Baldur’s Gate 3 gets special edition miniatures release from Merchoid April 24
Merchoid’s April 24 drop puts Lae’zel, Shadowheart, Wyll, Karlach and more on the tabletop in 16 unpainted miniatures.

Merchoid is turning Baldur’s Gate 3’s cast into table-ready plastic on April 24, 2026, with a special-edition Nolzur’s Marvelous Miniatures line that is already up for preorder. The release spans 16 characters in eight two-figure packs, giving D&D players a concrete way to keep the game’s most familiar faces in circulation even as the digital chapter winds down.
The pairings lean hard into the characters players actually remember from long campaigns and co-op runs: Lae’zel and Shadowheart, Wyll and Karlach, Jaheira and Halsin, Volo and Withers, and Sarevok Anchev and Raphael. Merchoid describes the figures as unpainted miniatures with deep cuts for easier painting, which makes this more than shelf candy. It is a hobby project built for painters, skirmish maps, and DMs who want the party, and its troublemakers, on the battle mat.
That tabletop usefulness matters because Larian Studios said in March 2024 that it would not make DLC, expansions, or Baldur’s Gate 4 for Baldur’s Gate 3. Hasbro and Wizards of the Coast have said the franchise’s future will be discussed, but the timing for a sequel is still undefined. Until that next digital move is settled, products like this keep the game’s cast visible in the hobby spaces where many players already spend their weekends.
The line also fits a pattern Wizards has used before. Baldur’s Gate has already been folded into Magic: The Gathering crossover products, including Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur’s Gate, and Wizards’ own store copy has long framed Baldur’s Gate as one of D&D’s most iconic locations on the Sword Coast. That bigger cross-media footprint is why these minis land as more than a merch cycle. They reinforce Baldur’s Gate as a living part of the D&D ecosystem, not just a successful video game.
For active play, the set is strongest for groups that want their party represented by name, especially when a DM wants to drop Lae’zel, Shadowheart, Karlach, Astarion, or Raphael onto the table with the right silhouette and attitude. For collectors, the appeal is broader: this is a clean snapshot of Baldur’s Gate 3’s breakout cast at a moment when the franchise’s next game is still out of frame.
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