D&D's Lack of 2026 Announcements Actually Follows Precedent

D&D didn't announce its 2025 slate until early 2025.
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Dungeons & Dragons fans seem to have short memories based on the number of speculative articles wondering why Wizards of the Coast hasn't announced any new books for next year. Over the past few weeks, various D&D blogs have speculated about the lack of 2026 announcements. Yes, Wizards of the Coast has underwent some internal turmoil this year, with a number of higher-ups tied to D&D leaving the company and replacements only named relatively recently. And yes, Wizards of the Coast was also hit by a series of delays for various books, with Eberron: Forge of the Artificer bouncing from a summer 2025 release to December due to a printing defect. However, neither of these are likely the reason why Wizards hasn't announced their 2026 slate. In fact, all one has to do is look at the timing of the 2025 announcements to take a deep breath.

Entering 2025, Dungeons & Dragons players only knew of one confirmed release - the 2025 Monster Manual tied to the core rulebooks. A D&D Direct in August 2024 revealed some rough timelines for two other D&D products, but specifics weren't revealed at that time. The rest of the 2025 D&D slate was announced at an embargoed press conference held at Wizards of the Coast's Renton headquarters in January 2025. Most major nerd press outlets, including EN World, were invited to the event. At the event, Dragon Delves, Eberron: Forge of the Artificer, and the Forgotten Realms books were all announced, as was the Starter Set box. The Stranger Things book was also teased as a "mystery" product.

Based on Unearthed Arcana playtests, it appears that the 2026 books will include a Dark Sun book featuring a new Psion class (the first new D&D class in over five years) and a book featuring several arcane subclasses. Wizards has also yet to release a campaign adventure based on the 2024 ruleset. However, the lack of any announcements shouldn't be concerning at all, as this is precisely what Wizards did in 2025 as well.

We'll also point out that D&D has a relatively new marketing manager (Blain Howard, who replaced Greg Tito) and a new PR firm (Tara Bruno PR, replacing 360 PR) for the D&D tabletop group, so any lack of announcements such as the lack of a D&D Direct may be tied to a retooled marketing strategy rather than any other prognosticator of other factors.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

There is other point. I have just seen WotC accounts in Facebook and Twitter and they haven't published any post in more a year.

We are in the last days of the year and we know nothing about the first sourcebook what will be published in 2026 when usually we should know it six months before.

* If Netflix is the new owner of Warner IPs then some forgotten titles could be "rewritten" to become a D&D setting, for example "Pirates of the dark Warters" and "Wildfire".

* If Magic: the Gathering has got a roadmap for 2026, why not D&D?

* Other point. After the last season of "Stranger Things" a spin-off will be produced, in a different city, with new characters in an independient story within the same franchise-universe. This teleserie may have been the best "product emplacement" for the brand. It shouldn't be a surprise if Hasbro wanted to have serious talks with Netflix.

And the last episode will be in 31 December. I mean maybe there is a future D&D product linked to the end of the serie, for example the "homemade" setting created by the characters.

* UA articles in 2025
Eberron Feb.
Horror + Psion May
Arcane subclasses June
Apocaliptic August
Arcane Update Sept.
Subclasses update October.
 

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I'm a lot more interested in sales figures. I would be curious how WotC did for the holidays, and D&D in particular. The reason is that locally none of the FLGSs seemed able to move the new D&D books....like, at all. One had a ton of the new Forgotten Realms books and ended up putting them on permanent 50% off discount because they weren't moving, and they still didn't sell (I'm the only one who bought them). I have no idea if this is an anecdotal local phenomenon or indicative of something bigger. I am very curious to know....because if it turns out sales took a nosedive during the holidays, that could mean a lot of planned products are being re-evaluated in context. Or it could just be a local thing and these stores way overstocked to a saturated local market.
 

I'm a lot more interested in sales figures. I would be curious how WotC did for the holidays, and D&D in particular. The reason is that locally none of the FLGSs seemed able to move the new D&D books....like, at all. One had a ton of the new Forgotten Realms books and ended up putting them on permanent 50% off discount because they weren't moving, and they still didn't sell (I'm the only one who bought them). I have no idea if this is an anecdotal local phenomenon or indicative of something bigger. I am very curious to know....because if it turns out sales took a nosedive during the holidays, that could mean a lot of planned products are being re-evaluated in context. Or it could just be a local thing and these stores way overstocked to a saturated local market.
I sold a TON of New D&D books over Christmas. I'll agree that the FR books are a little slower-selling than I would like, but it's not anything to worry about. What you describe sounds terrible. And surprising to me.
 


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