Tabletop Simulator is a physics-based sandbox game that brings the joy of tabletop gaming to your screen. With genres spanning Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation, and Strategy, it offers endless possibilities for single-player or multiplayer fun. Whether you're flipping tables in frustration or crafting your own board games, this game lets you play classics like Chess, Poker, and Mahjong or dive into thousands of community-created mods. The AI Community Rating of 87.65% highlights its appeal, with players praising its creativity, multiplayer fun, and versatility. However, some note frustrations with clunky controls, buggy workshop assets, and limited table customization. Despite these flaws, Tabletop Simulator shines as a must-play for tabletop enthusiasts and creative minds alike. Perfect for casual gamers, RPG fans, or anyone looking to host a virtual game night, this game offers something for everyone.
This game also allows you to create or recreate things beyond gaming -- for example when my brother died I created a memorial room (with walls of photos) to honor and remember him forever within the game. The incense is burning, music playing, videos of him dancing and laughing, and everything in the room was specifically designed and placed for him. Still makes me cry when I load the room, and that's just a touch of the magic this game bestows upon you. This is not "one game" -- it's a massive (technically infinite) collection of tabletop/card/miniature games and therefore no other 'single' game could possibly compare. 96% positive reviews, I think that says enough. Thank you Berserk Games.
If you ever wondered if it was possible to play chess with your friend that moved to the other side of the country in such a way that you won't lose the option to move one of his pieces when he's not looking, then look no further. Tabletop Simulator has you covered.
The ability to try nearly every tabletop game in existence without spending 80 bucks to figure out that you hate it is well worth the price of admission. To everyone who takes the time to program all the games available for free, thank you for your service.
I've been DMing for 5th Edition D&D games both in-person and online since 2015. I've tried every other VTT, including roll20, and foundry. This is hands down the best for maps and minis, you have the most control with the least amount of micro-transactions. use D&Dbeyond for your character sheets and this is the most customizable by far. Use Heroforge for minis and you're good to freaking go dude.
I ran an entire Dungeons & Dragons campaign remotely using Tabletop Simulator as our table. Though not as graphically pretty as some of the newer competing products, I could set up whatever scenarios I wanted pretty easily. Players liked that it ran on mid-range systems, the interface was mostly intuitive, and they were never "fighting" it to do what they wanted to do.
Game pads for this game are unacceptably bad. Unlike the keyboard and mouse inputs, controllers have premapped bindings that are not visible and i have yet to find a solution to unbind. Your games "controller scheme" is dog. It is just a bad way to use a controller. Let me bind my own controls. Fix this, it has been a problem for years.
I honestly can't recommend buying this after they removed global chat. Its kinda impossible to get some randos together to play a game. So now almost this entire thing, every server locked or not is essentially a private server. enter a game to see if you want to play or learn? kicked. host your own server? no one joins for hours. I would say it's only use is to replace having to physically interact with real life friends.
This sure isn't what I expected. I just wanted to play all sorts of games offline by myself. I go online and try to play single player and just couldn't find anything to do. Then I tried multiplayer and all people are doing is screwing around. I looked for over an hour and did NOTHING but waste my time. I do NOT recommend this piece of crap to anyone... Its ok if you like dealing with other people's stupidity. I will be deleting this off my drive.
Tabletop simulation is a clunky and not fun way of playing board games. Many implementations of games for TTS partially script some of the rules but don't say what that is, so on top of trying to learn a new game, you have to try to deduce how that works, and then trying to undo a misclick or misunderstanding is a whole endeavor that physical board games don't suffer from
poorly made, uses the same engine as tarkov btw. its a novel way to play [insert tabletop game that doesnt have a good digital format] with people online but can also quite easily lead to storage space problems and setting up said games can prove more difficult then it will be fun in the end, especially when problems occur mid-game. there are games out there that are wildly expensive hobbies (MtG and Warhammer most notably) that have a place on this as they offer a way to with just the price of a game build nearly unlimited amount of decks and armies so long as you know how to port things into it or if you can find it in the workshop. If you just want to play chess, D&D, or many other tabletop games that have a lot of alternatives that are just as cheap if not cheaper go for them, this is by far not a premium experience.
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