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This D&D board game could be the magic item needed to refresh your game nights, but it won’t be a critical hit for everyone

August 15, 2025


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The Horrified series started in 2019 with a game of the same name in which players worked together to fight off classic movie monsters. Its combination of accessibility and variety made it a big hit (one of the best board games, you could argue), and it spawned several sequels all of which were fun enough but, thanks to some confusing rules oversights and a lack of innovation, none were quite as good as the original. The latest iteration is a combination of the game system with the famous Dungeons & Dragons role playing game, which could be the magic item needed to refresh the series, but could also be another quick cash in.

Horrified: Dungeons & Dragons features & design

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Price

$29.99 / £29.99

Ages

10+

Game type

Cooperative

Players

1 – 5

Lasts

60mins

Complexity

Moderate

Designers

Peter Lee

Publisher

Ravensburger

Play if you enjoy

Horrified series, Pandemic, Betrayal at House on the Hill

  • Battle iconic D&D monsters using beloved classes
  • Great art and dice, but poor plastic miniatures
  • Make sure you punch out all the cardboard components

The original Horrified greeted players with a message printed on the reverse of the folded board. Those days are gone, but there’s still a fun monster print to say hello when you open the box lid. This unfolds to display a board that’ll be familiar to fans of the series on which clearly marked locations are connected to each other via passageways and stairwells. The board art is great, and role-players will notice that it resembles an isometric dungeon map dropping from the surface environment of Castle Waterdeep, from D&D’s Forgotten Realms setting, into the catacomb levels below.

There are also several sheets of punch-out cardboard tokens. Most of these are items which you store in the supplied “haversack” – another riff on D&D – a fold-over, velcro-closing bag from which you’ll draw them during play. Among the remainder are various markers and standees which come with plastic bases: coloured ones for player character heroes and clear ones for non-player citizens. If you’re unboxing the game yourself be aware that the punch sheets contain some small, black cardboard crosses which are easy to miss. Make sure you punch them out before you chuck the sprue in the recycling.

Horrified: Dungeons & Dragons Red Dragon model and monster components

(Image credit: Future/Matt Thrower)

While players have to make do with cardboard standees, the monsters get plastic figures, indicating who the real stars of the show are. There are four, representing a Mimic, a Displacer beast, a Beholder, and a Red Dragon. They’re fine but nothing to write home about – chunky, soft plastics that are serviceable during gameplay but not to scale nor nice enough to paint, although the beholder does have a transparent flying stand, which is a fun touch.



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