I never understood the appeal of a jumbo novelty d20 until I saw one inspired by one of my favorite new RPGs

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close up of Esoteric-ebb themed D20 die with helmet instead of 20 face, metal edges, blue and white faces (Image credit: Die Hard Dice)

Die Hard Dice has unveiled a new line of d20s based on Esoteric Ebb, our current front runner for the best RPG of 2026. The three products on offer are up for pre order, with expected fulfilment by June. I guess more like two-and-a-half products: Two are the same set of dice with different colored bags.

Die Hard Dice is offering a set of three standard-sized d20s corresponding with three of Esoteric Ebb's main characters, with your choice of purple or orange bag. There's a translucent green and blue d20 for goblin rogue Snell, a purple and white die for wearable mimic Meek, and a dark brown with gold shimmer number for the angel, Ettir. Each one has a symbol representing their respective character in place of a critical 20.

Esoteric Ebb Ettir die next to character art
(Image credit: Die Hard Dice)

The standard dice are fun and fit their respective characters well, but I'm here for the big kahuna: One of those oversized, novelty d20s, with this one celebrating the reason for the season, the man himself, the world's worst cleric, The Cleric. It's a big 'ole hefty metal thing⁠—bigger than most, smaller than some⁠—with blue and white faces, plus The Cleric's helm picked out in the same electroplated finish as the die's edges and numbers.

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I'm a disgusting fiend for nerdy crap to put on my office shelves, but I've never been much of a dice guy⁠—miniatures are more my speed as far as tabletop paraphernalia goes. But The Cleric Dire d20 spoke to me enough to elicit a preorder. I used some of the money I saved not snagging a Steam Controller in time earlier today.

But before buying Esoteric Ebb-themed novelty dice, I would recommend buying Esoteric Ebb itself⁠—it really is all that. I thought I had a fairly completionist playthrough, but missed, like, half the game. I was also seriously impressed by how developer Christoffer Bodegård approached save scumming.

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Ted has been thinking about PC games and bothering anyone who would listen with his thoughts on them ever since he booted up his sister's copy of Neverwinter Nights on the family computer. He is obsessed with all things CRPG and CRPG-adjacent, but has also covered esports, modding, and rare game collecting. When he's not playing or writing about games, you can find Ted lifting weights on his back porch. You can follow Ted on Bluesky.

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