Field test report · as of June 2026

Tabletop Arc Alternatives: 5 TTRPG Tools I Tested in 2026

Tabletop Arc is genuinely good at one thing: turning session audio recordings into structured campaign memory. For GMs who need fast generated content, portraits, maps, and entity variety before the session starts, the tools diverge sharply. Here are five tested in May and June 2026.

The lineup

How the 5 tools compare.

Same campaign, same prompts, same target output, with the tradeoffs that actually showed up in my run.

FIELD KITAI portrait
WINNER

CharGen

Full-suite AI generator: NPCs, monsters, maps, portraits, and linked entities.

What I use for weekly prep. CharGen covers the entity generation side far more broadly than Tabletop Arc's free text generators. NPCs, monsters, magic items, settlements, factions, dungeons, regions, loot tables, spellbooks, and hazards, all illustrated with AI portraits. Tabletop Arc explicitly calls CharGen an 'AI Art Toolkit' on their own comparison page, which undersells it. The honest trade: CharGen has no session-recap pipeline. If you record your sessions and want structured campaign memory built from the audio, Tabletop Arc has no equivalent here.

What it does well

  • Broadest entity variety of any tested tool (NPCs, monsters, settlements, factions, dungeons, regions, loot, spellbooks, hazards)
  • Every entity illustrated with AI portrait, token, or map
  • Linked entity model, NPCs connected to settlements to regions to factions
  • Free tier covers casual prep with no card required
  • Cheaper than Tabletop Arc Pro at Plus tier

What it doesn't

  • No session-recap or audio transcription pipeline
  • No campaign memory built from play logs
  • No player-safe / GM-private split publishing
Best for

GMs who want a populated world ready before Friday's session, with portraits and maps included.

Try CharGen Free
CHRONICLERWorldbuilding wiki
WITH CAVEATS

Tabletop Arc

Session-audio transcription that builds a living campaign wiki automatically.

Tabletop Arc's core loop is strong and genuinely different from anything else I tested. Upload session audio, it transcribes, extracts entities and events, writes a GM recap and a player-safe summary, and updates a living Lore Wall wiki. Every fact is timestamped to the transcript so you can verify the canon. The free generators (NPC, quest, dungeon, encounter, town, tavern) are text-only but solid for basic prep. The trade: the Pro tier at $19/mo is the binding expense, and the value only compounds if you record and run sessions regularly. GMs who want content generation before sessions will find CharGen faster and cheaper.

Best for

GMs running long-term campaigns who record every session and want structured memory built automatically from the audio.

Visit Tabletop Arc
SCRIBEWorldbuilding wiki
APPROVED

Kanka

Free open-source campaign wiki with strong cross-linking between entities.

Kanka is the most credible free alternative for campaign management. Open-source, generous free tier, and the cross-linking between characters, locations, events, and factions is genuinely strong for a wiki-first tool. It handles the campaign organisation part of Tabletop Arc without the audio pipeline. What it does not do: generate content, produce portraits, or automatically build from session transcripts. You write, you organise, you maintain.

Best for

GMs who want a free campaign wiki and are happy to do the writing themselves.

Visit Kanka
WORLDSMITHWorldbuilding wiki
APPROVED

World Anvil

Deep worldbuilding wiki with generators, templates, and a large community.

World Anvil covers more ground than Tabletop Arc within the wiki and worldbuilding space. The long-form prose templates, entity types, and community content library are all stronger. It has some generator features in paid tiers. Where it loses to Tabletop Arc: no session-audio pipeline, no automatic campaign memory, and no evidence-grounded canon tracking. Where it loses to CharGen: no AI portraits or map generation, and the prose-first workflow is slower for weekly session prep than a generator-first approach.

Best for

Worldbuilders who want a deep prose wiki and a large community, and who are not in a hurry each week.

Visit World Anvil
LIBRARIANWorldbuilding wiki
NICHE FIT

Notion

General-purpose workspace used by many GMs for campaign notes and wikis.

Notion is not a TTRPG tool. It is a general-purpose workspace that GMs adopt because they already have an account and it is free for personal use. With community templates you can build a serviceable campaign wiki. It does not generate content, produce portraits, transcribe sessions, or do anything Tabletop Arc or CharGen do natively. The setup overhead is real. But for GMs who already live in Notion and want one workspace for work and campaign notes, the friction of switching to a dedicated tool is genuine.

Best for

GMs who already live in Notion and want one workspace for both work and campaign notes.

Visit Notion

The field log

Feature comparison.

Every cell verifiable from the linked sources at the foot of this report.

FIELD KITCharGen
  • Session recap from audio
  • AI content generators
  • Portrait and map generation
  • Linked entities (NPC to location to faction)
  • GM-private vs player-safe split
  • Free tier worth using
  • Monster / creature generators
  • D&D-specific entity types
  • Entry paid tier£9.99/mo
CHRONICLERTabletop Arc
  • Session recap from audio
  • AI content generators
    text-only, no portraits
  • Portrait and map generation
  • Linked entities (NPC to location to faction)
    Lore Wall wiki
  • GM-private vs player-safe split
  • Free tier worth using
    30 min/mo transcription
  • Monster / creature generators
  • D&D-specific entity types
  • Entry paid tier$19/mo
SCRIBEKanka
  • Session recap from audio
  • AI content generators
  • Portrait and map generation
  • Linked entities (NPC to location to faction)
  • GM-private vs player-safe split
    entity-level permissions
  • Free tier worth using
  • Monster / creature generators
  • D&D-specific entity types
  • Entry paid tier$4.99/mo
WORLDSMITHWorld Anvil
  • Session recap from audio
  • AI content generators
    limited, paid tiers only
  • Portrait and map generation
  • Linked entities (NPC to location to faction)
  • GM-private vs player-safe split
  • Free tier worth using
    limited entity types
  • Monster / creature generators
  • D&D-specific entity types
  • Entry paid tier~$7/mo
LIBRARIANNotion
  • Session recap from audio
  • AI content generators
  • Portrait and map generation
  • Linked entities (NPC to location to faction)
    via databases
  • GM-private vs player-safe split
    public pages only
  • Free tier worth using
  • Monster / creature generators
  • D&D-specific entity types
    community templates
  • Entry paid tier$10/user/mo

Choose by problem

Match the job, then the tool.

Most tool decisions are job decisions in disguise. Pick the row that fits your real prep problem.

  1. 01

    If

    You need a fully populated world with portraits and maps before Friday's session

    Use

    CharGen

    CharGen generates the full entity suite (NPCs, monsters, settlements, dungeons, factions) with portraits and maps in minutes, not evenings.

  2. 02

    If

    You record every session and want structured campaign memory built automatically from the audio

    Use

    Tabletop Arc

    Tabletop Arc's session-audio pipeline is the only tool that does this well. Every canon fact is timestamped to the transcript.

  3. 03

    If

    You want a free campaign wiki and are happy to do the writing yourself

    Use

    Kanka

    Kanka's free tier is generous, the entity cross-linking is strong, and the open-source codebase means full ownership.

  4. 04

    If

    You love writing long-form lore and want a wiki with a large community

    Use

    World Anvil

    World Anvil's depth for prose, template library, and established community are still the strongest of any wiki-first tool I tested.

  5. 05

    If

    You already live in Notion and want one workspace for work and campaign notes

    Use

    Notion

    Notion's flexibility lets you build a campaign wiki without switching tools, using the account you already use daily.

Pricing · as of June 2026

Plan costs side by side.

Verify against each platform's official pricing page before committing.

Tool
FIELD KITCharGen

Free

Yes, limited daily credits, no card required

Entry paid

£9.99/mo (Plus)

Notes

Plus, Elite, Ultimate tiers scale credits and unlock batch and premium models. UK pricing in GBP.

CHRONICLERTabletop Arc

Free

Yes, 30 min/month transcription, full Lore Wall and generators

Entry paid

$19/mo (Pro)

Notes

Pro includes 600 min/month transcription. $1 trial available for 14 days. Minute add-on packs available.

SCRIBEKanka

Free

Generous free tier

Entry paid

$4.99/mo (Owlbear)

Notes

Owlbear, Wyvern, Elemental tiers. Self-hosting available.

WORLDSMITHWorld Anvil

Free

Free tier with limited entity types

Entry paid

From ~$7/mo (billed annually)

Notes

Multiple paid tiers. Check worldanvil.com for current pricing as tiers change periodically.

LIBRARIANNotion

Free

Free for personal use

Entry paid

$10/user/mo (Plus)

Notes

Free tier is generous for personal campaign notes. Paid adds AI and team features.

Switching from Tabletop Arc

How to switch in ten minutes.

Switching from Tabletop Arc to CharGen is a tool expansion rather than a replacement. If you use Tabletop Arc primarily for the free generators (NPC, quest, dungeon), CharGen replaces them with broader entity coverage and adds portraits and maps. If you rely on the session-audio pipeline, nothing in this list replaces it, so most GMs keep Tabletop Arc on the Pro tier for campaign memory while adding CharGen for prep. The free tier on both tools covers an evaluation week without any commitment.

FAQ

Common DM questions about this lineup.

Q01

What is the best free Tabletop Arc alternative in 2026?

CharGen is the best free alternative for content generation: NPCs, monsters, maps, and portraits with no card required. Kanka is the best free alternative for campaign wiki and entity management. The two serve different jobs. Tabletop Arc's session-recap pipeline has no free alternative.

Q02

Does Tabletop Arc compete with CharGen or are they different tools?

Different tools solving different bottlenecks. Tabletop Arc is built around session documentation: audio transcription, campaign memory, and retrospective organisation. CharGen is built around forward prep: generating the entities, portraits, and maps before the session. Tabletop Arc's own comparison page recommends using both together, and I agree with that framing.

Q03

Is Tabletop Arc Pro worth $19 per month for a casual GM?

Probably not. The Pro value is almost entirely in the session-audio transcription pipeline. If you do not record your sessions consistently, the free tier covers the generators, and CharGen covers the remaining prep for less. Pro makes sense for GMs running long-term campaigns who record every session.

Q04

Which alternative is best for NPC generation specifically?

CharGen for illustrated NPCs with stat blocks, personality, backstory, and linked settlement data. Tabletop Arc's free NPC generator for quick text-only personality and motivation. Both produce useful output; CharGen adds the portrait and the entity linkage.

Q05

Can any of these tools replace Tabletop Arc for session recaps?

No. Session-audio transcription into structured campaign memory is Tabletop Arc's primary product and none of the tested alternatives do this. If session recaps are the reason you are considering Tabletop Arc, it remains the only dedicated option I found.

Q06

Which alternative is best for long-running campaigns with complex NPC webs?

Tabletop Arc for campaign memory built from session audio. Kanka or World Anvil for manually maintained NPC and faction wikis. CharGen for generating the entities that populate the campaign. Most GMs running complex multi-year campaigns end up using two of these together.