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D&D Beyond’s My Library update makes shared books easier to find

My Library turns D&D Beyond’s old Sources page into a personalized bookshelf, with 5.5e and 5e filters, shared content, and favorites front and center.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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D&D Beyond’s My Library update makes shared books easier to find
Source: dndbeyond.com

If your D&D Beyond account has turned into a pile of sourcebooks, adventures, and campaign shares, the old Sources page now makes way for something much easier to live with. My Library puts owned and shared material up front, so the book you need is no longer buried in a full catalog of everything on the platform.

The update is built around a simple but meaningful shift: D&D Beyond rebuilt Sources from the ground up into a personalized home for the books, rules, and content players actually use. My Library automatically recognizes what you own and what you can access through campaign content sharing, then lets you sort by recently viewed, alphabetical order, newest, oldest, rule set, book type, and publisher. On the live page, the main views are Owned+Shared, Owned, Favorited, and All, which makes it far easier to separate your personal purchases from what a DM has opened up for the rest of the table.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That matters because the library is no longer just a catalog, it is a working tool for active campaigns. The visible library view currently shows 151 total items, with 7 in Owned+Shared, 7 in Owned, and 0 Favorited in the example state. The rule-set filters are also clearly labeled 5.5e and 5e, reflecting D&D Beyond’s March 2, 2026 clarification that the updated rules are now labeled 5.5e while 2014 content is labeled 5e. D&D Beyond says both versions remain fully supported and compatible, which is exactly the kind of detail mixed groups need when they are bouncing between older books and the current rules.

The sharing side is just as important. Master Tier subscribers can share purchased Marketplace content with up to 12 people across 5 campaigns, and the campaign page includes an Enable Content Sharing toggle. That explains why a library organized around what you own and what your group can access is a real quality-of-life upgrade for DMs juggling adventures, sourcebooks, and partner content. D&D Beyond has also rolled out Journals and shared dice on mobile in the same product window, reinforcing the same idea: the platform is being shaped less like a storefront and more like a table tool.

For players who have invested heavily in the digital ecosystem, My Library cuts down the friction of finding a rules reference or opening the right supplement in the middle of prep. It is a small redesign with a very tabletop payoff, the kind of change that saves time before the next initiative roll.

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