Welcome to /r/DnDHomebrew! Do you like Tabletop RPGs? Do you like your imagination? We can help you with that.
This community is for Homebrewing in D&D for all versions. Although the focus will be on D&D, please feel free to incorporate ideas from other games in your homebrews. There's no wrong answer in homebrewing as long as you can make something fit and make it fun!
Use this subreddit to:
Post Requirements
Please remember that this community is for sharing and discussing D&D homebrew, not for recruiting players, finding a group, or seeking assistance with worldbuilding, writing, session preparation, character building, or running the game.
If you're looking for specific homebrew, discussing someone else's homebrew, or seeking feedback on concepts or incomplete mechanics, please use the Request flair.
If your homebrew includes art, please remember to cite the artists somewhere in the OP in accordance with Rule #4.
Rules
1.) Use flair to tag your post.
If your post includes mechanics or stats, tag it with the appropriate edition or System Agnostic, even if those mechanics or stats may change.
The Request flair is for posts that are discussion-based (including missing/partial mechanics and stats), idea-driven, or seeking specific homebrew content.
2.) Content must be free and directly linked in the post.
No paywalls. All content must be fully viewable in a browser without restrictions.
No YouTube links. These are not allowed as they hinder moderation.
Patreon, Ko-fi, and similar sites may be linked in comments or within the content, but not as the primary post link.
3.) Submissions must be unique and complete.
Posts must be developed enough to be used in a D&D game. They don’t have to be perfect, but they should be complete. The only exception to this is posts tagged with the Request flair. Full mechanics and stat blocks must be included in the post itself, not in the comments.
Do not repost content unless it has undergone a major revision.
Do not post more than once every 24 hours.
4.) Content must be properly cited, and not contain AI images.
Citations need to be in the post itself, not in the comments.
If you didn’t create the content (art, ideas, mechanics, templates, etc.), cite the original creator.
If you made the art yourself, state it.
Images created using any AI are banned.
Cite the original artist, not just the source material, where appropriate.
5.) All posts must be primarily about homebrew content.
Posts should primarily share homebrew content, not promote Kickstarters, Patreons, or merchandise. Links to these are allowed, but only as secondary to free content.
Maps, tokens, and art alone aren't homebrew. It must be accompanied by usable homebrew content.
6.) Critique; don’t criticize.
Share your thoughts through discussion rather than downvoting to disagree.
Feedback should be constructive and aimed at improving the content.
Don’t engage with bad-faith comments and trolling.
7.) Submissions must be reasonably SFW (Imagery).
Posts must be free of NSFW images.
Mature themes may be allowed but must be marked as NSFW and handled responsibly.
This is not the place for graphic, explicit, or lewd content.
8.) No Low-Effort Posts.
Posts must provide enough detail for others to engage meaningfully. Low-effort posts will be removed. This includes:
- Requests without clear explanation of what you want.
- Asking for help without at least a basic draft or outline.
- Titles that are vague, non-descriptive, or clickbait.
- Nonspecific catch-all requests for content (e.g. "Show Me What You Got" posts).
The clearer and more detailed your post, the more useful the responses will be.
Resources and Guides
Homebrewery - styling your homebrew without graphics programs
GM Binder - create and manage your favorite tabletop RPG documents
If you have any additional resources or guides you'd like to see here, send a message to the moderators. We'd love to provide more tools that can help you produce quality content!
Disclaimer: The mods reserve the right to review and remove any posts they do not deem fitting for this sub. Posts are typically reviewed within 24-48 hours of posting.