I continued to play around with settings and styles in this map. With a little web development, I created my I created a raster tileset from the georeferenced mapĪnd a style to reference in a web page. Popups with more information about the locations. I also created a geoJSON file for all the cities and points of interest to add those to the map and allow for Pictures with coordinates that allow you to place them in the correct location. This allowed me to create a georeferenced raster, much like satellite imagery, which isn't much more than I made a less stylized version of the map designed for printĪnd brought it into QGIS (my mapping software) to apply some coordinates to the image so the web mapping softwareĬould recognize it and put it on earth. I decided to use Mapbox to accomplish my goal. So my friends and I could pull it up on our phones or laptops to reference during a session. We had a physical map that I had printed for our Dungeon Master, but I thought it would be cool to make an interactive version of it After creating a fantasy map for a D&D campaign I was playing in, I wanted to try to take our map experience