Denver, Colorado D&D Players and TTRPG Groups
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Denver D&D Players and Front Range Tabletop RPG Community
Denver has a strong tabletop scene, but it... View more
Public Community
Group Description
Denver D&D Players and Front Range Tabletop RPG Community
Denver has a strong tabletop scene, but it does not live in just one kind of place. You can find D&D players in game cafés, breweries, hobby shops, convention halls, libraries, movie theaters, private campaigns, and online tables that still feel connected to Colorado.
This Nerd Culture group is a free place for Denver-area players, Dungeon Masters, Game Masters, organizers, stores, libraries, and tabletop fans to connect. Use it to find D&D players and groups, join a campaign, recruit for a one-shot, ask beginner questions, and share local events.
There are no platform fees to create a profile, join the group, search for players, post events, start discussions, or message members. If you are trying to turn “we should play sometime” into an actual date on the calendar, this group can help.
Denver’s Tabletop Scene Has a Lot of Different Doors
One of the best things about Denver tabletop gaming is that there are several ways to enter the hobby. Some players want a classic local game store. Some want coffee and a table reservation. Some want a brewery one-shot. Some want a convention weekend. Some want a public library program before they try a private campaign.
Enchanted Grounds, with locations in Littleton and Highlands Ranch, blends coffeehouse comfort with a full-service game store. Its site highlights Dungeons & Dragons, indie RPGs, weekly D&D meetups, Magic drafts, game nights, and event-friendly spaces. For players in the south metro area, it is one of the most natural places to think about tabletop community.
PlayForge in Downtown Littleton has hosted Dungeons & Dragons for new players, including sessions designed for people who have never played, people who have only played a few times, and people returning after many years away. That kind of event matters because it gives beginners a way to learn without feeling like they are interrupting a private campaign.
Copper Kettle Brewing has listed Dungeons, Dragons & Drafts as a weekly Tuesday event with single-night campaigns and no experience required. Brewery-based D&D is a good fit for adults who want a relaxed public table, a social atmosphere, and a lower-commitment way to meet other players.
Alamo Drafthouse has also been part of Denver’s public D&D activity through Dungeons & Drafthouse, a monthly roleplaying event connected to the theater’s movie-geek culture. It is a useful reminder that Denver D&D is not limited to hobby shops. Sometimes the next table starts in a place built for movies, snacks, and shared fandom.
Colorado’s convention scene gives Denver-area players another path into RPGs. HexaCon is a Denver-based tabletop convention for board games, RPGs, miniatures, and LARPs. GenghisCon and Tacticon, presented through Gamer Girl Games, bring board games, card games, roleplaying games, and broad tabletop programming to the Aurora-Denver area. These conventions are especially useful for trying new systems, meeting Game Masters, and finding people who want more than a one-time event.
Denver Public Library has also offered Dungeons & Dragons programming, including youth-focused club activity with dice, pre-made character sheets, snacks, and all skill levels welcome. Library programs are important because they make tabletop roleplaying feel public, approachable, and beginner-friendly.
What This Group Adds to the Denver Scene
Local stores and events are great, but they do not always solve the biggest problem: staying connected after the first game. Nerd Culture gives players a place to continue the conversation, build smaller groups, and organize future sessions.
- Bridge public games into private groups. If you meet cool people at a store, brewery, library program, or convention, use this group to keep the party together.
- Post your table style. Mention whether you enjoy casual fantasy, tactical combat, horror, mystery, character drama, old-school dungeon crawls, or rules-light storytelling.
- Be practical about location. Denver, Aurora, Lakewood, Littleton, Englewood, Highlands Ranch, Arvada, Westminster, Boulder, and online play all create different scheduling realities.
- Use events when plans are real. A one-shot, session zero, Learn-to-Play night, convention follow-up, or campaign launch is easier to find when it has a date attached.
- Keep campaign talk organized. Discussions can hold scheduling notes, table expectations, safety tools, recaps, house rules, and character updates.
For People New to D&D in Denver
You do not need to know every rule before joining a table. You do not need expensive books, a perfect voice, or a character sheet covered in optimal choices. You can start with curiosity and a clear message.
A good first post might say that you are new, where you are comfortable playing, whether online games work for you, and what kind of first experience sounds fun. Ask for a beginner table, a one-shot, help making a character, or a DM who enjoys teaching.
Denver has several beginner-friendly entry points, from new-player store events to public library programs and casual one-shot nights. Nerd Culture helps you ask questions before you show up, which can make that first session much easier.
For Denver DMs, GMs, and Hosts
If you run games in the Denver area, clear posts will help you find better-fit players.
Include the system, schedule, location or online format, number of seats, tone, experience level, cost if any, and how players should respond. If beginners are welcome, explain what support you offer. If the game is paid, make the price easy to see.
Players searching for a professional DM can also use Nerd Culture to connect with paid Game Masters, teaching DMs, one-shot hosts, and campaign organizers. Nerd Culture does not take a platform cut from those arrangements.
Stores, cafés, breweries, libraries, conventions, educators, clubs, and community organizers may share tabletop RPG events here when the posts are local, useful, and clearly written.
RPG Systems Welcome Here
Dungeons & Dragons is the main focus, but Denver players can post about many tabletop RPGs.
Pathfinder, Call of Cthulhu, Cyberpunk RED, Starfinder, Vampire: The Masquerade, Daggerheart, Mothership, Shadowrun, Blades in the Dark, Alien RPG, Monster of the Week, Dungeon Crawl Classics, Savage Worlds, Fate, and indie games all have a place in this group.
If you want to run something less common, make the pitch friendly and specific. Tell people the tone, session length, experience needed, and why the game is fun.
Denver FAQ
What is the easiest way to find a D&D group in Denver?
Join this free Nerd Culture group and post a clear introduction. Include your area, availability, experience level, preferred system, and whether you want online, in-person, or hybrid play.
You can also use Nerd Culture’s search, events, discussions, and messaging tools to connect with local players and Dungeon Masters.
Can I use this group if I live outside Denver?
Yes. This group is for Denver and the surrounding Front Range community.
Players from Aurora, Lakewood, Littleton, Englewood, Highlands Ranch, Arvada, Westminster, Boulder, Golden, Thornton, Northglenn, and nearby areas are welcome. Add your general location or travel comfort when posting.
Are there beginner-friendly options around Denver?
Yes. Denver-area players can look for new-player store events, public one-shots, brewery games, library programs, convention games, and online tables with local people.
In this group, beginners can ask for character creation help, teaching games, one-shots, or patient DMs.
Can paid games be posted?
Yes. Paid campaigns and professional Game Master services are allowed when pricing is transparent.
Include the cost, payment schedule, what players receive, whether materials are provided, and any cancellation or attendance expectations.
Can local venues share events?
Yes. Stores, cafés, breweries, theaters, libraries, conventions, schools, clubs, and community organizers can post relevant D&D nights, RPG one-shots, beginner sessions, workshops, youth programs, and campaign openings.
A helpful event post includes date, time, location, system, cost if any, age range if relevant, seat limit, and how people can join.
Can I post online campaigns?
Yes. Online and hybrid games are welcome.
A lot of Denver-area players use online play because commute time, weather, work schedules, childcare, and distance can make weekly in-person campaigns difficult. A local online campaign can still become a real community.
Denver Table Etiquette
This group should make it easier to find good games and harder for spam or table drama to take over.
- Make the post useful. Include system, schedule, location or online format, cost, seat count, experience level, and tone when recruiting.
- Respect different entry points. Store players, brewery players, library players, convention players, home-game players, online players, beginners, veterans, and professional DMs all belong here.
- No gatekeeping or harassment. Do not insult, bully, exclude, creep on, or talk down to people because of identity, age, disability, neurodivergence, background, experience level, playstyle, or favorite system.
- Be honest about paid seats. No hidden table fees, unclear subscriptions, surprise deposits, or paid campaigns disguised as free games.
- Use safety tools. Discuss boundaries before horror, romance, PvP, mature themes, intense emotional scenes, or sensitive story content.
- Keep promotion local and relevant. RPG events are welcome. Repeated ads, unrelated links, vague self-promotion, and mass messages are not.
- Respect public venues. Follow store, brewery, café, library, theater, and convention rules. Good guest behavior helps keep public gaming available.
- Report problems early. If someone is spamming, misleading players, harassing members, or making the group unsafe, use platform tools and contact moderators.
Keep the Front Range Rolling
Denver already has stores, coffee shops, brewery tables, libraries, conventions, paid DMs, volunteer Game Masters, and curious new players. What many people need is a cleaner way to connect the right people after the first conversation.
Post your introduction. Share a local D&D night. Recruit for your campaign. Ask about beginner options. Start a one-shot. Look for a Dungeon Master. Build a group around your favorite RPG system. Keep in touch after a convention table, store event, library game, or brewery one-shot.
Whether your next game starts in Denver, Littleton, Aurora, Highlands Ranch, a convention room, a library branch, a movie theater, a home campaign, or online with local players, Nerd Culture can help the next session happen.
Support your local TTPRG groups in Denver, click here to become a co-organizer or moderator of this group.
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