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Official D&D artwork, featuring three adventurers looking over a set of maps and papers on a table in tavern.

Where Are All the New D&D Books in 2026?

For a brand that tends to promote its releases months or even years in advance, 2026 is looking strangely quiet for Dungeons & Dragons. As of this writing, Wizards of the Coast has not announced a single new D&D book for next year. No new new adventures, no new setting guides, not even a short D&D Beyond digital supplement.

It’s odd given that historically WotC has announced new D&D materials through a mix of convention panels, press releases and, most importantly, their annual D&D Direct event. Yet in 2025, WotC didn’t hold a D&D Direct at all and, at recent conventions like GenCon, have been tightlipped about their upcoming release schedule.

So just why is WotC silent and what does it mean for the future of D&D? Below, we try and get some answers.

Official D&D artwork, featuring a group of adventurers outside a caravan staring out at the lights of a nearby village as the sun begins to set.

Why hasn’t Wizards of the Coast announced any new D&D Books for 2026?

While it’s not entirely clear why WotC hasn’t yet announced any new products for 2026, there are few possibilities:

  • Leadership shakeups: Several major figures who helped shape and guide D&D 5e have recently stepped away, including longtime designers Chris Perkins and Jeremy Crawford, both of whom left for Critical Role publisher Darrington Press. Former D&D VP Jess Lanzillo also left the company in 2025 moving to World of Darkness publisher White Wolf. At the same time, longtime employee Dan Ayoub has taken over as VP of the D&D Franchise. Any one of these changes would be significant. Taken together, however, they represent a major internal transition that could have disrupted the usual design and product pipeline.
  • Post-D&D 2024 relaunch slowdown: Wizards invested heavily in revising the D&D 2024 core rulebooks, and may be deliberately slowing down after a period of significant investment and effort. They may also be looking to assess player response and sales for the new rules before pushing out new campaigns or setting books. And while officially, WotC leadership has said that the 2024 core books are the fastest selling D&D books ever, there’s evidence that suggests it hasn’t quite been the home run WotC was hoping for.
Official D&D artwork, featuring a group of riders on birdlike axebeaks approaching the ruins of a black and twisted fortress in a desert.
  • Potential pivot to digital-first content: With an increased focus on D&D Beyond, Wizards may also be reallocating resources away from traditional hardcover production. A more digital-heavy strategy could naturally reduce the number and type of products released each year. In fact, this past year, we saw the release of three short D&D Beyond digital products: Astarion’s Book of Hungers, Netheril’s Fall and Lorwyn: First Light. WotC may be waiting on sales and fan reception to these digital books before deciding whether it’s a strategy that’s worth pursuing with future products.
  • Projects not ready for announcement: Another possibility is simply that the products aren’t ready. Projects and timelines may have shifted, priorities may have changed and while various books are no doubt being worked on, it may be the case that they still need a little bit more time to bake before WotC is willing to officially announce their release.
  • Printing and shipping challenges: Wizards has faced production issues this past year, including delays significant enough that Eberron: Forge of the Artificer required a complete reprint, which moved out the release from August to December 2025. International shipping has also experienced slowdowns, with books arriving weeks or months later than expected in some regions. These logistical setbacks may have led WotC to be more cautious about announcing new physical products until supply chain reliability improves.
Official D&D artwork, featuring a white haired woman playing a harp around a campfire in a dark snowy forest while a winged cat looks on from a nearby branch.

What new D&D books might be coming in 2026

While Wizards hasn’t announced anything concrete, two recent Unearthed Arcana playtests offer some intriguing possibilities.

  • Ravenloft: In May 2025, Wizards of the Coast released the Horror Subclasses UA playtest. which featured eight subclasses: the College of Spirits Bard, Grave Domain Cleric, Phantom Rogue, Shadow Sorcery Sorcerer, Hexblade Patron Warlock, Undead Patron Warlock, Reanimator Artificer and Hollow Warden Ranger (notably the last two are completely new subclasses, while the other six are updates to existing subclasses first presented in Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft). This has lead many fans to speculate that we see a new Ravenloft D&D book sometime in 2026.
  • Dark Sun: In May 2025, WotC also released a playtest for the Psion (a powe and classr long associated with the Dark Sun setting). This was followed in August 2025 by the Apocalyptic Subclasses UA playtest, which featured four subclasses: the Circle of Preservation Druid, the Gladiator Fighter, the Defiled Sorcerer and the Sorcerer-King Patron Warlock. While Athas was not mentioned by name in either playtest packet, the setting is clearly implied, leading many to suspect that new a Dark Sun book is on the way in the coming year.
Official D&D artwork, featuring the inside of a Harper stronghold, complete with a writing desk, map, bunks and a carpet with the Harper symbol on it.

What it means for the community

For the first time in years, the D&D community is experiencing a vacuum in official game releases. Third-party publishers, however, may be quick to fill the void, with new fantasy games like Daggerheart and Draw Steel gaining significant traction and eating into D&D’s market share. If Wizards of the Coast is slowing its publishing output, intentionally or not, the gravitational pull of the TTRPG market may shift accordingly.

In the meantime, while Dark Sun and Ravenloft may be on the horizon, they’re still far from certain. One thing is certain however: this level of silence from the world’s most popular roleplaying is anything but normal.

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A photograph of Dungeons & Dragons Fanatics Publisher, Jason Volk.
Jason Volk is the Publisher of Dungeons & Dragons Fanatics and lives in the wilds of Western Canada. He has been playing D&D for over 25 years and is a huge fan of Dragonlance and the Forgotten Realms. His favorite character of all time was a Necromancer named Neek who spent most of his adventuring career resurrecting the corpses of slain monsters. When he’s not playing TTRPGs, Jason enjoys video games, Magic: The Gathering, Warhammer 40K, watching football and spending time with his wife and adorably nerdy children.
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