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Sideshow secures Baldur’s Gate 3 license for new collectibles

Sideshow has picked up a new Baldur’s Gate 3 license, and collectors are already being steered toward a future line of statues, figures and art prints.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Sideshow secures Baldur’s Gate 3 license for new collectibles
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Sideshow has locked in a new official Baldur’s Gate 3 license, and for collectors that is the clearest sign yet that premium merch around Larian’s hit remains very much alive. The announcement points toward a fresh run of statues, figures and fine-art prints built for display shelves, not quick shelf-fillers, which fits Sideshow’s place in the high-end fandom market.

The first wave has not been revealed, but the shape of the line is easy to read. Baldur’s Gate 3 is an ensemble story with a cast that has become instantly recognizable across Dungeons & Dragons fandom, so any early collectibles are likely to lean on the game’s most visible heroes and companion-driven appeal. That matters because the game’s characters, art direction and Forgotten Realms setting have already proven they can carry attention well beyond the tabletop crowd.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Sideshow’s timing also says plenty about where Baldur’s Gate 3 sits in the D&D ecosystem right now. The game is still one of the strongest modern gateways into the Forgotten Realms, and every new licensed product keeps that world in front of fans who may never crack open a sourcebook but will absolutely notice a premium statue or print. For Wizards of the Coast and the broader D&D brand, that kind of crossover is more than a merch drop. It is another reminder that Baldur’s Gate 3 continues to function as a commercial bridge between video games, collectibles and tabletop fantasy.

The company framed the license as a natural fit for its business, which centers on statues, figures and fine-art pieces for dedicated fandoms. It also invited fans to RSVP for updates so they can be notified when pre-orders open, a sign that Sideshow is still teasing the line rather than showing finished product. That early-stage approach usually means the reveal runway is still ahead, with more details to come before anything reaches cart.

For Baldur’s Gate 3 fans, the practical takeaway is simple: this is not just another licensing note. It is another premium lane opening for one of the biggest D&D-adjacent properties in circulation, and it keeps the game’s cast, setting and iconography in the conversation while the table is still hot.

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