Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves becomes a top Pluto TV stream
Regé-Jean Page’s star turn and Pluto TV’s June 1 lineup helped Honor Among Thieves crack Pluto’s U.S. top 10, three years after it hit theaters.

Regé-Jean Page has stayed busy since Bridgerton, but one of his most visible post-breakout roles is still the one that put him in armor and into the Forgotten Realms. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves has climbed into Pluto TV’s top 10 most-streamed movies in the United States, giving the 2023 fantasy caper a fresh run in front of viewers who may have skipped it in theaters.
The timing matters. Pluto TV added the film on June 1 as part of a June slate that included nearly 400 movies and TV series, and the movie’s free-streaming debut has clearly kept it in circulation. For D&D fans, the cast remains a major draw: Chris Pine leads the ensemble alongside Michelle Rodriguez, Justice Smith, Sophia Lillis, Chloe Coleman, Regé-Jean Page, Bradley Cooper, and Hugh Grant. That mix of A-list names and genre-friendly energy has made the film easy to rediscover, especially for fantasy audiences browsing a free service for something with real table-top DNA.

Honor Among Thieves has always had a different profile from the earlier Dungeons & Dragons film trilogy released between 2000 and 2012. Directed by Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley, and set in the Forgotten Realms campaign setting, it was built as a fresh live-action take on the brand rather than a continuation of the old movies. It premiered at South by Southwest on March 10, 2023, reached U.S. theaters on March 31, 2023, and opened to $37,205,784 domestically before finishing at $205,460,387 worldwide against a reported $150 million budget.
That box-office total never matched studio expectations, but the film’s reception never fit the usual flop narrative. Rotten Tomatoes called it “a solid emotional core” and “fun fantasy and adventure even if you don't know your HP from your OP,” and that broad appeal is part of why it keeps resurfacing on streaming. Chris Pine said in 2024 there is still a “really good chance” of a sequel, which only adds to the sense that the movie remains the franchise’s live-action touchstone.
For Dungeons & Dragons, this is the part that counts: a movie that did not roar out of the gate is still rolling high when it gets back to the table. Honor Among Thieves keeps proving that a good party can outlast one bad opening roll.
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