Dungeons & Dragons is all about getting together with your friends and telling an epic tale of adventure. But what if you can't get together in person? Over the past couple of years, playing D&D online has become easier than ever and can allow you to join your friends for a quest wherever they may be. Whether you're a newcomer to D&D or a veteran looking to transition their game to a virtual setting, our guide will cover the basics to take your D&D game online, some ways to enhance your virtual game, and tips for making online D&D fun for everyone!
- Why Play D&D Online?
- How to Play Dungeons & Dragons Online
- Ways to Enhance Online D&D
- Tips for Online Play
Why Play D&D Online?
Modern-day technology has made playing D&D online a nearly seamless experience. Between high-quality video chat, virtual tabletops, and digital tools, you may be so enthralled by the game that you forget you're not in the same room as your party members! In the past, when your D&D friends moved from your hometown, it usually meant the sad ending of a campaign. But, with access to the internet, you and your friends can hop online and play no matter the distance between you.
Online D&D play can also help defeat Dungeons & Dragons' greatest enemy: scheduling conflicts. With the ability to play from home, you can avoid travel times, making your D&D nights more streamlined and easier to fit into your busy schedule. The multitude of digital tools available also benefits players who don't have the time to scan through books to create or level up their characters. Instead, they can let the tools handle the busy work while they focus on having fun with friends.
How to Play Dungeons & Dragons Online
Have the upsides of online D&D play intrigued you? Here are essential things you need to get your D&D game online.
Internet Connection
All you truly need to play D&D online is an internet connection or some other way to connect to your friends. While D&D is at its best when you and your friends can see each other, you can play using just voice chat software. Worst comes to worst, and your internet is inaccessible or unable to even handle audio during a session, some video chat software allows you to phone in so you can join in the game as long as you have cell service.
Microphone
Most laptop computers have a built-in mic and webcam, and even though they aren't professional quality, they're more than enough to get the job done. If you want to go one step further, a dedicated table microphone and webcam will give you better sound and video quality to make your online game easier to watch and listen to. If you don't have access to a computer, most cell phones have a perfectly fine built-in camera and microphone. You can make a simple phone stand using a stack of books or use a pop-out grip, so you don't have to hold your phone the whole time.
Text, Video, or Voice Chat
There are lots of tools that you can use to create a group video call. Discord is a popular option because it's simple and supports advanced integrations. Skype and Facetime are other free options but have certain restrictions between Windows and Apple devices. Zoom and Google Hangouts are solid alternatives that easily handle high-quality video calls, but they come with a price tag if you want to use them for group calls.
People to Play With
Maybe you're looking for a new group or just a couple more players to round out your party. Good news! Finding players to join an online D&D campaign is usually easier than an in-person one. For tips on how to find a D&D group online, check out our article on how to find a D&D group to play with.
Ways to Enhance Online D&D
Though it's simple enough to get the essential tools you need to play D&D over an internet connection, some optional tools might make your game more fun and convenient.
Webcam
While joining a video call isn't necessary to play D&D online, it can help with social cues as other players can react to your body language and facial expressions. If your device doesn't have a webcam, there are plenty of affordable USB plug-and-play options. You could even use your phone to join the call while using your laptop, tablet, or paper to keep track of your character sheet, maps, and notes.
D&D Beyond
D&D Beyond is the official digital toolset for D&D. We host a wide variety of tools that can streamline D&D for Dungeon Masters and players, allowing them to focus on the fun. For players, we offer a Character Builder that generates a digital character sheet, allowing them to manage their skills, abilities, and inventory, as well as roll dice with the click of a button. The character sheet even takes care of the math for you! To get started with your character, sign up for an account today!
If you're a DM running the game for your party, there's a lot of content available on D&D Beyond to get you started. You can access the Basic Rules and freely claim the Intro to Stormwreck Isle adventure. You can also build encounters and track combat with the Encounters tool and manage homebrew creations with our homebrew tool.
We recommend that DMs create a campaign and have players create characters in that campaign so you can see all of your players' character sheets in one place. This way, you can also use the Game Log to see what your players have rolled. Creating campaigns also allows Master-tier subscribers to share their content with their players, enabling them to create characters using options from all of the sourcebooks the DM owns on D&D Beyond.
Virtual Tabletop
Though not strictly necessary, a virtual tabletop is an excellent tool for playing online. It's particularly useful if you played using maps and miniatures in person since you can upload maps and create tokens for characters and monsters. You may not need a virtual tabletop if you're playing a game without a battle map (also known as Theater of the Mind), but they can be a lifesaver for online groups interested in tactical gameplay.
D&D Beyond's Maps tool is a gamespace where Dungeon Masters with a Master-tier subscription can quickly and easily provide a virtual 2D map for their players. All of the maps and creatures from the DM's D&D Beyond library are automatically integrated with the tool, allowing them to set up a battle map for their encounters in minutes!
Some other popular virtual tabletops include Roll20, Owlbear Rodeo, Foundry Virtual Tabletop, and Fantasy Grounds. Roll20 and Owlbear Rodeo both have free options, but we always recommend supporting the developers if you can!
A Player Community
Having people to talk to about D&D outside their gaming group is a luxury not everyone has. If you can't find enough players for your online game or want to find more people to talk about D&D with, the D&D Beyond Discord community is a great place to start.
Discord Bots
Avrae is a Discord bot that can help groups integrate Discord with D&D Beyond. It's full of automated features, like virtual dice, initiative tracking, and character sheet support. So if your group plays over Discord and you want to streamline gameplay, Avrae might be precisely what you're looking for.
Tips for Online Play
Now that you have all the tools you need, you should take a few minutes to learn some good habits for playing online. Of course, most of these tips apply to playing in person, but since playing online is a different experience than playing in person, they're more important than ever. Share these tips with your friends on game day to help make your session go smoothly.
- Start simple: If you're just starting out with D&D, or even if you're a veteran and are making the move to online D&D, there can be a significant learning curve while everyone gets settled with the new technology. Before diving into all of the enhancements available, playing with a barebones video chat for the first couple of sessions might be best. Once everyone has that figured out, you can start adding in digital tools and virtual tabletops.
- Set guidelines and expectations: Transitioning your game to online can throw off the dynamic of a group. So if you're switching to online, it's best to go over what the expectations are for sessions using this new medium. This way, you can get on the same page with the rest of the group on important topics, such as when to join the call, how you want to handle dice rolling, what to do if you need to step away, etc.
- Avoid distractions: It's easy to get distracted while playing D&D, and while it's not a sin to let your attention wander, the online world can easily distract players when there's downtime for their character. Of course, each player will have their own way of dealing with this hurdle. So, if you find that it impacts your games, discussing it as a group never hurts.
Your Online D&D Session Awaits!
At the end of the day, playing D&D virtually can look and feel however works for your group. The best way to play D&D online is the way that allows your party to get together, have some laughs, and roll some (physical or virtual) dice. Hopefully, the advice we've shared in this article will enable you to hit your online D&D stride, so you can continue having adventures no matter the distance between your party members!
James Haeck (@jamesjhaeck) is the former lead writer for D&D Beyond, the co-author of Waterdeep: Dragon Heist and theCritical Role Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, and is also a freelance writer for Wizards of the Coast, the D&D Adventurers League, and Kobold Press. He lives in Seattle, Washington with his partner Hannah and two wilderness defenders, Mei and Marzipan.
Mike Bernier contributed to the reporting of this article
This article was originally published on March 20, 2020, and was updated on March 6, 2023.
If you DM on Discord, priority PushToTalk is a must to talk over the player crosstalk.
Why discord and Skype? Teach me. Those are both chat/text/videocall programs. What am I not getting? I am confused.
What to use for 8+ players as an option? You negated that. Help us out.
D&D Beyond needs to develop it's own virtual tabletop solution or buy one of the others.
hey Jon, the Jamboard was a great suggestion! I am using Microsoft's Whiteboard as a free Win10 app and it adds a couple of features on top of what you talked about here, namely a massive size, the ability to embed a graphic (like a map or battlemap) and then place tokens on top of it and move them seperately, you can also convert tokens to drawings and color them differently and finally you can grab a group of tokens/images/drawings at once and move them around. No phone app or highlighter though....
Discord will allow you to do this. Simply right-click on a user in the chat window (or on their name in a chat room, if you aren't using the video call option), and there should be a mute option that pops up. They'll still be able to unmute themselves, but I don't know of any platform that doesn't do that part.
if you mute someone, that person cannot unmute herself for you.
people can mute themselves, and unmute themselves, but they cannot control "your" discord.
Very helpful, thanks!
I apologize. I am confused. Your first statement seems to say that DM does have the ability to mute a player.
The second seems to say they can't.
I understand that you are looking for a mute button on the DM's end that Gary the player can undo, but the entire purpose of muting a player is to effectively put tape on their mouth during a problem. If they can just remove the tape...the button is less than effective if they go back to creating a problem.
That is why mute-other(?) and deafen-other are designed that way.
i meant that you can mute players ! they cannot unmute themselves ! not on discord !
but each players controls their own sounds. thus if i mute a player, only "I" cannot ear them. and they cannot do a thing about that !
an admin on a server can mute a player and that player cannot unmute themselves. as the admin has more rights then them.
so i don't know where you think players can unmute themselves if they wish to. the only way for them to be able to do that would be for them to be admin or moderator on the said server. of course they can also mute themsevles by shutting their mics off, and of course they can decide to unmute at any time. but they do not have any controls on others apps at all.
Zoom
I just take images of my map from above, as if we were playing from a table, labelling markers where needed. which makes things easier(especially seeing as i tend to invent half of them on the spot) than making maps on Roll20, World Anvil, etc. and just makes it so that a DM has more to do for game prep. taking images and sending them to my party over discord works for me, but i'm lazy that way. Most of the game can be played over discord.
If you are looking for a VTT check out MapTool.
- Free
- Open Source
- Unlimited map size
- Unlimited number of maps
- Fog of War (manual and automatic removal)
- User-definable Sight and Light settings.
- Herolab support
- PDF images support
- Square, Hex, Isometric, and no grid at all support.
- Multiple languages supported.
See Feature List for other ideas: http://www.lmwcs.com/rptools/wiki/Feature_List
They have an active and helpful community on Discord.
https://discord.gg/Kbp7au
I use it all the time. I started off just using it for displaying maps, then added tokens... from there, I went from manually revealing the fog of war to using visual blocking and character reveals based upon sight. Then I went to tracking stats and HP - I keep waiting for the API so I can write code to link my players' PCs to it. (*hint-hint*) Most recently I've been adding different light types and colors.
REPLYING TO FUNDPIRATE ABOVE re: Jamboard vs Win10 Whiteboard
That's cool that it's built-in and bigger. Plus the copy / paste ability probably makes things even easier.
I'm a Mac person and one of my players is on Linux so the web-based thing is easier to deal with.
But it would definitely be nice if there was a cross-platform (including web and mobile) solution that was basically this whiteboard idea with a few extras like the larger size, a locked background, and maybe layers that the host could control. Copy and paste between different whiteboards.
Roll20 is cool. I just find it to be overkill for me.
discord
If you're hosting the call, Zoom should have options to let you mute other people in the call. While muted you can hold the spacebar to temporarily unmute yourself - a nice alternative to constantly switching yourself (or having the DM switch you) from muted to unmuted. It isn't a virtual tabletop, however, just video and audio, but you can share your screen and the like. It is a paying option, too, so not necessarily the best choice, but it's the one I'm most familiar with.
Get Beyond20 if you use firefox or chrome. Lets you use your DND beyond character sheet (or monsters if your the DM) and make all your rolls by clicking on that and sending it to Roll20. Saves so much time and gives you access to everything you've purchased here.
I agree with you about Roll20 and Microsoft does seem to do an iOS app of its Whiteboard and a web based version if you use Office 365 so they are opening the door a bit further.
Thank you for this article!!! it was very helpful