WotC D&D Beyond Reveals 'Partnered Content' Schedule

Products from Eberron creator Keith Baker, Beadle & Grimm's, and Kickstarter favourites Loot Tavern and The Griffon's Saddlebag.
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D&D Beyond has published a release schedule for partnered content in the first quarter of 2026. This includes products from Eberron creator Keith Baker, Beadle & Grimm's, and Kickstarter favourites Loot Tavern and The Griffon's Saddlebag.

Partnered content is existing D&D books from third-party publishers on D&D Beyond.
  • Exploring Eberron (Visionary Production & Design)
  • The Pugilist Class (Benjamin Huffman)
  • Faster, Purple Worm! Everybody Dies, Vol. 1 (Beadle & Grimm’s Pandemonium Warehouse)
  • Heliana’s Guide to Monster Hunting: Part 2 (Loot Tavern)
  • The Griffon’s Saddlebag: Book One (The Griffon’s Saddlebag)
 

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I don't think they consider DMsGuild a ghetto, at least for some creators (not least Baker). I mean, aren't the new membrs of the D&D team straight from DMsGuild content creation?
...mastering dungeons recently posted an insightful assessment of what the guild has become: essentially a dead-end market even for high-profile folks like keith baker...

edit: ...excepting a handful of charity PDFs independently-produced by in-house staff, i don't think wizards of the coast have made any effort toward legitimising `guild content since they abandoned the nascent guild adept program over six years ago...
 
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...mastering dungeons recently posted an insightful assessment of what the guild has become: essentially a dead-end market even for high-profile folks like keith baker...

edit: ...excepting a handful of charity PDFs independently-produced by in-house staff, i don't think wizards of the coast have made any effort toward legitimising `guild content since they abandoned the nascent guild adept program over six years ago...
That podcast episode of Mastering Dungeons was brilliant. But I didn't get the take-away that Abadia and Merwin felt that the DM's Guild has become a "dead-end market" or "ghetto" . . . although it certainly has diminished in how well it serves the community, including fans, creators, and WotC.
 

I don't think they consider DMsGuild a ghetto, at least for some creators (not least Baker). I mean, aren't the new membrs of the D&D team straight from DMsGuild content creation?
Ghetto, no, but given the legal agreementa in place for publishing there, this is an interesting development for OneBookshelf and WotC working with creators.
 


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