

Great for offline work and avoiding monthly fees, but you’ll have to pay for DLC instead of getting automatic updates. It’s one of the few programs with a single purchase, and you download it. Though for the price, if you mainly want world maps it is one of the better options.

The problem is it focuses heavily on world maps, while other similar programs have more features. The miles feature is amazing if you’re like me and stress out over “how many days will it take to get from town to town?”

It’s pretty, and I love the feature where it can translate how many miles between points. Honestly, I’m still tempted to get Wonderdraft.

I’ve included photos of the art styles currently available. I’ve had it almost a year, and I’m still playing around and learning how certain styles work. You can generate maps with an old-fashioned parchment style, or watercolor styles. The variety of maps is really nice compared to other programs. I’m still having issues making my cliffs, rivers, and shorelines look pretty. It has a great variety of buildings and is easy to use. Personally, my focus when I use Inkarnate is for world maps and area/town maps. They have a good variety of art styles for each type of map you want to make. They’ve only recently started having assets for dungeon maps, but so far I’ve enjoyed using them. I started using Inkarnate for world maps for my campaigns and when I write stories. Of the map generators I’m going over, this is the one I have the most experience using.
