These are the first set of metal miniatures that Wizards of the Coast made.  I                     
    remember hearing that they were cast by  
Grim Reaper Casting.  These figures are     
    extremely hard to come by these days, and include a great pair of giants and some      
    excellent characters.
These were the first set of "official" D&D 3rd edition miniatures.  Again, they are hard to  
    come by nowadays.  This set included all of the iconic characters from the Player's       
    Handbook, as well as a bunch of monsters.  Of note in this set are the Beholder and   
    a Huge Black Dragon.
This was Wizards of the Coast's first attempt at a wargame.  Using the same name as  
     the classic D&D predecessor and having a unique group of armies, Chainmail            
     earned a good fanbase for itself.  Unfortunately, due to sagging sales, Chainmail        
     was discontinued.
D&D minis is Wizards of the Coast's new answer for both wargamers and Roleplayers  
     alike.   These are sets of 60 pre-painted, random, plastic miniatures.  Overall, this       
     has the nice effect of getting some rather unusual figures in print.
Dreamblade was a short lived game from Wizards of the Coast.  The game took place
between two 'Dreamlords' controlling creatures in the 'dreamscape'.  I'm not sure how it
played, but the miniatures are kind of quirky and interesting to paint.
Star Wars miniatures are pre-painted, random, collectible figures much like D&D
miniatures.  


Wizards of the Coast is probably best known for it's D20 system of games.  These games include the grand-daddy of all Roll Playing games,           
      Dungeons & Dragons.  Wizards of the Coast has also put out various official D&D sets of miniatures since the late 1990's, as well as the newer    
      Star Wars licenced miniatures.  The links that follow will bring you to different sets of figures.  There is more information on each set below,      
      next to the buttons that link to the individual lines.