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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It's getting more rougher. I talked about some things previously in this thread and the decisions have come out regarding the instability of the markets and things getting sent, talked about, and priced with constant things changing or people being inconsistent. (my google foo is poor on this, I tried to find some links to credible stories so you know that it isn't all coming out of nowhere, but I can't find the stores).).

Not a direct RPG thing, but it will affect RPGS. I've tried googling and can't find the news story on it, but you may have a few troubles with finding a reasonably priced computer in the future if things keep the way they are going.

Things just occurred yesterday and today in response to the crazy calls regarding the tariffs that have been going on back and forth with some computer makers. At least for now, shipments are going to be halted to avoid this insanity and take a step back to figure out where to go from here, what to do...etc). This could be the first of a cataclysmic change in the market (or things could settle down...I don't know at this point). (once again, can't find the googling. tried to google Dell with variations on halts shipments, etc, but all I get is dell's main page, and that goes for others such as HP as well...sorry...bad at finding an actual source that I can refer you guys to on this).

It's not an overnight, instant decision. This has been a result of talks and meetings on this over the past little while since the craziness started to really hit home strongly with calls for tariffs to be paid for things ordered during such and such a period or not to be paid or other strange things that are unusual to the market occurring.

This is tangentially related because some have mentioned that RPG makers could go more online or PDF. That's not going to matter a whole lot if it is harder to get a computer or laptop than it is to pay for books or games.
 

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I think the Chinese government controls more than you think. Maybe they aren’t controlling small items but I bet anything over a certain dollar amount is
I'm pretty sure the Chinese government doesn't control what Morrus is charging for his products. If he prints them in China, they may pressure the factory to lower the price to compensate for the tariffs (which would then likely have an indirect effect). But that doesn't seem likely – only about 3% of China's GDP comes from exports to the USA, and for much of that they'll just be able to sell to someone else.
 


Turns out Xi Jinping was a big 4e fan and he's only using the trade war as an excuse to exact his revenge on the entire gaming community. If major industries collapse, well, that's just price that has to be paid.

You heard it here first, folks.
I said bigger companies like apple Nike. There are articles out there that they government has a lot of influence for companies that manufacturer in china and many were moving out prior to the new administration. Government was stealing technology. I never said anything about little companys
 

I said bigger companies like apple Nike. There are articles out there that they government has a lot of influence for companies that manufacturer in china and many were moving out prior to the new administration. Government was stealing technology. I never said anything about little companys
Since this diversion is not related to the TTRPG industry and the tariffs, and more just a general opinion on Chinese politics and economics it has no place on this thread (or this forum). Let’s get back on topic, please. Tariffs and tabletop games
 

One thing I’m not 100% clear on is that I believe the tariff is on the manufacturing cost of the product, not the retail price, is that correct?
It depends, if a publishes is importing dice (say) to their warehouse for later retail, it’s the "replacement value" which is to say the manufacturing cost. But if you are a customer in the US buying from overseas, your import duties are on the full cost. EDIT, I didn’t,t realise there were 45 pages of replies, someone has probably already said this
 

I think this is very important …

The only real thing we as individuals can do to try and get this tariff debacle ended is to contact your senators and representatives.

Seriously - if enough folks let them know how much we do not want these crippling tariffs, and how catastrophic they will be to the economy, they may push back on the Administration enough to get them ended for good.

Remember, it’s easy to just vent and complain about it, it takes more effort to actually reach out and let your Congress people know what you think, but reaching out to your Congress people is the only way we can hope to fix this …
 

I think this is very important …

The only real thing we as individuals can do to try and get this tariff debacle ended is to contact your senators and representatives.

Seriously - if enough folks let them know how much we do not want these crippling tariffs, and how catastrophic they will be to the economy, they may push back on the Administration enough to get them ended for good.

Remember, it’s easy to just vent and complain about it, it takes more effort to actually reach out and let your Congress people know what you think, but reaching out to your Congress people is the only way we can hope to fix this …
Sadly, I (and most of the world being ruined by these tariffs) cannot do that. It’s literally being done to us. :(
 

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