piecepack 3D models suitable for hobbyst-grade 3D printers or online fabrication services. Includes the regular suits and Card expansion. It was created by Elena "of Valhalla" Grandi.