Dungeons & Dragons Is Apparently Banned in Federal Prisons
State prisons around the country ban the roleplaying game, too, because of bizarre concerns about gang behavior and security threats.

Dungeons & Dragons, the seminal tabletop roleplaying game, is wildly popular these days, even more so than in its early '80s heyday, but there's still one place the revival hasn't reached: prison.
The Washington Post's FOIA guru, Nate Jones, alerted me to this 2018 FOIA request on MuckRock, which indicates that the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) bans D&D and other roleplaying games from being purchased for inmates:
.@cjciaramella bait. pic.twitter.com/xN6XZtYIVv
— FOIA Nate???? (@FOIANate) November 1, 2022
Any rationale for the ban, if given, is buried under redactions, but D&D and other roleplaying games are widely banned in state prison systems under the dubious rationale that they present a security threat or encourage gang behavior. As I noted in a 2017 Reason feature on D&D's resurgence, this has resulted in some unusual case law:
In 2004, the Waupun Correctional Institution in Wisconsin decided to ban D&D and confiscated a small mountain of campaign materials from inmate and dungeon master Kevin Singer's cell, including a 96-page handwritten manuscript. Singer, a lifelong D&D enthusiast, sued the prison, arguing the ban violated his First Amendment rights. The case wound its way to the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, where a panel of august judges found themselves considering the security threat presented by inmates pretending to be wizards….
The 7th Circuit, ignoring affidavits from other inmates and from advocates of role-playing games, sided with the jailers. "The question is not whether D&D has led to gang behavior in the past; the prison officials concede that it has not," the court wrote. "The question is whether the prison officials are rational in their belief that, if left unchecked, D&D could lead to gang behavior among inmates and undermine prison security in the future."
Until recently, the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections banned D&D manuals and similar role-playing games under the category of "writings which advocate violence, insurrection or guerrilla warfare against the government or any of its facilities or which create a danger within the context of the correctional facility."
Pennsylvania now allows the books, but playing the game is still forbidden, a spokesperson for the agency writes. The reason? "It is a hierarchical game. There is concern that such a competition could lead to violence."
It's all silly, but it does illustrate how counterproductive and dumb prison book bans can be. Of all the things you could be doing in prison, D&D is one of the better and less offensive ways to pass the time. It's social, encourages teamwork and empathy, and as one former incarcerated man told me, gives "the vilified an opportunity to be the 'Good Guy' that the world in which we live rarely does."
The Bureau of Prisons did not immediately respond to a request for comment. If you're a federal inmate who plays D&D behind bars and can shed further light on this situation, you can reach me on Corrlinks at cj@reason.com or through a Sending spell.
UPDATE: Several former and current federal inmates sent me messages saying that, if D&D and similar games like Pathfinder are technically banned, correctional officers tend to look the other way.
A current federal inmate writes:
I'm in Danbury FCI and I do not play but many people do play pathfinder (D&D facsimile I guess) and it's very popular. Technically it's a gray area. Some say it's technically against the rules but they don't enforce the rules. Others say it's not. But I haven't seen anybody actually ever get an incident report (shot) for it. If it is in the rules they do not stop you. Many people get all the books sent in as well.
And a former inmate writes in:
I was just reading your article about the ban on roleplaying games in federal prisons and thought that I would reach out and offer my experiences. I spent just over 5 years (2009-2014) at FCI Terminal Island in Long Beach, California and spent much of that playing Pathfinder, a derivative of Dungeons and Dragons. While being officially "banned", there was something of a tacit understanding between our groups and the prison staff. They knew we had contraband (dice) and were breaking the rules (playing the game), but so long as we kept to ourselves and didn't cause any trouble they had better things to do than go harass some geeks.
Playing the game is what helped get me through my sentence, it let me mentally escape my situation and socialize with my peers since I didn't really fit in with most of the prison population. Honestly, if you want to keep inmates out of trouble then letting them play a multi-year long roleplaying campaign is a pretty good strategy.
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encourage gang behavior
The Wizards vs Dwarf riot of 86 really set D&D back.
I guess the D&D players didn’t meals their saving throw on that d20.
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The Bureau of Prisons is putting its weight behind GURPS. And I hate to say it, but they're right damn it.
I wonder if the prison guards are stupid enough to think the ban only applies to WoTC Branded D&D. I doubt it. I do remember way back in the heyday of D&D panic that my excuse was "It's not D&D it's RuneQuest" actually worked.
Paranoia was an interesting game. Most adults wouldn’t know quite what to think of it.
No time for games, make little ones out of big ones.
'....it's social, encourages teamwork and empathy ...' which a 12 year would understand it can be used just as easily to train and encourage anti-social teamwork and indifference, hatred, violence etc. If you want to play it, don't get yourself locked in a prison. Meanwhile read the Harry Potter books and Reason.com if you want some fantasy.
The Daniel Radcliffe fantasy stories are even better. Where men can be women by just wishing hard enough.
"The question is whether the prison officials are rational in their belief that, if left unchecked, D&D could lead to gang behavior among inmates and undermine prison security in the future."
Look, there's a perfectly reasonable explanation why the dungeon is laid out like our cell block and all the kobolds are wearing guard uniforms...
Silliness aside, inmates don't need D&D to engage in gang behavior.
No, though I doubt it should be banned. My guess is the reason it's banned is that there was some collection of banned books that accrued over time from various prisons, and at some point it got added on to it for some reason.
It feels like a very bureaucratic ban in that form. Which is something I increasingly get the sense is what happens in a lot of our prisons. Reading a bit more about that guy dying of cancer they were discussing here a few weeks ago, I'm sort of increasingly thinking that's more a Socialized Medicine issue combined with a complete lack of give-a-shit rather than active cruelty.
Which, isn't really a great defense, but does differ in how your combat it.
I don't think it should be either. It's got to be better than sitting around idle.
I do remember years ago that roleplaying games were actually perfectly fine in prisons. gave the prisoners something to do besides lift weights and make pruno.
Um... Whutabout Leisure Suit Larry? (Asking for a friend)
I wonder if the author has ever actually spent time in a prison. I am fairly certain any game could lead to violence. (I once through pieces of Catan at my brother) However, D&D has additional issues of capriciousness based on the whim of the Dungeon Master. It also has vast potential for coded language when a dwarf really means the guys we don’t like and the sword is the shank point you carved out of the 12-sided dice.
D&D is racist. Black elves are always evil. Why? Because they’re black. Certain races can do some things and not others, while humans can do anything. Why? Because they’re human and all other races are inferior. That’s why D&D should be banned. Not just because it brings Satan into the lives of the players, but because it’s racist.
It's gambling. Dice games are banned because they're inevitably going to be used as cover for gambling.
Also important are the possible negative impacts of poor dungeon mastering, like if the DM were to unilaterally rule that a player's thief had missed a poison trap and were auto-killed. People have died over such matters.
A good scared-straight message: Don't go to prison, because they won't let you play D&D.
my nephew-turning-niece loves D&D ... I'm all how much fantasy role-playing do you need outside the fanta-reality you currently live?
In my fantasy world there's an insane tyrannical king who lives in an opulent white house paid for by the peasants.
Wait a sec, I'm getting fantasy and reality mixed up again...
I heard they had to stop the prison poetry slam after Cheech Martinez recited "Shank That Bitch In The Yard".
also write your own fucking campaigns you dummies are already in a dungeon
That's nothin'. At boarding school in Tulsa they banned poker, blackjack, craps... even roulette and slots!
Doesn't everyone want to beat down the guy that always plays the paladin?
I like some of the newer classes, like beggar, honor, dandy, urban Druid, fetishist, etc..
It's prison. If you do not want to lose the sorts of liberties that everyone else has do not get sent to prison.
Reason's exquisite concerns for the finer details of some people's incarceration, while studiously ignoring the abuses heaped upon J6 defendants (note: defendant is not a convict) is abhorrent.
You are a shameless fucking hack Ciaramella. We will not forget.