This was not a blog that I had been planning on working on. I had been thinking about working on something about Looney Lab’s Pyramid Arcade.
Then I saw that PnP Arcade was shutting down on January 29, 2026.
It’s the end of an era.
PnP Arcade was an online store that sold print and play game files. I’m not sure how many different publishers used the site but I’m sure I wouldn’t have heard of a lot of them if it wasn’t for PnP Arcade.
The store started in 2018 and I know I was actively following it and using it by 2019. So I got a good six years of out it, checking every Friday for new games to see if there were any that interested me. Their Black Friday sale became a tradition for me.
I don’t think I can overstate the impact PnP Arcade had on my gaming life. By 2019, Print and Play had become a major focus for my gaming. I was actively looking at design contests and Kickstarters that had PnP options. However, PnP Arcade took me to the next level, looking at products that were intentionally created for home creation. So much of what I had been looking at were prototypes with the intent of being eventually physically published. In theory, the games at PnP Arcade were the finished product.
Frankly, the site let me explore whole new worlds of gaming. And between the backlog of games that I haven’t made and tried yet and the games that I want to keep on playing, even with the site closing down, I have years of entertainment ahead of me.
The notice that went up stated that life had just gotten too busy to keep on running the store. Which I can easily believe and completely accept. PnP Arcade had to have been passion project and a lot of work to keep it going, and I find it hard to believe that it generated a ton of profit, although I would be delighted to be wrong. If Jason Tagmire and Jason Greeno decide that they are burnt out on publishing games and want to sell aluminum siding door-to-door, they have already made a positive impact on my life.
Now, I do understand that PnP Arcade is going to continue in some form on Substack. Which means I have to figure out what the heck Substack is. However, it’s clearly going to be different.
Thank you to both Jasons for keeping it going as long as you did.