D&D 5E (2024) D&D Beyond's Development Roadmap Is A Complete Rebuild Of Platform

Includes new character builder and DM tools.
D&D Beyond has announced its roadmap for the future, including features in active development and those planned for later down the line. These include a full rebuild of the game platform's engine, a new character builder, tools for Dungeon Masters, and more.

Over the past few months, we’ve launched a new homepage, a revamped and more sortable content library, image reveals in the Maps VTT to help DMs immerse their players more easily, and several other quality-of-life improvements.

2026 is a year of refocusing and rebuilding D&D Beyond to make it easier to play D&D your way. Three major initiatives will drive most of our work:
  • Rebuilding D&D Beyond’s Game Platform
  • Improving Player Onboarding and Revamping the Character Builder Experience
  • Launching a Suite of Dungeon Master Tools


Screenshot 2026-02-20 at 10.19.50.png

Screenshot 2026-02-20 at 10.20.48.png


 

log in or register to remove this ad


log in or register to remove this ad

Since I started my journey with D&D 5e, I have a bunch of the books digitally on DDB and I will say that the reorganization of the library tab has been my favorite thing about the DDB revamp. Before it was very annoying to get to books I owned on there.
It seems that there is no longer a link to the Italian 2014 PHB through the sources page. I was still able to find it through a Google search.
 

D&D Beyond is a really great program which is why I stick with 5th edition. If they would bring older editions back I would drop 5e like a brick. And would hasbro care?
Because supporting different versions of D&D on the same platform would be extremely expensive to cater to a small number of players, would undermine their entire strategy of getting away from editions and into "One D&D"...and because apparently their strategy is working in your case, since they've already got you using it to play 5th edition. It makes zero sense for them to spend more money to compete with themselves.
 

Because supporting different versions of D&D on the same platform would be extremely expensive to cater to a small number of players, would undermine their entire strategy of getting away from editions and into "One D&D"...and because apparently their strategy is working in your case, since they've already got you using it to play 5th edition. It makes zero sense for them to spend more money to compete with themselves.
You're right, of course. But I could see a time when WotC realizes that they can (probably) make money off of selling us (anyone who is interested) earlier editions, and it is, for once, no longer likely to cannibalize the audience for their new material. If DDB moves to Rules as Data, I believe that it would be much simpler (and cheaper) to make that sort of thing possible. I suppose it depends on how much they make selling PDFs of old rules on DMsGuild, and whether they think they'd make more (I bet they would) putting it all on Beyond.
 

You're right, of course. But I could see a time when WotC realizes that they can (probably) make money off of selling us (anyone who is interested) earlier editions, and it is, for once, no longer likely to cannibalize the audience for their new material. If DDB moves to Rules as Data, I believe that it would be much simpler (and cheaper) to make that sort of thing possible. I suppose it depends on how much they make selling PDFs of old rules on DMsGuild, and whether they think they'd make more (I bet they would) putting it all on Beyond.
I suspect that the potential earnings from selling digital access to older editions on D&D beyond are less than the cost of the customer confusion it would create. If we do ever see WotC making a digital platform for older D&D versions, it's going to be on a separate website.
 

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top