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D&D Beyond maps Q3 2026 partners, from horror to magic

Greyhawk and Eberron anchor D&D Beyond’s Q3 slate, signaling that seasonal worldbuilding is becoming the platform’s new default between big releases.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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D&D Beyond maps Q3 2026 partners, from horror to magic
Source: D&D Beyond
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D&D Beyond’s Q3 partnered-content slate reads less like a storefront update and more like a campaign map. The platform said it was “deep in the Season of Horror” with Ravenloft: The Horrors Within, then would shift into a Season of Magic with “wonder, secrets, and spellbinding possibilities,” and that framing makes the larger play clear: legacy worlds are now carrying the seasonal model from one beat to the next.

That strategy shows up most sharply in Legends of Greyhawk. D&D Beyond calls it “D&D’s Modern Shared Campaign,” built for the latest D&D rules, and the quarter spaces out three monthly releases around it. Saviors of Safeton lands in July as the first release from West Coast Adventurer’s Guild. Dreams of the Chained God follows in August from Baldman Games, and The Tear-Stained Idol from GameConclave rounds out September. Dreams of the Chained God sends players back to Greyhawk City, brings back adversaries first seen in Elemental Evil Rising, and stands as the first Legends of Greyhawk adventure bundle aimed at levels 5-10.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That monthly cadence matters because Greyhawk is no longer being treated like a nostalgia play or a one-off convention experiment. D&D Beyond had already said in 2025 that Legends of Greyhawk was entering beta and coming to conventions around the world, with debuts at Gen Con 2025 and PAX West 2025. Now the marketplace itself is carrying digital Legends of Greyhawk products from Baldman Games and GameConclave, a sign that the shared campaign is settling into the platform’s regular rhythm instead of waiting for a hardcover to set the pace.

The same quarter also keeps room for other recognizable settings and sharper-lensed concepts. Frontiers of Eberron: Quickstone appears in August, while the Field Guide to Floral Dragons arrives the same month, giving D&D Beyond a mix that swings from established setting support to creature-forward material with a stronger collectible and table-facing hook. That blend fits the broader 2026 pattern the company has been building through Q1 and Q2 release updates, where partner content, marketplace listings, and seasonal branding all keep pointing back to the same hub.

The result is a Q3 slate that feels designed to make D&D Beyond the place players check between big book launches. Ravenloft holds the horror lane, Greyhawk gives the quarter its organized-play backbone, and Eberron adds another familiar world to the mix. If the model keeps sticking, the platform’s calendar will start to feel like the campaign log between sessions, with each roll leading cleanly into the next.

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