Disability, Neurodiversity, and Mental Health Resources for Tabletop Roleplaying Games

blue disability symbol with a d20 replacing the wheelchair wheel

Here’s a growing collection of resources to improve your life or to help you improve the lives of others.

Representation Resources

Miniatures

Accessibility Resources

Mental Health Tools

Publisher Resources

Feel free to add more in the comments below!




Limitless Champions: Disabled Fantasy 3D Miniatures

Limitless Champions: halfling with Down Syndrome playing a drum, tiefling monk with cerebral palsy, blind tiefling with ornate cane, blue dragonborn on sled with shortbow

Update: Don’t miss the adventures!

We are making a book of adventures that feature these characters and demonstrate how to use them respectfully in a roleplaying game. Follow the Kickstarter to get notified when it launches for an early backer bonus adventure!

And sign up for The Dragon’s Hoard to get weekly inclusive gaming updates, discounts, free gifts, and more in your inbox!

We are making history!

  • What if your fantasy RPG world included disabled people, just like the real world?
  • What if that disability representation went beyond wheelchairs and pirates?

We’re creating the largest, most diverse line of disabled fantasy miniatures ever made with 5e stat blocks and cards, which launched in a Kickstarter campaign on May 2, 2023.

Limitless Champions will make history as the largest, most diverse collection of disabled fantasy game miniatures ever created.

rotating figure of human with long dark brown hair, purple hat, multicolor dress, sitting in a wheelchair with 4 arms made of connected spheres, holding teapot & cup on right and paintbrush & board on left. Hubs and arm spheres have Hebrew inscription on them
Backers at Silver or higher within the first 48 hours get a free alternate STL of Rohna Ginnsley, a bard who uses her multi-armed wheelchair for assistance! (Available to others as an add-on)

Character representation includes:

  • Alopecia Areata
  • Amputation
  • Anxiety/Panic Disorder (represented by a fidget, grounding device, and emotional comfort animal)
  • Arthritis
  • Blindness
  • Cerebral Palsy
  • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis)
  • Down Syndrome
  • Dwarfism (Diastrophic Dysplasia)
  • Ectrodactyly
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Face Differences (Treacher Collins syndrome, Cleft Palate)
  • Multiple Sclerosis
  • Quadriplegia
Row of 12 sample characters, 2D full color art

Each character includes:

  • 5e Stat block
  • Background & Personality
  • Full color character art
  • Miniature (Choice of STL, pre-printed mini)
  • Plot hooks for inclusion in your game
8 gray sample images of character 3D models

Also included:

  • Condition markers accessible to visually impaired gamers
  • Wooden chests with custom artwork
  • Digital Planner stickers & VTT Tokens (Stretch Goal)
  • Service Animals (Stretch Goals)

The character collection follows accessibility principles for maximum readability (dyslexia, colorblindness, etc.) and will be available in multiple formats: PDF, ePub, txt, audio, and it will be included in Lair format for all subscribers.

Wyrmworks Publishing prioritizes hiring disabled, neurodiverse, and mentally ill creators for all of our projects, and characters on this project are based on a combination of research and conversations from previous projects, real-world people who commissioned characters based on themselves, and consultation with therapists, advocacy professionals, people whose experiences are represented here, and before the final sensitivity reading and edit, besides playtesting, we will send the manuscript to backers who are represented here for additional feedback.

Missed the Campaign?

All of the pieces are available in our store:

Check out the whole collection




Apply to freelance for Wyrmworks Publishing

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We’re accepting ongoing applications from a variety of freelancers who are interested in working with us to make lives better through tabletop roleplaying games. If you are a TTRPG creator or artist who would like to work with us, please submit the following.




Gaining Advantage 019: Finding Your Space

Gaining Advantage: Making Lives Better through tabletop role-playing games; Wyrmworks Publishing Logo; Disability symbol with wheelchair wheel replaced by d20; Brain with embedded d20; YVR DM logo

How do you get started with Dungeons & Dragons and find a group that’s right for you? We welcome Montana Rosalle from YVR Dungeon Masters to give you some help!

  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 01:44 Interview: Montana Rosalle
  • 23:56 Wrap-up

Manually captioned. Transcript available at our website.

YVR Dungeon Masters Links

Wyrmworks Publishing




Gaining Advantage 018: Excellence in TTRPG with @MForbeck

Gaining Advantage: Making Lives Better through tabletop role-playing games; Wyrmworks Publishing Logo; Disability symbol with wheelchair wheel replaced by d20; Brain with embedded d20; Diana Jones Award pyramid logo

How can game excellence make lives better? We welcome Matt Forbeck to talk about excellence in game design.

  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 02:54 Interview: Matt Forbeck
  • 21:46 Wrap-up

Manually captioned. Transcript available at our website.

Matt Forbeck Links

Wyrmworks Publishing




Become a Wyrmworks Publishing Affiliate

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Fans, podcasters, streamers, and anyone else who thinks more people should know about Wyrmworks Publishing’s products and wants to join us in helping you make lives better with tabletop roleplaying games, we have an offer for you!

Join the Wyrmworks Publishing Affiliate program, give your fans a discount, and get a commission as our thanks!

  1. Sign up using the form below.
  2. We will review your application. If we feel you are a good fit, we will send you a link to our affiliate contract and promotion graphics.
  3. Once you sign the contract, we will give you a coupon code.
  4. Anyone new who buys one or more of our products using your coupon code gets a 10% off discount, and you get a 10% commission! It’s a win for you, a win for your fans, and it helps get the word out about our products and mission!

And if you want to use our products in actual play shows or similar uses, we can help you with samples or discounts.




Gaining Advantage 017: Accessible Benefits from TTRPG

Gaining Advantage: Making Lives Better through tabletop role-playing games; Wyrmworks Publishing Logo; Disability symbol with wheelchair wheel replaced by d20; Brain with embedded d20; photo of Katriel Paige

How can the TTRPG industry teach the rest of the world about accessibility? We welcome Katriel Paige to talk about their work in accessibility.

  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 02:46 Interview: Katriel Paige
  • 30:24 Wrap-up

Manually captioned. Transcript available at our website.

Katreil Paige Links

Wyrmworks Publishing




Improvements in TTRPG Inclusion

Black background with a grayscale woman in a wheelchair

When we launched Limitless Heroics, we said, ”Limitless Heroics is more than an RPG book. It’s a petition. Back this project, and you communicate to every game publisher on earth that disabled people exist and can easily be included in their games, that the customers want that representation, and that accessibility and representation are necessary core features for future products.” Some scoffed at that. Others called it virtue signaling. But we truly believe that these small actions have a ripple effect on the industry and the world.

Efforts toward inclusion have definitely improved over the years. Third party products like Ancestry & Culture and An Elf and an Orc Had a Little Baby offer suggestions for better representation and an alternative to the bioessentialism that has had such a prominent role in Dungeons & Dragons throughout its existence. Wizards of the Coast began making changes with Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything and took racial representation to the next level with the announcement of Journeys through the Radiant Citadel, and we applaud these efforts and see the leader of the industry providing a positive example for racial representation.

But what about disability representation?

The first well-known effort to better represent disabilities in role-playing games came from the viral Combat Wheelchair, followed closely by the inexplicably controversial ”ramps in dungeons” adventure in Candlekeep Mysteries, but note that the latter, while published by Wizards of the Coast, was only designed to be accessible by its author, Jennifer Kretchmer, not by direction from the company, which is obvious in that that’s the only adventure in the collection that includes any deliberate accessibility. (GURPS and the Hero System also include disabilities, but it does more harm than good.)

Besides a handful of very small games floating around itch.io, Accessible Games produces Psi-Punk and Survival of the Able, and Evil Hat’s Fate Accessibility Toolkit was the first deliberate representation publication by a second tier publisher, and it’s still considered the best of its kind in the industry, and while it’s brilliant, it’s also the best because it’s the only one of its kind until Limitless Heroics finishes production.

Other third party offerings have stepped into the D&D system with examples like Adventures in ADHD and our own Accessible Adventures of the Week, but those examples remain rare.

Proof that Tony Stark Has a Heart

But now Marvel has thrown down the Infinity Gauntlet of accessibility with the Marvel Multiverse RPG, including limited but deliberate disability representation. Disney/Marvel by no means leads the TTRPG space, but they’re the first company to enter it in recent years with the potential to challenge WotC on their home turf. While Marvel’s past TTRPG offerings haven’t challenged D&D for dominance, that’s not necessary even now to see more inclusion. (No, I have no illusions that Limitless Heroics influenced this decision.)

As more publishers, especially media companies whose reach extends beyond the TTRPG sphere, implement disability inclusion in their game systems and campaign worlds, the more it becomes expected. Imagine how odd a campaign world of all white characters would seem today thanks to the civil rights movements and the ongoing work of millions to demand racial representation. In the same way, games and other media without a broad range of orientations and gender expressions are becoming increasingly expected.

The more we see accurate and positive disability representation throughout different forms of media, the more it becomes a standard. I look forward to the day when the lack of disability representation becomes noticeable.




Enter the Dragon’s Hoard

Blue legless dragon with tail wrapped around orb

Our fans are actively dedicated to joining us in our mission to make lives better through tabletop roleplaying games (TTRPG).

We provide what you’d expect from a weekly publisher email: discounts, freebies, and news, but we also provide personal encouragement and opportunities to improve lives by working together. This is also the place for playtest announcements of upcoming products.

Our fans make the world a better place, and we truly treasure them, which is why we call them the Dragon’s Hoard, and we invite you to become a part of this treasure trove by signing up today and immediately getting your own free collection of treasure as soon as you confirm your subscription!






Gaining Advantage 016: More Fey, Less Squirrels

Gaining Advantage: Making Lives Better through tabletop role-playing games; Wyrmworks Publishing Logo; Disability symbol with wheelchair wheel replaced by d20; Brain with embedded d20; Adventures in ADHD logo

Let’s learn about Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in a fun way, like a way that will keep your attention! We welcome Kel and Skald from Awfully Queer Heroes!

  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 04:38 Interview: Awfully Queer Heroes: Adventures in ADHD
  • 37:53 Wrap-up

Manually captioned. Transcript available at our website.

Awfully Queer Heroes Links

Wyrmworks Publishing