Game Night Just Got More Expensive
A $25 board game may soon hit the shelves with a $40 price tag because of tariffs.

On Saturday, a 34 percent tariff on Chinese products went into effect, bringing the total tax rate on Chinese imports to 54 percent. Yet President Donald Trump's trade war might be just beginning: On Monday, the president threatened to levy an additional 50 percent duty on China.
These additional fees will make Trump's already bad trade war even worse. The tabletop gaming industry, which makes board games, cards, and role-playing games, is especially spooked.
"The latest imposition of a 54% tariff on products from China by the administration is dire news for the tabletop industry and the broader US economy," the Gaming Manufacturers Association (GAMA) said in a press release last week. "As an industry highly dependent on producing goods overseas and importing them into the US, this policy will have devastating consequences."
Indeed, China is the dominant force in producing "specialty components like custom dice, injection-molded plastic, and miniatures," Meredith Placko, CEO of Steve Jackson Games, tells Reason. However, it is not the only player. Poland, Germany, and the Czech Republic—all members of the European Union, which faces a 20 percent tariff under Trump—are also key producers of high-quality dice, printing, and wood components. India (26 percent tariff) and Vietnam (46 percent) have also become emerging manufacturers in recent years as companies have looked to diversify their supply chains, according to Placko.
Bolstering domestic production, a stated goal of the president and tariff supporters, is easier said than done, says Placko, who tells Reason that she has looked into building a domestic manufacturing facility in America. "The real challenge is that the United States simply isn't equipped to support full-scale tabletop game production. There are a few domestic shops that can handle cards or small-run printing, but once you move into complex assemblies or high-volume tooling, it becomes prohibitively expensive."
Even if it were as easy as flipping on a switch, ramping up domestic production would not be able to avoid tariffs. Just as auto manufacturing requires sourcing steel, aluminum, and other materials from trading partners, the specialized equipment to make tabletop games—like die cutters, lamination machines, and precision cutting tools—is all sourced overseas. As Jamey Stegmaier, president of Stonemair Games, recently wrote, "Even if a company wanted to invest in the infrastructure to try to make it happen, the short-term losses from the tariffs will eat too deep into their cash to make it possible."
Unable to skirt tariffs, the tabletop gaming industry expects costs to increase. In real terms, a game that cost $3 to manufacture in China last year could now cost close to $5. This means that a $25 board game may soon hit the shelves with a $40 price tag. Stegmaier expects the 2025 holiday season to be "the weakest in years."
Tabletop games are not the only ones to be impacted by Trump's trade war. Last week, Nintendo announced that it was delaying preorders for its Nintendo Switch 2. From 2015 to 2020, the company exited Brazil's markets entirely because of the country's import tax on video games. Nintendo has not yet altered the original June release date of the Switch 2.
As an industry that relies heavily on trade and discretionary income in consumers' budgets, tabletop gaming may be one of the biggest losers in Trump's trade war. With production and distribution costs climbing steadily in the past few years, tariffs are "adding fuel to an already smoldering fire," according to Placko.
Even if Trump doesn't follow through on his threat to add additional duties on China, his tariffs are already hurting American consumers and businesses.
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Unable to skirt tariffs, the tabletop gaming industry expects costs to increase. In real terms, a game that cost $3 to manufacture in China last year could now cost close to $5. This means that a $25 board game may soon hit the shelves with a $40 price tag. Stegmaier expects the 2025 holiday season to be “the weakest in years.”
I am confused how this works. Adding $2 flat on top of the production cost of a game that retails for $25 should make the game now cost $27 if my math is correct.
Forget it Woodchipper, it’s TDS.
Yeah.
They can’t skirt the costs except they could by manufacturing it domestically or in any zone zeroing out its own tariffs.
A game that costs $3 to manufacture in China will still cost $3 to manufacture in China unless US tariffs directly affect production costs. So what they really mean is that it currently costs $1 or less to manufacture, $2 to import and distribute, netting $22 for the $25 retail will now cost them the same $1 to manufacture, $4 to import and distribute, netting them $35 for the $40 retail.
Maybe, just maybe, board games are dying because everybody gets Candy Crush on their phones for free, we’ve been telling kids to learn to code for over a decade, and, really, the physical board game manufacturers are willing to lie, cheat, steal, and sell out individual liberty to the CCP to ensure they have a golden parachute.
Plus let’s consider the existing 25% or so tariffs on china already. The game manufacturers are already paying good-sized tariffs on the imported products. I’m not fan of tariffs but not a fan of panicking either.
Yes and no.
Retails costs are typically a multiple of the input costs because at each step a producer, a distributor, a retailer, has to factor in the cost of capital.
But that’s a very rough measure and demand obviously has elasticity.
Need to factor in the rest of the supply chains increases. The distributor when their costs were $3 may have sold it to the retailer for $6 and are now maybe selling it at $10.
Stegmaier is pointing out that tarrifs will not result in production moving to America. The cost to produce a game here is at least 5x the cost to produce the same game in China. The tarrif would need to be 400% in order for production here to be break even. Tarrifs will only raise prices.
Go to your local pawnshop and buy a second hand chess set.
No tariff, no need for additional accessories, and you can play for the rest of your life without spending another dime.
I’ve made 3-4 chess sets in my life. Between various youth groups, day cares, Sunday schools, and and classes for school I probably invented a half dozen or so games as part of a group. Probably oversaw another half dozen as an adult leader in the same role. This is strictly “games played on a (piece of card) board”. Various card, dice, and other games were not counted and probably push the total number of “games built from scratch” well above 50, if not into the hundreds.
Not that everybody should be forced to make their own chess set, that would be totalitarianism, but we aren’t talking about “Make your own chess set or don’t play.” we’re talking about “I want to play chess at the precise quality I want for the precise amount I’m willing to produced specifically without regard for any/all political ideologies and labor practices involved.” which has never really been a thing, much less one guaranteed by The Constitution.
More like bored games. Am I right?
hey we’re decluttering and I literally have RISK, Parcheesi and Scrabble from the mid-70s all in relatively awesome condition I don’t think I’ve opened any of them since the 90s if anyone affected by this game night inflation wants free games hit me up
Just threw a similar collection in the trash. If only I had known how valuable board games are my portfolio would be in the green.
I get them all [if and when I want them] as a digital download.
2022: BIDENFLATION IS KILLING AMERICA!!!!11!!!
2025: Higher prices are going to make us rich!
ZZZZZZZZ
Boo fucking hoo.
Do people really do game nights?
Hipsters.
But they’re not really people.
I thought they went extinct.
Most of them did commit suicide, yes.
Yes, a giant avocado toast meteor struck a goat yoga convention and wiped them out. All that left is mustache oil and the odd monocle.
We wait for weekends and do game days. Sunday we did Illuminati — classic, with expansion and gamer-composed variants. Slightly bigger cards custom-printed for one of us to better suit our old eyes, but not as big or fancy as INWO, which was never that popular with us. Just taught an old hippie friend the game too, to join us last Sunday.
Wish I could play more table games, but the presbyopia and cataracts are a serious inhibitor.
Dunno. Reason told me I’d never get to eat another avocado and they went on sale the next week. Still pretty cheap.
Easiest way to tell if you’re dealing with someone who took econ 101 and now thinks they are an expert but their argument starts with “assume everything but my hobby horse is static” to prove their hobby horse.
Those Chinese “high quality” dice.
This is like the second or third Reason article whining about the tears of manchildren who can’t play their games.
“The real challenge is that the United States simply isn’t equipped to support full-scale tabletop game production. There are a few domestic shops that can handle cards or small-run printing, but once you move into complex assemblies or high-volume tooling, it becomes prohibitively expensive.”
Maybe you should try writing a libertarian article for a change, and explain why – and whose fault it is – that such domestic endeavors are “prohibitively expensive.”
Are you counting the one about whether the NFL can fix its kickoffs?
Who the fuck is buying boardgames for only $25 bucks? You are if you want garbage.
Premium boardgames are $80 or more and have been for the last 4 years.
That may be the most oddly specific critique of Reason’s reportage all year. And I have no doubt you’re correct, because they get pretty much everything else wrong these days.
Why should I care if a bunch of commies get the tax increases they demand? Here is hoping this works to purge the space of the vermin.
1. No it won’t
2. It’s a board game. Is this the best you got for the massive harm tariffs will do? For those who oppose the tariffs this is the weapon you for them – a worst case scenario built around a *board game*.
This is as bad as you guys lazily all using the same example of the one idiot calling for genocide being deported. You had nothing better so you made *that guy* your poster.
>The real challenge is that the United States simply isn’t equipped to support full-scale tabletop game production
Shoulda bought that 3d printer then. You can get some nice SLA from Europe if you want detailed minis or you can get a Prusa or equivalent FFF – thus avoiding the Chinese tariffs.
+1
I saw AT’s repost of that sentence above and thought “So much for the 3D printing revolution.”
Game Night Just Got More Expensive
A $25 board game may soon hit the shelves with a $40 price tag because of tariffs.
*looks in crystal ball*
I see… a business opportunity!
Didn’t you read the article? It is impossible to make games here.
It’s impossible to make anything here. We need to just roll over and accept the Sino-Russian alliance as our new master. And then be tolerant of Iranian Islam killing us all. And while we await our inevitable demise, let’s give all of America’s money to the magical rainbow people so they can play make-believe and to the magical black people so they can buy rims to make up for slavery.
succinct!
Do Hangman and Dots-and-Boxes count as board games?
If the adults of my youth were to be believed, there were approximately as many kids playing chess via snail mail with their pen pals in the 60s, 70s, and 80s as there were kids sexting each other in the 00s, 10s, and 20s.
You mean Cheapass Games? (Which are indeed cheapass games.) Some good titles there, some clunkers.
“It’s expensive to do build business here”
Well, that’s it then. Import anything if domestic production takes too much effort and money. Don’t bother with deregulation, tax and business reform, and free market solutions.
China and the EU are the DOMINANT force in dice and board game manufacturing you say. Since we’re too retarded to make those in America, I guess we as consumers have no choice but to hold back our tears and play these games for free on the iphone or play something else like angry bird. Oh no, will tariffs also affect the cd and vhs market? What about tamagochis?
Wait a sec, there’s a possible solution here – those Chinese and European board game and grandfather clock makers can just move production to America. That way we don’t have to try to make our own things and those guys can dodge tariffs. That Donald Trump is a total Svengali!
Nintendo admitted that Switch prices were set before the tariff. The lunatics tried to sell a game key with no actual game for 80 bucks and 10 bucks for a tutorial.
“Even if a company wanted to invest in the infrastructure to try to make it happen, the short-term losses from the tariffs will eat too deep into their cash to make it possible.”
That’s just silly. It assumes that only those already in the business would invest in it, and new capital could not flow into the industry. Even if expansion were limited to those already in the industry, why couldn’t they relocate or expand into the USA?
Besides, the Illuminati control SJG. Or vice versa.
Guess what – pretty much none of the machinery used in manufacturing is made in the the US. That machinery is expensive and also subject to tarrifs. Why are inputs not exempt?
All the other countries need to do to really fk us from being able to manufacture here is ban export of manufacturing equipment to the US.
Virtually all of these games can be purchased at local thrift stores for less than $10.
Seems like Root (like others at Reason) is/are going to great lengths to scare unthinking naive Americans.
From 2015 to 2020, the company exited Brazil’s markets entirely because of the country’s import tax on video games.
Ah, so the reason I’ve heard about riots in Europe, the end of free speech and a two-tiered justice system in the UK, Ukraine conscripting its own people in the fight against Russia, and people fleeing oppression in Venezuela and Guatemala… but nothing about Brazil is because everyone in Brazil already died for lack of Nintendo Switch 2s that haven’t come out yet… because of Trump’s tariffs.
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