- 178 campaigns
- 63 Backerkit
- 0 Crowdfundr
- 2 Gamefound
- 113 Kickstarter
- $4,021,004.70 raised
- $1,712,583.76 on Backerkit
- $0.00 on Crowdfundr
- $20,154.16 on Gamefound
- $2,288,266.78 on Kickstarter
- Types of campaigns
- 11 accessories
- 43 adventures
- 9 campaign settings
- 28 Holiday Markets
- 1 magazine
- 1 platform
- 1 podcast
- 3 reprints
- 50 supplements
- 29 systems
- 1 translation
- 1 zine
- 60 distinct systems used (14 original)
- 68 campaigns (38.20%) used D&D 5E and raised $795,500.44 (19.78% of all money raised in December)
- 38 campaigns used AI in some form (21.35% of total) and raised $125,773.25 (3.13% of all money raised in December)
- 25 of these were D&D 5E campaigns, accounting for 36.76% of all 5E crowdfunding campaigns
- Campaigns were based in 17 different countries
- Top 3: 89 in USA, 30 in UK, 11 in Canada
- Singleton countries: Japan, New Zealand, Portugal, Singapore
Backerkit's December
The top 5 campaigns on Backerkit in December were:
- Twilight Sword by Two Little Mice ($822,492.30 from 5,189 backers)
- Infernals: Crowned by Hellfire for the Exalted 3E RPG by Onyx Path ($191,285 from 2,126 backers)
- Mausritter Junk City by Exalted Funeral Press, Games Omnivorous, and Losing Games ($168,735 from 1,956 backers)
- DCC+5E Crowdfunding Exclusives & Mystery Gifts! by Goodman Games ($66,155 from 570 backers)
- Loot Tavern Lighting Sale by Loot Tavern Publishing ($46,756 from 355 backers)
Gamefound's December
The 2 campaigns on Gamefound in December were:
- Vileborn - Das düster-heroische Rollenspiel by Ulisses Spiele ($19,874.72 from 208 backers)
- 1130+ Fantasy Battle maps for TTRPG and VTTRPG by Agnesagraphic ($279.44 from 7 backers)
Kickstarter's December
The top 5 campaigns on Kickstarter in December were:
- Life After Everything: Astro Oceans 🌊 Tarot Tabletop RPG by Gifted Ocean ($363,871 from 2,418 backers)
- Fighting Fantasy - Solo Adventure Gamebooks - Set 2 by Steve Jackson Games ($278,223 from 3,977 backers)
- Apocalypse World: Burned Over by Vincent Baker ($215,104 from 3,763 backers)
- The Dungeon Reignited. Set of 2 Book of Battle Mats for RPG by Loke Battle Maps ($168,212 from 1,569 backers)
- Tome of Mystical Tattoos III for D&D 5e by Karl Nicolas ($152,837.86 from 1,810 backers)
December 2023 vs 2024 vs 2025
| 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Campaign count | |||
| Backerkit | 7 | 35 | 63 |
| Kickstarter | 112 | 130 | 113 |
| Money pledged | |||
| Backerkit total | $116,631.00 | $1,898,104.11 | $1,712,583.76 |
| Backerkit average | $16,661.57 | $54,231.55 | $27,183.87 |
| Backerkit median | $8,599.00 | $13,703.65 | $5,091.89 |
| Kickstarter total | $3,062,243.35 | $2,213,471.01 | $2,288,266.78 |
| Kickstarter average | $27,341.46 | $17,026.70 | $20,250.15 |
| Kickstarter median | $4,507.04 | $3,266.92 | $3,602.00 |
| AI | |||
| Campaign count | 32 | 37 | 38 |
| Money pledged | $150,217.33 | $145,101.71 | $125,773.25 |
| D&D 5E | |||
| Campaign count | 48 | 73 | 68 |
| Money pledged | $999,475.20 | $917,977.49 | $795,500.44 |
Backerkit has come a long way since December 2023, but it's really interesting to compare its Dec 2024 vs Dec 2025 considering that both Mausritter Month and their Holiday Market happened in 2025. Let's break down the stats of both:
- Mausritter Month
- $323,197.86 pledged (18.87% of money pledged on Backerkit in December)
- 16 projects (all successfully funded)
- $20,199.87 average
- $9,570.55 median
- Holiday Market (TTRPGs only and limited to projects actually providing something gameable and not just merch)
- $261,890.54 pledged (15.29% of money pledged on Backerkit in December)
- 28 projects (no funding goals)
- $9,353.23 average
- $3,255.65 median
Mausritter Month was clearly a success by any metric (all projects funded, pretty good average, really high median), but it notably raised less money from fewer projects than either Mothership Month. Not only that, but you would think that these kinds of initiatives would boost the overall money pledged on Backerkit, but instead there was a slight decrease from 2024 to 2025. It is definitely too early to say that backers are experiencing Month fatigue the same way I am, but these numbers might explain why Backerkit is ramping up their promotional events: they need them to boost otherwise flagging traffic.
I'm going to be getting into it in a 2025 wrap-up post, but this year was not great money-wise for TTRPG crowdfunding. There are more projects than ever and less money to go around, and nothing from the past 6 months suggests that's going to change anytime soon. These promotional events from Backerkit are relatively easy ways to get users on their platform, entice creators to put their campaigns there, and the money that comes from it will keep the floor from falling out of their bottom line. Obviously I can't speak to how healthy their other types of campaigns look, but I can't imagine they're looking all that much better than TTRPGs right now. A combination of US economic uncertainty and tariffs playing havoc with both international shipping and component production is going to make everyone just feel less than great about putting money down on something that isn't a sure bet.
Which brings me to the Holiday Market. I personally don't like it. It makes complete sense for Backerkit and the creators involved, but any move by a crowdfunding platform towards becoming a sales platform just doesn't make me feel good. Especially because the whole premise was that anything you 'back' will ship within just a few weeks and (theoretically) arrive in time for Christmas. So these aren't even campaigns for reprints! It's just a promotional 'preorder' event, even more so than many 'crowdfunding' campaigns are these days! Again, makes complete sense for creators to participate since it's an easy way to sell some extra inventory you might have lying around, but that just seems like something that doesn't belong on a crowdfunding platform.
There's not really a bigger conclusion to draw from this in the end, at least not yet. My brain is pretty goopy just from general post-holiday post-New-Year post-travel stuff, so I'm really saving up anything particularly relevant for the full year review coming sometime soon.
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