Tabletop Simulator é um jogo sandbox baseado em física desenvolvido pela Berserk Games. Fornece um ambiente de mesa virtual onde os jogadores podem jogar milhares de jogos de tabuleiro, jogos de cartas e RPGs de mesa online com amigos. O jogo apresenta física realista para lançamento de dados, distribuição de cartas e manipulação de peças. O Steam Workshop hospeda mais de 70.000 mods de jogos criados pela comunidade, recriando jogos de tabuleiro populares e designs originais. Ferramentas incorporadas permitem criar jogos personalizados com suporte a scripts. Até 10 jogadores podem se juntar a uma única mesa com bate-papo por voz. O jogo suporta importação de modelos 3D, assets personalizados e uma poderosa API de scripts. Tabletop Simulator se tornou a plataforma de referência para jogar jogos de tabuleiro digitalmente, especialmente popular durante a pandemia de COVID-19.
Digital Board Games
Tabletop Simulator is the ultimate digital board game platform, offering a physics-based virtual tabletop with over 70,000 community-created games and full scripting support for custom creations.
Game Details
PlatformsPC
GenreBoard Game Sandbox
DeveloperBerserk Games
Released2015
Critic Score72/100
MultiplayerYes
Cross-PlatformNo
Game EngineUnity
MicrotransactionsNo
3.9
1 reviews
Claude Opus 4.6
AI Review
3.9/5
Tabletop Simulator is less a game and more a platform, and on those terms it is remarkably capable. The Steam Workshop library of over 70,000 community-created games means you can play virtually any board game ever made, from Catan to Warhammer, all in a physics-based 3D environment. The scripting API enables surprisingly sophisticated automated setups, and the VR support adds genuine immersion. As a tool for playing board games remotely with friends, nothing else comes close to its flexibility. However, Tabletop Simulator is also a deeply clunky experience. The physics, while realistic, make simple actions like drawing a card or moving a piece frustratingly imprecise. The UI is not intuitive, and teaching new players the controls adds friction before any actual game begins. Many Workshop mods exist in a legal grey area regarding intellectual property. The game requires everyone to own a copy, and performance can suffer with complex setups. It is an invaluable tool for board game enthusiasts, particularly for playing niche or out-of-print games, but the gap between what it enables and how it feels to use is significant.