Beadle & Grimm’s Magic and Pathfinder products are a bit of a mixed bag

By: Anry Sergeev | 27.04.2022, 20:50
Beadle & Grimm’s Magic and Pathfinder products are a bit of a mixed bag

Beadle & Grimm’s, purveyor of the finest and most esoteric licensed merchandise for Dungeons & Dragons and Critical Role, is branching out. The company co-founded by actor Matthew Lillard has a new line of items to support Pathfinder’s Absalom: City of Lost Omens. It’s also taking a big swing with a lavish assortment of kits for Magic: The Gathering. But while I’ve sung the company’s praises in the past, this new batch of products is definitely a mixed bag.

Image: Paizo

Let’s start with the best of the batch: Pathfinder Character Chronicles. These $40 hardcover books are customized for each of the game’s core classes, and contain everything you need to manage your player character from level one upward. There is a character sheet up front — up to 25 pages long for some classes — that gives you more than enough room for all of your skills, feats, spells, and more. These books also include all of the rules from the Pathfinder Core Rulebook and the Pathfinder Advanced Player’s Guide that apply to a given class: spells, feats, even some extra stuff that Beadle & Grimm’s made up on its own. Add in original art and a pull-out dry-erase board so you’re not making nasty erasures all over the place during play, and it’s chef’s kiss perfect in my opinion. You can even get a couple of ribbon bookmarks that will help you keep track of your places. They are well-made and affordable. I want them for Starfinder, D&D, Cyberpunk Red, Twilight: 2000 … everything. Please make them right away.

Next up, we’ve got Absalom: City of Lost Omens Gold Edition, a weighty campaign-in-a-box that includes all of the content from the Paizo-published campaign book. This is the same sort of treatment that Beadle & Grimm’s has given to Wizards of the Coast’s campaigns in the past, including Baldur’s Gate: Descent Into Avernus, Curse of Strahd, The Wild Beyond the Witchlight, Tal’Doeri Campaign Setting Reborn, and more.

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

This Gold Edition format hits a sweet spot right between Beadle & Grimm’s over-the-top Platinum Editions and Paizo’s core book itself. For game masters (GMs), the entire campaign is broken up into smaller pamphlets that make prepping and playing at the table a breeze. The custom GM screen is included, as well as NPC and place cards to make sharing art easy with other players, handouts for passing across the world, and a variety of coins, pins and coasters to help bring the setting alive. It’s another outstanding package, albeit with a premium price tag — $349.99. As I have said, it is a joy to have such support. I know this because I have run many campaigns and some of them took years. This set will make your life as a GM easier, and your players will love it. The Gold Edition also comes with some of the most vibrant and interesting large-scale battle maps that I’ve seen in any Beadle & Grimm’s product to date. They even throw in a code to unlock the entire campaign digitally, which is a welcome addition for quick reference alone.

Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

My only gripe here are the maps, which are redundant in the extreme. There’s a large map of the entire city of Absalom, an even larger two-part map that’s something like four feet across, and a portfolio of over a dozen 8. 5-by-11-inch maps of each of the city’s districts. That means you have three copies of the same city map printed at different scales. The city map isn’t very interesting. It’s such a large urban center that it may as well be a texture when seen from above. However, here, it may be more a problem with the source material. It could have left Beadle & Grimms’s without much more interesting cartography.

The light-up playmat has multiple color settings and animations.
Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

Finally, my least favorite line out of this latest batch of products are the items that support Magic: The Gathering‘s newest set of cards, Kamigawa Neon Dynasty. I simply can’t recommend the $499 Kamigawa Platinum set. The deck boxes, backpack and art card folio are the most expensive items. They feel like something you would find at a convention. The demon mask necklace and art-inspired life counter are both a bit too offensive. The biggest disappointment is the sword-adorned card vault, which is difficult to open and won’t lay completely flat on the table. It’s also got these big lids that are easy to catch your hand on if you leave them open.

On the other hand, the $199 Kamigawa Silver includes the best stuff from this line. The LED playmat is a delight, and while it’s a bit thin for my liking, it’s quite the conversation piece. It runs off USB power, including cell phone battery packs. Metal counters look great and feel solid in your hand. However, collectors may not want to spend too much on the most valuable cards. Add in 100 card sleeves, a handy game log, and a world map, and you’ve got some decent value for your money.

The middle compartment won’t swing out easily, and won’t lay flat on the table either.
Photo: Charlie Hall/Polygon

The trouble is that Beadle & Grimm’s originally wanted this Kamigawa line to start shipping in February — around the same time that Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty was released in print to the public. Magic‘s next set, Streets of New Capenna, drops on Friday, and the Kamigawa line is still showing as a pre-order on the Beadle & Grimm’s website. As I am aware, the global logistics pipeline has been shut down. This is not the first time the company has missed shipping estimates. If it plans to keep up with the breakneck pace of new releases that Magic is known for, Beadle & Grimm’s is going to have to get a lot better at logistics to keep hungry fans sated.

Everything on the Beadle & Grimm’s website for the Pathfinder franchise is 10% off through April.


Beadle & Grimm’s products were provided by the manufacturer for review. Vox Media has affiliate partnerships, but not with Beadle & Grimm’s. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via other affiliate links. You can find additional information about Polygon’s ethics policy here.

Source: www.polygon.com