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D&D Accessories: Micro Stuff For When You’re Working With Micro Space

4 Minute Read
Jul 14 2024
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If you’re an adventurer tight on adventuring space, we have you covered with all of the tiny, space-conscious, and small D&D.

Dungeons and Dragons is a hobby that can easily take up a lot of real estate in your house. Between minis, terrain, and buildings, the stacks of books, then of course your dozens and dozens of sets of dice, it’s easy to let D&D take up a lot of your physical space.

But what if you don’t have a lot of space to let it take up? Or if your play area is small? If you’re an RPG enthusiast with limited space, here are some items to help keep your gaming area as itty-bitty and compact as possible.

1. Dice Tray Slash Tower Slash Storage

When you’re tight on space, sometimes the best answer is a multitasker. If one tool can do the job or two or three, you just need less total stuff. And this rectangle does a whole bunch. There’s room for 4 full sets of dice, as well as a dice tower and rolling tray. When you’re done playing for the night, the whole thing folds down into a 13x5x2.5-inch box. Not only will it keep your stuff safe and secure, but its footprint during and between sessions is relatively tiny.


2. Another Storage Slash Tray Option

If you looked at the first item and thought, “I like where it’s going but I don’t use dice towers” or “but I’d need more space,” don’t worry. We’ve got you. Coming in at 15×8.5×3.5 inches it’s a little bigger than the last piece for sure. But it also has the capacity for 500 dice. Or if you travel with a reasonable number of dice, plenty of room for notes, pens or pencils, your mini, etc., and then opens up completely for a nice big dice tray.


3. Tiny Dice

Of course, you could also go hard in the other direction and buy accessories that are physically, very very small. This set of 6 dice is in the area of 6mm each. They’re small enough to fit into that pocket watch-style dice box. Are the numbers too small to read? Are dice this tiny easy to lose? Maybe! But you’re low on space so it’s time to squint and be real careful.


4. Mini Noteboks

Even if space isn’t on your side, you should still try to keep some D&D notes. This is a ‘do as I say, not as I do’ sort of situation You should be taking more game notes. Your DM will appreciate you taking more game notes. And this set of 8 mini notebooks is perfect for an adventurer who has to cram everything for a game night into one fanny pack. These 3.84×5.65 inch notebooks are definitely pocket-sized, and each one is themed after a different iconic D&D monster.


5. Spell Book In Your Pocket

Spell lists are a pain to keep track of, especially if you have a class that’s always updating their prepared spells. And while decks of spell cards are super useful to have, you don’t even need the whole deck with you. Instead, just take the spells you need in this handy miniature spell (card) book. Cards are protected by their own plastic sleeve, and 26 pages will make sure you have all the spells you need for this week’s adventure.


Oh hey! BoLS might make a little dolla-dolla if you decide to buy these items. We need that money to make a pocket dimension to store all of our RPG stuff in.

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