TTRPG Example Library
Hundreds of structured archetypes across eight categories. Every example is canonized, tagged, and linked into the AI memory layer for tabletop campaigns — drop them into your Lore Wall, remix with a generator, or use them as continuity seeds.
What are these examples for?
Every Tabletop Arc example is a curated TTRPG archetype — an NPC, quest, dungeon, town, tavern, item, encounter, or battlemap — written for evidence-grounded continuity. Drop one into your Lore Wall and it becomes a canonical entity in your campaign memory layer, linked to recaps, episode timelines, and a living wiki that grows session over session.
NPCs
51 examples- Smiling Assassin
- Guild Master
- Imperial Defector
Quests
50 examples- Wedding Disaster (Quest Hook)
- Magical Experiment (Quest Hook)
- Rescue The Prisoner (Quest Hook)
Dungeons
50 examples- Tower Of Mirrors
- Blood Ziggurat
- Drow Outpost
Battlemaps
50 examples- Thieves Rooftop
- Ruined Coliseum
- Icy Lake Rumble
Taverns
49 examples- Haunted Tavern
- Bardic College Pub
- Underdark Mushroom Hall
Items
50 examples- Gauntlet Of The Fallen
- Rune Marked Shield
- Hag Bargain Ring
Towns
50 examples- Imperial Outpost
- Mountain Pass Stop
- Abandoned Mine Town
Encounters
50 examples- Kobold Trapsmiths
- Skeleton Patrol
- Ogre Bridge Toll
Hand-built example arc
See a complete Tabletop Arc campaign with five episodes, 14 NPCs, and 6 locations — all linked.
Open Phandelver example arc →Related on Tabletop Arc
Pillar guides
Campaign continuity
- Pillar guide
AI campaign continuity
How AI keeps a multi-month TTRPG campaign coherent: structured canon, evidence-grounded recaps, and a living wiki.
- Positioning
The AI memory layer for tabletop campaigns
What "memory layer" means for TTRPGs and why it beats one-off generators for long campaigns.
- Continuity
Persistent campaign memory
Build a canon ledger that compounds session-over-session and never loses an NPC again.