Releases

Sirius Dice unveils Castle Ravenloft Treasure Packs for Dungeons & Dragons fans

Ravenloft’s latest merch push mixed real table utility with collector chase: 55 dice variants, 31 coins, and a $19.99 price tag.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Sirius Dice unveils Castle Ravenloft Treasure Packs for Dungeons & Dragons fans
Source: siriusdice.com
This article contains affiliate links, marked with a blue dot. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Ravenloft has long been one of Dungeons & Dragons’ most reliable horror sub-brands, and Sirius Dice leaned hard into that trust with Castle Ravenloft Treasure Packs. The limited-edition bundle landed with the kind of built-in urgency that collectors understand immediately: it was not just another accessory drop, but a themed run tied to Barovia, Strahd von Zarovich, and the broader Domain of Dread look that fans already recognize at a glance.

Each pack included a full seven-piece polyhedral dice set, a matching embroidered dice bag, and a collectible metal ability coin. That mix gave the product a dual purpose that matters to different corners of the hobby. Active Ravenloft players got usable dice for actual sessions, while collectors got a presentation piece that could sit beside a DM screen or on a shelf without feeling like dead weight. At $19.99 per pack, the value pitch came from bundling play gear with display-worthy styling instead of forcing buyers to assemble a matching set one piece at a time.

The chase factor was the other big hook. Sirius Dice said the line came in 55 different dice-set variations spread across common, uncommon, rare, legendary, and artifact tiers, along with seven bag designs and 31 different metal coins. That gave the release a blind-box flavor without turning it into pure mystery merch. The bags pulled directly from Ravenloft iconography, including Castle Ravenloft, bats, ravens, the Holy Symbol of Ravenkind, and even creepy Pidlwick-style jester imagery. The coins went deeper into the setting, with references to Strahd, Tatyana, Baba Lysaga, Rudolph van Richten, spells, abilities, and monsters.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The packs had already been released in early April 2026, but the timing of the renewed push made sense. They were being put back in the spotlight alongside the wider Season of Horror and the coming Ravenloft sourcebook, which kept the setting hot for anyone building a Barovia campaign or hunting for horror-flavored table gear. Sirius Dice, the Brooklyn-based accessory company that signed an official D&D license deal in 2023, has already worked across cups, pins, dice sets, and even a Pride Month collaboration. Castle Ravenloft Treasure Packs fit neatly into that pattern: licensed merchandise with enough utility for the table and enough variant art to pull collectors into the hunt.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.

Get Dungeons & Dragons updates weekly. The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Dungeons & Dragons News