Play tabletop RPGs online, with the setup already done

Professional GMs, times in your timezone, and a virtual table someone else built. You click a link; the dragon does the rest.

Browse online games

Online D&D has one hard part, and it isn't the technology: it's finding a table that reliably happens, with a GM worth the evening. That's the product here. Every online listing shows the system, the platform, the schedule in your timezone, the seat price, and the GM's public reviews; you book, click the invite link at game time, and play.

The setup is genuinely minimal

Discord for voice, a browser for the virtual table, a headset because your table deserves it. That's the whole stack, and the GM builds everything on it: the maps, the sheets, the automation that does your math. First-timers get walked through the tech in the first ten minutes; it's priced into the seat.

Platform anxiety is optional too. Whether a table runs Roll20, Foundry, Owlbear Rodeo, or pure Discord, the player-side skills are five minutes deep. The listing names the platform; our guides cover each one.

Why online, why here

Online play's superpower is reach: the perfect table for your schedule, system, and vibe exists somewhere, and geography stops mattering. What usually breaks it is flakiness, which is the part professional GMs fix; their reviews depend on sessions happening. And if you're near our Utah stores, the same account books both formats; plenty of players run a hybrid diet.

Systems beyond D&D run constantly: Pathfinder 2e, Call of Cthulhu, Daggerheart, Blades in the Dark, and whatever the GM pool is excited about this season.

Frequently asked questions

What do I need to play D&D online?

Discord, a browser, a headset, and a booked seat; the GM provides the virtual table, characters, and tech support. Total player-side cost beyond the seat: the headset.

Are the game times shown in my timezone?

Yes; online listings display start times in your browser's local time, which sounds minor until the first time someone else's "7 PM" isn't yours.

I'm brand new. Is online or in-person easier to start?

Both work; online adds automated character sheets (less math) and subtracts room presence. Beginner-marked tables exist in both formats, and the GM's onboarding is the real variable, not the format.

Which virtual tabletop should I learn?

Whichever your booked table uses, and only that one; player-side skills take minutes on any platform. Our per-VTT guides exist for the curious, not as prerequisites.

Can I play with friends in other cities?

That's online play's signature move: book seats together on the same listing, or reserve a private online table for the whole scattered group. The college party reunites, no flights involved.