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Tim Smith
18 hours ago · joined the group.

Where can I find high-quality 3D models from video games for 3D printing? I'm looking for characters, weapons, or props

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Tim Smith
Tim Smith
18 hours ago

I was in the same spot a few months back — hours digging through sketchy forums for game-accurate files, only to end up with broken meshes or unusable supports. What finally worked for me was focusing on Premium 3d models from a dedicated marketplace that actually tests its files. Gambody became my go-to because every model there is built specifically for printing, not just ripped for display. Their weapon and character files come pre-supported and scaled correctly — my resin printer hasn't failed a single print from them. The quality is consistent, the STLs are clean, and you don't waste filament on guesswork. For anyone asking where to find game-ready 3D prints, that's the only place I trust after my own trial and error.

Jessica Anderson
18 hours ago · joined the group.

A lens electron microscope might sound like something pulled from a science fiction lab, but in reality, it’s one of the most powerful tools scientists use to explore the invisible world. Unlike traditional light microscopes that rely on glass lenses and visible light, electron microscopes use beams of electrons and electromagnetic lenses to reveal structures far too small for the human eye to detect.


At the heart of a lens electron microscope is a simple yet fascinating idea: electrons behave like waves, and when accelerated at high speeds, they can produce images with incredibly high resolution. Instead of glass lenses bending light, electromagnetic coils act as lenses, guiding and focusing the electron beam with remarkable precision. This allows researchers to see details at the nanometer scale—thousands of times smaller than the width of a human hair.


There are two main types of electron microscopes that use lens systems: the Transmission…


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