About TavernPost
A cross-system marketplace and community for TTRPG creators.
TavernPost is a marketplace and community built for tabletop RPG creators. Whether you write adventures, paint maps, design characters, or build entire campaign settings — this is your place to publish, sell, and share your work with people who actually play the games you love.
We built TavernPost because TTRPG creators deserve better than generic digital storefronts. Your work is specific, your audience is passionate, and your tools should reflect that. TavernPost is designed from the ground up for the way tabletop creators actually work — with system-specific browsing, built-in commission workflows, and a community that understands what a "five-room dungeon" is without needing it explained.
What you'll find here
TavernPost is system-agnostic at heart. We ship with dedicated tags and browsing support for five popular systems — Dungeons & Dragons 5e, Pathfinder 2e, Call of Cthulhu, Vampire: The Masquerade, and Cyberpunk Red — but nothing stops you from publishing content for any other system, setting, or entirely homegrown world. If you made it for a table, it belongs here.
Built for creators
Creators keep 85% of every sale. No tiers, no paywalls, no premium plans — every creator gets the same deal. List as much as you want, price it how you want (free or $5+), and get paid via Stripe Connect on a standard payout schedule.
Commissions are built into the platform. Set up your commission menu, receive offers, negotiate terms, deliver work, and get paid — all without leaving TavernPost. The entire workflow is tracked and auditable, with deposit handling, rework negotiation, and dispute resolution built in.
The community
TavernPost isn't just a storefront — it's a community. Heart the work you love. Leave comments on listings and portfolios. Follow creators to see their new releases in your feed. Browse curated featured content on the homepage.
We also run a Community Feedback board where you can suggest features, report bugs, and vote on what gets built next. TavernPost is built in the open, and the community shapes what it becomes.
Content Transparency
At TavernPost, we welcome creators of all kinds — whether your work is hand-drawn, digitally painted, or AI-assisted. What matters to us is that the community can make informed decisions about what they're buying and supporting. That's why we require transparency around AI-generated content. We don't judge the tools you use. We do believe you owe your buyers honesty about them.
How it works
When a creator uploads an image, they can tag it as AI-generated, human-made, or leave it untagged. We also automatically run it through Illuminarty, an AI image classifier, as a second opinion. Depending on what the creator said and what the classifier sees, one of three badges can appear on the image.
The three badges
The creator told us this image is AI-generated. This is always the primary signal — if a creator says their work is AI-made, we believe them and show this badge immediately.
The creator didn't tag this one, but our classifier thinks it's AI-generated. We err on the side of transparency and show it — if we're wrong, the creator can add the human-made tag to settle the dispute.
The creator tagged this as human-made, but our classifier disagrees and thinks it's AI. When the two signals conflict, we show the disagreement so buyers can make their own call. We don't automatically take a side.
How we tune the detector
Illuminarty returns a confidence score from 0 to 1 — how likely it thinks an image is AI-generated. We classify images using two cutoffs:
- 50% or higher → flagged as AI. We err toward transparency. Real TTRPG art tends to sit clearly on one side or the other, so anything past the middle is worth surfacing.
- 30% or lower → treated as human-made. The classifier is confident. No badge shown on untagged images in this zone.
- Between 30% and 50% → treated as inconclusive. No badge shown. These sit in a narrow middle where the classifier genuinely isn't sure, and we'd rather stay silent than accuse.
Every classified image also stores its raw score so we can revisit the cutoffs as we learn from real usage.
Detection isn't perfect, and that's okay
No AI classifier catches everything. Skilled AI output with post-processing can slip past, and some styles of human art can fool the model. That's fine — TavernPost isn't trying to be the AI police. Creator honesty is the primary signal and detection is a supporting signal, not a courtroom.
If you're trying to decide whether to follow or buy from a creator, the best move is to look at their profile as a whole. How much of their catalogue is declared AI? How often do their images get auto-flagged? Patterns tell a clearer story than any single image ever will.