The tables in Roman times used to have one foot, although they had three, four or five legs, used as luxury furniture they could be made of stone, bronze or marble, the three-legged ones being the most common use (Mensa tripens). Those for eating were round and the square or rectangular ones were used in military camps. Citrus wood was considered appropriate for dinner tables, because the wine and sauces served did not leave it marked.Historically accurate game ready asset modeled in Blender and high quality PBR (Diffuse/Metallic/Roughness/Normal_OpenGL) textures in Substance Painter at 4k 2k and 1k resolution and subdivision ready for different LOD implementations, at FBX and OBJ and .blend files to work with any 3D software.
LOD00
Vertex 20354Faces 20350
LOD 01
Vertex5090Faces 5089
References:
Arredi di lusso di età romana. Da Roma alla Cisalpina. Fabrizio Slavazzi.
https://books.google.es/books?id=ZiaBCwAAQBAJ&lpg=PA10&ots=PAcabUgUIJ&dq=Villa%20Imperiale%20pompei%20Arredi&hl=es&pg=PA47#v=onepage&q=Villa%20Imperiale%20pompei%20Arredi&f=false
Pompei: Villa Imperiale-Alcova
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xwff6XfPOIU
“Pompei come duemila anni fa: arredi ricostruiti nelle domus”. Il Matino.it
https://www.ilmattino.it/napoli/cultura/pompei_come_duemila_anni_fa_arredi_ricostruiti_nelle_domus-1888961.html
Reconstrucción virtual del mobiliario doméstico romano a través de las fuentes antiguas. Manuel Moreno Alcaide. 2013ANDRIANOU, D. (2009): The furniture and Furnishings of ancient Greek houses and tombs. Cambridge. DE CAROLIS, E. (2007): Il mobile a Pompeii ed Ercolano. Letti, tavoli, sedie e armadi. Roma. Mobiliario romano.
https://gladiatrixenlaarena.blogspot.com/2016/08/mobiliario-romano.html