RPG Evolution: Why the New D&D Board Game is a Big Deal

Hasbro’s recent announcement of new D&D board game is welcome but not necessarily new—Wizards of the Coast has published several D&D-themed board games in the past. What is new is that the product is listed under Hasbro Games rather than Wizards, which might be indicative of the parent company finally putting its muscle behind the tabletop role-playing game.

Hasbro’s recent announcement of new D&D board game is welcome but not necessarily new—Wizards of the Coast has published several D&D-themed board games in the past. What is new is that the product is listed under Hasbro Games rather than Wizards, which might be indicative of the parent company finally putting its muscle behind the tabletop role-playing game.

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D&D’s Always Been a Board Game

Dungeons & Dragons’ roots originated with tabletop play, albeit not on a board but rather a sand table with the first iteration of Chainmail. The game that inspired D&D, a freewheeling Braunstein campaign that featured a dungeon crawl, also inspired Dave Megarry DUNGEON! board game.

TSR dabbled with a variety of crossover formats for the tabletop game, returning to the concept of a “game in a box” again and again as a means of getting the game on toy store shelves and making it more accessible to new and younger players.

Since then, Wizards of the Coast has flirted with a similar approach to introducing the game to a new audience. Wizards used the same molds for its miniature games, repurposing them for the Dungeons and Dragons Adventure System series with the launch of Castle Ravenloft back in 2010. WOTC even produced Dungeons & Dragons: The Fantasy Adventure Board Game … distributed to the European market only.

One thing all these games had in common? They didn’t use the D&D rules!

But Not Recently

Although DUNGEON! is much venerated as the premiere dungeon crawl board game, the most popular is HeroQuest. Created by Milton Bradley in conjunction with Games Workshop, it was in print until 1997. A worthy successor, Descent: Journeys in the Dark, from Fantasy Flight Games followed in 2005. And yet, although all three of these games feature dungeon-crawling adventures, they are not actual D&D.

Hasbro has been willing to license the D&D brand to many of its longstanding game staples, like Clue. And Wizards of the Coast has produced other board games set in D&D settings, like the Euro-style Lords of Waterdeep. But the last proper game in a box using D&D miniatures and rules was back in 2004 with the Dungeons & Dragons Basic Game, produced by Wizards of the Coast.

Like the invisible wall that Wizards of the Coast built between Magic: The Gathering and Dungeons & Dragons, there seems to be something preventing divisions within the company from cross-pollinating. With the arrival of new CEO Chris Cocks, those obstacles were removed, which is why D&D now has several Magic: The Gathering/D&D crossover supplements. With this new board game, we may see history repeating itself.

What’s Different This Time

What makes this new version of the D&D board game unique? For one, it’s a D&D starter set using the full production values of Hasbro’s board game division. A quick glance of its listing on Amazon confirms that the game is being produced by Hasbro Games, not Wizards of the Coast. Moreover, it’s listed as available on Hasbro Pulse. What’s Hasbro Pulse?

Hasbro Pulse is a place where fans come first. As fans ourselves, we have an idea of what you – our fans – want. Hasbro Pulse is where you’ll find some of the best product offerings and experiences from the brands you love, a glimpse at more behind-the-scenes material and insider details that you can’t get anywhere else. We made Hasbro Pulse with you, the fans, in mind. We hope you’ll make it your first stop when you’re looking for insider info about your favorite Hasbro brands.

Given that Dungeons & Dragons is a brand powerful enough to launch a battle over the film rights, you’d think that there would be several D&D products on Hasbro Pulse. But as of today, the only product that is listed under the D&D brand is this new board game. Not even the My Little Pony/D&D crossover figures are listed under D&D!

In short, something changed, and from the looks of it, Hasbro is finally embracing D&D as a brand worthy of the parent company’s publishing muscle. Here’s hoping the board game is just the beginning.
 

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Michael Tresca

Michael Tresca

Sacrosanct

Legend
The BD&D/AD&D split was a sign of the kind of bad business planning that eventually led to TSR cannibalizing itself to death with 10,000 different settings, each with supplements and modules, in the 2E era.

A better run company would A) have not created a new version of the game to screw Arneson legally and B) would have taken the best ideas from both versions of the game (and BD&D definitely had those) and had a single, strong game instead of a version most players had to unlearn in order to play with their friends.

Nah. there was the BD&D and AD&D split since the late 70s, including during the meteoric rise in popularity of the early 80s. The issues with TSR and the eventual failing during the 90s had little or nothing to do with two versions of the games. IIRC, they stopped Basic in the mid 90s, which did nothing to stop the failure of the company. Which suggests again that the failures had little or nothing to do with having 2 versions. Aforementioned things like horrible management, glut of returned books, and disaster of dragon dice were a much bigger factor
 

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Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
Nah. there was the BD&D and AD&D split since the late 70s, including during the meteoric rise in popularity of the early 80s.
Re-read my post. I didn't say it started in the 2E era, I said it's the same terrible thinking that led to their problems in the 2E era.

I specifically said they started BD&D to screw over Arneson.

If you think D&D had a meteoric rise in the 1980s, just imagine what it would have been like if they weren't competing with themselves and having, effectively, a dead-end street for new users and no smooth way of transitioning them over to their main line.

It would look a lot like how 5E is doing, I'd submit, and 5E is crushing TSR's 1980s successes.
 
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Nah. there was the BD&D and AD&D split since the late 70s, including during the meteoric rise in popularity of the early 80s. The issues with TSR and the eventual failing during the 90s had little or nothing to do with two versions of the games. IIRC, they stopped Basic in the mid 90s, which did nothing to stop the failure of the company. Which suggests again that the failures had little or nothing to do with having 2 versions. Aforementioned things like horrible management, glut of returned books, and disaster of dragon dice were a much bigger factor
The existence of Basic D&D was always a curious evolutionary offshoot of D&D, never treated as the main focus. I'm sure it split business some, but it was always clear that AD&D was the focus. TSR made many, many questionable decisions, I'm sure it could be studied as a "what not to do" case study in business school, and I'll definitely agree with you that the split between Basic an Advanced D&D was a separate error than their overdoing it on campaign settings in the 2e era (they made lots of wonderful settings, but a lot of things that could/should have been a one-off release got their own product line, and lots of supplements that could have been good stand-alones were turned into things specific to one product line).

However, as I said before, I think that making the introductory products Basic D&D, and the main product line that most players used AD&D, you imposed a needless learning curve on players having to re-learn things.

I'm hoping this new box set is designed for as seamless a transition between it and the main 5e D&D as possible.
 

Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
However, as I said before, I think that making the introductory products Basic D&D, and the main product line that most players used AD&D, you imposed a needless learning curve on players having to re-learn things.
I think this is definitely true.

I think the 5E Starter and Essentials boxes have been brilliant in using the regular rules, even if they only give purchasers a portion of the full character creation rules (in one case, just giving them premades).

It's amazing how long it took TSR and WotC to figure this particular idea out.
 

but I wonder how many kids that age have means to access a FLGS
The world is a different place now. FLGS's are no longer needed to access every D&D product in print.

The move to get D&D boxes into Target etc is the intro. Then once they have some starter set, kids can go online and get access to the complete line.

FLGS survive (those that do) because of the community they build, not because they are the only places to get certain products.
 

billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him)
The move to get D&D boxes into Target etc is the intro. Then once they have some starter set, kids can go online and get access to the complete line.

They're already available via Target. If the Hasbro imprint is going to give the new D&D boardgame any marketing/distribution muscle, it's going to be something beyond Target. I'm just not sure what.
 

Teraptus

Explorer
I will be getting this. But I think they have a severe marketing error approach. I didn't even hear about it until it came up as a related product. I think they need to put this game out there with more visibility.
I agree on the marketing approach. So many new products coming out and bewteen Wizards/Amazon/Hasbro it seems like there's no huge push or it's hidden somewhere.
 

Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
The move to get D&D boxes into Target etc is the intro. Then once they have some starter set, kids can go online and get access to the complete line.
My local Target has been steadily churning through Starter and Essentials boxes since the pandemic begins. (The selection and ratio is different each time.) They've got it stocked in the board games section, adjacent to the toys. It's within five feet of Monopoly games and couldn't be more positioned toward the mainstream.

I would love to hear from WotC how these two boxed sets are selling; I bet they're burning through inventory.
 



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