How Will The New Tariffs Affect TTRPG Prices?

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New US tariffs have hit the world, and the tabletop gaming industry is bracing for impact. Every company (including us) will be doing a thorough analysis of how the recent US tariffs will affect their business, and then plan accordingly.

Of the raft of global tariffs on US imports declared yesterday, two in particular affect the tabletop gaming industry--the tariffs on the EU and on China.

The new tariff on goods manufactured in the EU is 20%, while those which originate in China are 34%. This is in addition to a recent 20% tariff on China, raising that level to 54%.

The tariff applies to the place of origin of a product, not the country where the company is registered. Many game companies in Europe, the UK, and Scandinavia print books in the EU; and more complex products which require boxes or other components, including those from game companies in the US, often come from China. The tariff on UK-produced products is 10%, but most UK-based companies print in the EU and China.

There is something called the 'de minimis threshold', and generally shipments below that value do not incur tariffs. In the US that is currently $800, and it mainly affects individual orders bought from overseas. However, that no longer applies to goods made in China. It also won't help with shipments of inventory (such as a print run) shipped to a US warehouse from the EU. When somebody in the US orders a book from, say, a UK game company, that order will often be fulfilled from inventory stored in a US warehouse rather than shipped directly from the UK. That US inventory will have incurred the tariff when it was shipped as part of a larger shipment.

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A shipment of our books from our printer in the EU

Of course, these aren't the only way that tariffs can affect prices. Even products manufactured in the US might use materials or components from China, Canada, or the EU, and that will affect the production cost of those products. For example, a US printer which uses paper sources in Canada is going to have increased costs. DriveThruRPG's print-on-demand costs have already increased by as much as 50% in the US.

How might game companies go about handling these increased costs?
  • Eat the tariff themselves. That might be possible in some instances, but the size of them will likely make that non-feasible. Most game products do not have a 54% profit margin.​
  • Manufacture in the US. That solution might be feasible but runs into a couple of barriers. (1) US printing costs tend to be higher; (2) goods would then have to be exported to the EU, Canada, and other countries, which may have reciprocal tariffs in place; (3) US printing capacity isn't up to the task (remember printers don't just print games--we're talking books); (4) US non-book game component manufacture capacity is even more difficult; (5) splitting a print run between a US and EU or Chinese printer greatly reduces the per-unit manufacture cost as the volume at each location will be halved; (6) as the recent DTRPG printing cost increase shows, even US printers use raw materials from elsewhere.​
  • Pass the cost along to customers. This, unfortunately, is probably going to be the most feasible result. This means that the price of games will be going up.​
It gets really difficult when the production/shipping process straddles the tariff. We at EN Publishing have four Kickstarters fulfilling (Voidrunner's Codex, Gate Pass Gazette Annual 2024, Monstrous Menagerie II, and Split the Hoard) which have been paid for, including shipping, by the customer already. Two of those (Voidrunner and Split the Hoard) involve boxes and components, which meant they were manufactured in China. The other two are printed in the EU (Lithuania, specifically). All four inventory shipments will arrive in the US after the tariffs come in. We haven't yet worked out exactly what that means, but it won't be pleasant.

I suspect in the future, in these days of sudden tariffs, companies will hold back on charging for shipping right up until the last minute. And that's also bad news for customers, as they won't know the shipping price of a game until it's about to ship. This might also mean a shift towards digital sales which--currently--are not affected.

Most game companies are likely crunching numbers and planning right now. It is not known how long the tariffs will be in effect for, or what retaliatory tariffs countries will put in place against US goods. But this is a global issue which is going to drastically affect the tabletop gaming industry (along with most every other industry, but this is a TTRPG news site!)

Steve Jackson Games posted about the tariffs (the site seems to be experiencing high traffic at the time of writing)--

Some people ask, "Why not manufacture in the U.S.?" I wish we could. But the infrastructure to support full-scale boardgame production – specialty dice making, die-cutting, custom plastic and wood components – doesn't meaningfully exist here yet. I've gotten quotes. I've talked to factories. Even when the willingness is there, the equipment, labor, and timelines simply aren't.

We aren't the only company facing this challenge. The entire board game industry is having very difficult conversations right now. For some, this might mean simplifying products or delaying launches. For others, it might mean walking away from titles that are no longer economically viable. And, for what I fear will be too many, it means closing down entirely.

Note: please keep discussion to the effect of tariffs on the game industry. This forum isn't the place to discuss international politics.
 

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I have been in business for 31 years, in an industry that has low life expectancy for retail stores. I have never been more stressed about my future. My current plan is to just suck it up and keep going as best I can.
Best of luck and good on you for your determination to try to stay in what I assume is something of a dream job for you.

I know two other game store owners who tell me they're putting out feelers for someone to buy their businesses. Failing that they're planning to sell off their stock ASAP and leave the field altogether. Neither of them has been around for anything like 31 years, and both have struggled to recover from the COVID lockdown, but based on what I know of their situations I really can't argue with their choices here. This is a fragile industry, and what's happening may well be too much for it survive in recognizable form.

Then again, I could say the same thing about many things, including entire nations.
 
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I respect that decision, but I will point out, that (assuming you have ever bought from a local store) that your FLGS had to order product MONTHS AGO and can't reduce their order for the loss of your business. That's not a huge big deal if you are alone in your boycott, but if you are one of many (like, say, how most of Canada is with groceries and liquor) then the first business you will harm is your local shop, owned by fellow Canadians.
I have no existing pre-orders since November 2024. I will still spend my annual budget at the store but on non-US owned games.
 




This is a good video with a possible explanation as to the Trump administration strategy here. It would seem to me that if true this is not a thing that will blow over in months.
 

As an FLGS in Canada, we started to see (retaliatory) tariffs on most game products this week, making them vastly more expensive. I chose to eat most of it, except in cases where the new price seemed like a reasonable thing that wasn't beyond the pale. (Difficult to do when prices have already soared over the past four years).

I have been in business for 31 years, in an industry that has low life expectancy for retail stores. I have never been more stressed about my future. My current plan is to just suck it up and keep going as best I can.

GW just popped into my head, how badly are they going to be hit (and absolutely pass that hit down to customers) ?
 

I have to put at least one project on hold. I was going to print a GM's Screen at Standart Impressa but am rethinking that due to tariffs right now. However, I'm going to focus on smaller projects that I can print in the US or the UK via Mixam or a similar company. Margins aren't as good, but I don't have to deal with tariffs or international freight.
 

If I am reading things correctly, books printed in Canada that comply with USMCA are exempt from tariffs. Can someone with more knowledge confirm?
 

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