Paizo rolls out FoundryVTT deluxe Pathfinder Society modules
Paizo published FoundryVTT package pages for deluxe Pathfinder Society and Adventure Path modules, showing availability, update timestamps, and purchase links. GMs can buy codes from Paizo store to run organized-play scenarios with preconfigured assets.

Paizo has expanded its digital footprint on FoundryVTT by listing deluxe Pathfinder Society and Adventure Path modules, including entries such as Year of Battle’s Spark – Deluxe Edition 1 of 2. The new package pages show what assets come bundled, recent update timestamps, and verification notes that help GMs confirm a module’s readiness for online tables.
The listings highlight the practical elements GMs care about: preconfigured scenes, tokens, journal entries, and maps designed to speed setup and preserve organized-play structure. Package metadata calls out verification details and recent update times, giving an at-a-glance view of whether a release has been updated recently or vetted for typical Foundry workflows. Each Foundry listing points users back to Paizo’s official store for purchase and code delivery, keeping procurement and licensing aligned with Paizo’s storefront process.
This rollout continues Paizo’s move to produce official VTT content rather than leaving automation and assets entirely to third parties. For GMs who prefer running official modules with Foundry automation, these packages reduce the manual prep work of converting legacy modules into scene layouts, token sets, and journal-stored handouts. Organized-play GMs will find value in the bundled journal entries and maps, which can help maintain consistent table experiences across sessions and groups.
Operationally, the update timestamps and verification notes are more than bookkeeping. Check those fields before scheduling a table: recent timestamps can indicate fixes for compatibility with current Foundry releases or updates to included assets. Verification notes can flag whether the package author has tested specific features or dependencies, information that matters when you’re juggling modules, system versions, and community-contributed modules at a running game.

Buyers should follow the Foundry listing link to Paizo’s store to obtain purchase codes; the listings themselves document availability and feature sets but rely on Paizo for code delivery. Treat the packaged assets as a starting point: preconfigured scenes and tokens cut prep time, but you may still tweak encounter pacing, lighting, or token settings to match your table’s style and the Society’s scenario requirements.
The takeaway? If you run Pathfinder Society or Adventure Path material on FoundryVTT, these Paizo-produced packages are worth checking out. Verify the metadata and timestamps, buy through Paizo for code delivery, and use the prebuilt scenes and journals to shave hours off prep. Our two cents? Start by grabbing one deluxe edition, load it into a test world, and tweak lighting and tokens before inviting players, small setup tests save a session’s worth of interruptions.
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