Image Image

Recently I made a post on X and YouTube about how I am tired of paying Lulu and DriveThruRPG large cuts of my sales for the privilege of being on their platforms. Don't get me wrong, I am very appreciative of these platforms. They got my foot in the door in the professional side of this hobby. But I have this website that is linked to my YouTube channel that has over 7k subscribers. Do I really need to pay DTRPG for the chance of getting discovered on their site when I can directly market and reach out to the very people interested in what it is that I do?

No. I don't think so. I think I've grown beyond it, and I want to go in a different direction by providing fun, gamable content for my fans and customers that is also fairly priced to them and still profitable for me to do as well.

Therefore, I bought a laser printer, a large paper cutter, and various other tools so that I could print and saddle bind my own zines and even Wight-Box booklet sets as seen here. I'll be my own print-on-demand supplier and be able to make what I want and give you something that is cool, handmade with love, and very much the aesthetic I want (old school). Very soon, once a few more tools arrive, I'll be selling these booklet sets I make myself here on my webstore along with "Wightlands," a zine for Wight-Box that will be regular installments with new classes, monsters, adventures, articles about games and my philosophy on them, and official setting information of the Wightlands. Those zines will be like these booklets pictured as well.

The hobby is in a weird place. D&D YouTubers and creators are quitting. The new edition of D&D is an objective failure, it seems. Back in the 70s, it was zines and subculture that thrived, and I want to have some hand in doing that now, however big or small that may be. I hope all of this interests you and that I earn your support in this as I move in this direction with gaming content. I think it will be a good time and a lot of fun.