Heroes of the Borderlands Starter Set Price Point Revealed

This new Starter Set is twice as expensive as previous ones.
heroes of borderlands 1.jpg


The new Heroes of the Borderlands D&D boxed set will be significantly more expensive than past Starter Sets. Pre-order pages up on D&D Beyond and Amazon confirm that the new Starter Set, made to introduce the new version of 5th Edition rules to newcomers, will cost $49.99. Previous starter sets, such as the Essentials Kit or the Dragons at Stormwreck Isle, had much lower price points ranging from $19.99 to $24.99.

One reason for the price increase is that the new Starter Set will contain many more components than previous Starter Sets. A trailer (seen below) shows off many of the cards, tokens, and handouts that are included in the boxed set in addition to the standard quickstart guide and character sheets. Per Amazon, the new Starter Set will contain 3 adventure booklets, 8 character class boards featuring iconic D&D classes, 1 quick-start guide, a reference booklet, 5 in-world immersive handouts (including a tavern menu and shop catalogs), 9 double-sided poster maps, a combat tracker, 11 dice, 210 game cards (including spells, magic items, and equipment), and 273 tokens (including monsters, terrain, and resources).

One twist for this new boxed set is that it will include tiles that will add a modularity to character creation. Players will choose their background and class and then build a character sheet using corresponding tiles.

Hasbro also previously stated that the Starter Set was produced in China, so the increased price could be impacted by the current tariffs imposed by the US on foreign-made goods.


The new Heroes of the Borderlands Starter Set will be released on September 16th, 2025.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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Yeah. I dont know why all these children are so butthurt that i dont like toy figures.
Like what you like, but to me it is very unconvincing to claim some sort of precedent for your personal taste when D&D specifically grew out of miniatures gaming and was designed with that in mind.

As someone who teaches D&D to beginners (I sponsor my school’s D&D Club), I find miniatures or tokens very useful for helping new players conceptualizer what is happening. When I teach theatre of the mind play to beginners, I use Dread, not a rules heavy game like D&D.
 


Like what you like, but to me it is very unconvincing to claim some sort of precedent for your personal taste when D&D specifically grew out of miniatures gaming and was designed with that in mind.

As someone who teaches D&D to beginners (I sponsor my school’s D&D Club), I find miniatures or tokens very useful for helping new players conceptualizer what is happening. When I teach theatre of the mind play to beginners, I use Dread, not a rules heavy game like D&D.
I also regularly teach beginners to play, and I have done so for thirty years. I think I've taught around a thousand people? Across multiple editions. I think this boxed set looks great. I'll have to see how it works in practice, but it has a lot of the right ideas.

my point is that the 1977 basic ser is more relevant.
In no way am I asking you to outmatch my claim above, but... what gives you this idea? Is it simply a feeling, or do you have an explanation for why you feel this way?
 




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