

No guesstimating rules, and no early access, unfinished editions. RPG Kitchen gives you access to the fully published, completed core rulebook. The concept is a straightforward rental service, which lets you get a feel for a game before bringing it to your group.
Roleplaying games store full#
RPG Kitchen is offering a fresh new way to try out tabletop games before committing to a full purchase. BFF! Best Friends Forever! by heart of the deernicorn.If you’re an avid Roll20 user looking for a new game, check out their marketplace and make the transition easy on yourself and your group. What Roll20 offers alongside these games is all the resources needed to run them on the Roll20 platform, including maps, tokens, and digital character sheets. However, you’ll find a few good smaller games tucked in between more popular titles. The selection of core rulebooks is not expansive, and the majority of what you purchase is only available on Roll20. Competitors include platforms like Foundry VTT and Astral TableTop, but many groups playing online swear by Roll20 for their D&D, Pathfinder, or Cthulhu Mythos games. Roll20 is almost certainly more well-known as the standard for playing tabletop games online with a built-in battle map, also known as a virtual tabletop. Key art for BFF! Best Friends Forever! Image: Taylor Dow/Heart of the Deernicorn Golden Sky Stories by Star Line Publishing.If you want to dive into the deeper end of the games out there, IPR is exactly where you should go.įour games from Indie Press Revolution to try:

IPR has an excellent library of unique and unexpected games all thanks to its dedication to spotlighting smaller publishers. The genres are more specific, and the list of common systems to sort by includes newer options when compared to DriveThru’s offerings. The categories you can use to search are noticeably more expanded and fine-tuned.

IPR’s listings are, in my opinion, a lot cleaner than DriveThru when it comes to browsing. That doesn’t mean the layout is any less professional. What makes IPR stand out is exactly what the name implies: IPR deals only with small press publishers and indie tabletop developers. You’ll even find a number of games that appear for sale at both sites. While definitely more simplified, Indie Press Revolution is very similar to DriveThru in terms of its organization.

It’s also very pleasant to browse through, with the ability to sort by game system, publisher, product type, and even by genre. DriveThru is home to a massive selection of tabletop games, running the gamut from the biggest names in the industry to small press and indie publishers. OneBookshelf’s DriveThruRPG boasts nearly every major tabletop game you could ever want.
