Here Are 2025's Most Anticipated TTRPGs... As Voted By You!

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The nominations were nominated, and the votes were voted, and now we have the final results: this year's official most anticipated TTRPGs--as voted by you! Well, a few thousand of you.

Just like we do every year, the EN World community votes on the games they are looking forward to. Here is last year's Top 10 (spoiler: the winner was Shadow of the Weird Wizard. Previous winners include 13th Age (2013), Star Wars Force & Destiny (2015), Rifts for Savage Worlds (2016), Trudvang Chronicles (2017), Vampire: the Masquerade 5th Edition (2018), Savage Worlds Adventure Edition (2019), Dune (2020 & 2021), Twilight 2000 (2021), Blade Runner (2022), Pendragon 6E (2023), and Shadow of the Weird Wizard (2024). What will be the most anticipated RPG of 2025?

Let's find out!

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10) Starfinder 2E (Paizo Publishing)
The Starfinder Playtest Rulebook brings Starfinder into a new age of compatibility, as Starfinder switches to using the same rules engine that powers the popular Second Edition of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. Inside this playtest for the new edition, you’ll find six new classes, 10 ancestries, new skills, new feats, futuristic equipment including augmentations and upgrades, new science-fantasy spells, and more!


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9) Alien - Evolved Edition (Free League)

Expanded and updated core rules and a new cinematic scenario for the award-winning RPG from Free League and 20th Century Studios. Based upon feedback from thousands of players over five years of adventures, the Evolved Edition of the Core Rulebook delivers an updated and streamlined version of the ALIEN RPG fans know and love, along with additional new artwork, new content, and a variety of new tools for players and Game Mothers alike, all fully compatible with previous releases and game material.


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8) 13th Age 2nd Edition (Pelgrane Press)

A New Edition of the Award-Winning Heroic Fantasy Game! The coolest and most fun parts of traditional d20-rolling fantasy gaming plus story-focused rules, now with updated class and kin powers, fearsome new abilities for your favorite monsters, and revamped icon connection mechanics!

13th Age 2E has been in this chart three years running! In both 2023 and 2024 it came 3rd in the poll!


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7) Coriolis: The Great Dark (Free League)

Free League's original sci-fi RPG returns. Join expeditions to faraway stars and delve deep into ancient ruins.


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6) Dolmenwood (Necrotic Gnome)

Dolmenwood is a fantasy adventure game set in a lavishly detailed world inspired by the fairy tales and eerie folklore of the British Isles. Like traditional fairy tales, Dolmenwood blends the dark and whimsical, the wondrous and weird.

This is Dolmenwood's second appearance in this chart, coming in at #5 last year!


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5) Terry Pratchett's Discworld: Adventures in Ankh-Morpork (Modiphius)

Adventures in Ankh-Morpork, the Discworld tabletop roleplaying game, catapults you onto the streets of the Big Wahoonie, and once you've dusted yourself off you can adventure to your heart's content. With imagination and some shiny math rocks at your fingertips, your story on the Disc awaits. Based on the popular Discworld fantasy series by Sir Terry Pratchett, Adventures in Ankh-Morpork is an officially licensed tabletop roleplaying game set in its most recognisable city, complete with Sir Terry's iconic wit, humour, and humanistic satire.


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4) Draw Steel (MCDM)

A Fantasy RPG where your character starts, at level 1, already a hero. Maybe even locally famous! You might meet in a tavern, or start in the middle of the action! Whether you’re a group of local heroes sent to investigate mysterious goings-on in the nearby haunted wood, or famous mercenaries plotting and scheming in the big city, the MCDM RPG makes building adventures and fighting monsters fun. Basically, any adventure or story you’re running in your current Fantasy RPG, you can do that in this game. Just, in a more straightforward and fun way, unburdened by sacred cows from the 1970s.


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3) Daggerheart (Darrington Press)

Daggerheart is a fantasy tabletop roleplaying game of brave heroics and vibrant worlds that are built together with your gaming group. Create a shared story with your adventuring party, and shape your world through rich, long-term campaign play.


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2) Brandon Sanderson's Cosmere (Brotherwise Games)

The Cosmere® RPG is a "living" RPG that will grow as Brandon Sanderson writes new novels and expands his universe. This original system is designed to tell standalone stories in the Stormlight™ or Mistborn® Settings -- or sweeping Worldhopper™ campaigns that move between different worlds and realms!


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1) Legend in the Mist (Son of Oak)
A rustic fantasy tabletop RPG based on the acclaimed City of Mist. Spin a fireside tale of unlikely villagers setting out on a quest into a greater unknown world, rife with peril and mystery, in the vein of The Lord of the Rings, The Wheel of Time, Princess Mononoke, and many other classic fantasy stories, or create your own legendary realms with the game’s open-ended system.



PREVIOUS WINNERS OF THE ANNUAL EN WORLD MOST ANTICIPATED TABLETOP RPG OF THE YEAR
#
2013
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
1
13th Age
Star Wars Force & Destiny
Rifts for Savage Worlds
Trudvang Chronicles
Vampire: The Masquerade 5th Edition
Savage Worlds Adventure Edition
Dune
Dune/
Twilight2000
(joint)
Blade Runner
King Arthur Pendragon 6th Edition
Shadow of the Weird Wizard
2
Numenera
Deluxe Exalted 3rd Edition
Mutant Crawl Classics
Tales from the Loop
Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay Fourth Edition
Pathfinder 2nd Edition
Vaesen - Nordic Horror Roleplaying
-
Broken Tales
Dragonbane/Darkar och Demoner
The Electric State
3
Star Wars Edge of the Empire
Unified Rolemaster
7th Sea 2nd Edition
Kult: Divinity Lost
Kult: Divinity Lost
Lex Arcana
Cyberpunk Red
The One Ring (2nd Edition)
Pendragon 6E
13th Age 2nd Edition
13th Age 2nd Edition
4
Shadowrun 5th Edition
Conan Adventures In An Age Undreamed Of
Conan Adventures In An Age Undreamed Of
Star Trek Adventures
Forbidden Lands: Retro Open-World Survival Fantasy RPG
The Expanse
Fallout
King Arthur Pendragon 6th Edition
Avatar Legends
Household
Pendragon 6E
5
Call of Cthulhu 7th Edition
Deluxe Tunnels & Trolls
DCC Lankhmar
Conan: Adventures in an Age Undreamed Of
RuneQuest: Role-playing in Glorantha
Eclipse Phase 2nd Edition
Warhammer: Age of Sigmar: Soulbound
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition (A5E)
Mothership 1E
Mothership 1E
Dolmenwood
6
Firefly
Barbarians of Lemuria: Mythic Edition
RuneQuest 4
Starfinder
The Witcher Roleplaying Game
Dune RPG
Swords of the Serpentine
Rivers of London
Rivers of London
Shadow of the Weird Wizard
Cohors Cthulhu
7
Fate Core
Feng Shui 2
Torg: Eternity
The Witcher Roleplaying Game
Warhammer 40,000 Wrath & Glory
John Carter of Mars
Rivers of London
Pathfinder for Savage Worlds
Shadow of the Weird Wizard
The Walking Dead Universe
Daggerheart
8
Hillfolk
Fantasy AGE
Blue Rose AGE
Coriolis
The Expanse
Changeling: The Lost 2nd Edition
Stargate
Brancalonia - The Spaghetti Fantasy RPG
Cy-Borg
Warhammer 40K Imperium Maledictum
Monty Python's Cocurricular Mediaeval Reenactment Programme
9
Torchbearer
Paranoia
Paranoia
Delta Green Roleplaying Game
Legend of the Five Rings 5th Edition
Things from the Flood
Fading Suns 4E
Werewolf: The Apocalypse 5th Edition
Swords of the Serpentine
Old Gods of Appalachia
Mothership 1E
10
-
Shadows of the Demon Lord
Delta Green
Astonishing Swordsmen & Sorcerers of Hyperborea 2E
Numenera 2: Discovery & Destiny
Judge Dredd & The Worlds of 2000 AD
Cortex Prime
SLA Industries, 2nd Edition

Werewolf: The Apocalypse 5e
Monty Python's Cocurricular Mediaeval Reenactment Programme
Tales of the Valiant
 

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While I am sure there will be enthusiastic fans for all of these games (they voted didn’t they?) it is, for me, an underwhelming list.
Underwhelming in that you feel that there are more deserving games that didn't make the list (if so, which?) or that you just don't find any of them interesting?
 

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Certainly allowed, but it does leave a bad taste in my mouth and does not make me inclined to learn more about this game which I had never heard of before. I realize that this is my very personal idiosyncratic reaction.
A number of people have made disparaging comments about publishers encouraging their fans to vote. I don't get it. Personally, I think any publisher that can convince enough of their fans to vote and that they have enough fans to make a difference speaks well for a game. Kinda how popularity contest like this work, no? It may also have the additional benefit of brining more people to ENworld, which is good for ENworld and its community. Any publisher that doesn't encourage fans to vote for their games on various polls and fan-favorite award contests seems like poor business and shooting themselves in the foot.

It feels like gatekeeping by some members of the ENworld community, upset that companies are encouraging "outsiders" to join ENworld to vote. If instead it is concerns about some publishers "gaming" the system...well isn't this the entire game in a popularity poll?
 


Never a surprise that the games I'm into don't make it into the top 10 - it's been that way since 2020 or 2019 when I first took one of these polls. AND THAT'S OK. I rest easy knowing that there's quite a few folks who also like the games I like, because they are talked about on this forum and even in this very thread.

Legend of Mists looks like it's stripped down PbtA, with narrative taglines instead of "moves" and attributes. Congrats to them. Maybe I'll play it some day at a con...
 

A number of people have made disparaging comments about publishers encouraging their fans to vote. I don't get it. Personally, I think any publisher that can convince enough of their fans to vote and that they have enough fans to make a difference speaks well for a game. Kinda how popularity contest like this work, no? It may also have the additional benefit of brining more people to ENworld, which is good for ENworld and its community. Any publisher that doesn't encourage fans to vote for their games on various polls and fan-favorite award contests seems like poor business and shooting themselves in the foot.

It feels like gatekeeping by some members of the ENworld community, upset that companies are encouraging "outsiders" to join ENworld to vote. If instead it is concerns about some publishers "gaming" the system...well isn't this the entire game in a popularity poll?
Just good business practice honestly.
 

Underwhelming in that I have absolutely zero interest in any of the games listed.
Fair enough. I'm burnt out on buying new games. Don't have the time to play what I already have and don't want to spend more money, even on cool games, just to have them sit on my shelf. And, after over tens years since getting back in the hobby, very few games are offering a compelling enough experience to switch from my go-tos. I have to admit that the only new game systems I've bought in the past few years are mostly because the art and fluff, which I can enjoy just reading through.

But because I'm no longer actively searching for new games, I like lists like this that make me aware of new stuff. Instead of constantly checking Kickstarter, I just check out winners of awards like most-anticipated-games and ENnie awards a couple times a year.
 


Fair enough. I'm burnt out on buying new games. Don't have the time to play what I already have and don't want to spend more money, even on cool games, just to have them sit on my shelf. And, after over tens years since getting back in the hobby, very few games are offering a compelling enough experience to switch from my go-tos. I have to admit that the only new game systems I've bought in the past few years are mostly because the art and fluff, which I can enjoy just reading through.

But because I'm no longer actively searching for new games, I like lists like this that make me aware of new stuff. Instead of constantly checking Kickstarter, I just check out winners of awards like most-anticipated-games and ENnie awards a couple times a year.
Yes, I’m not knocking other people’s choices or enthusiasm (or trying to push my own) but there are usually at least one or two titles that I was unaware of or think ‘that’s cool’ after a quick check on the link. Not this time though. I have a few things I will buy (mainly as supplements for existing game lines) but not too much this year.
 

A number of people have made disparaging comments about publishers encouraging their fans to vote. I don't get it. Personally, I think any publisher that can convince enough of their fans to vote and that they have enough fans to make a difference speaks well for a game. Kinda how popularity contest like this work, no?
that assumes that they all do it, as soon as some do and some don’t, it tilts the results in favor of those that do reach out to their base.
 


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