NextGen Games
Boardgaming supplies and card sleeve protectors

Boardgame extras

We're bought in a small number of boxes and dice sets as shown in the table below for club use, and have access to zip bags if you need some.

We also have replacement tile draw bags for games like Carcassonne, Eclipse, and Tigris & Euphrates (included in the table below).

For FREE boardgaming resources click here.

If you are interested in any of these items please contact us here.

We also list many other items on Facebook (including accessories we don't list on TradeMe) here.

Details Photo
Marble dice sets
10 x 16mm marble-style dice.
RPG dice sets (7/set)
D4, D6, D8, D10, D12, D20,
and D10 percentage dice.
Deck box medium
Easily holds 110 unsleeved cards.
67 x 37 x 102mm outer dimensions.

Great for situations where space is at a premium (eg., storing sets of cards inside a boardgame box).
Deck box large
Easily holds 150 unsleeved cards.
5cm x 7cm x 10cm inner dimensions.
Small stackable boxes
57 x 45 x 23mm in size.

Great for storing board game components for quicker board game setup and packing away.
Small stacking component boxes
6cm x 5.5cm, height 3.5cm in size.

Indented lids help with stacking.

Great for storing board game components for quicker board game setup and packing away.
Large card and component boxes

Large enough for standard sized cards like Magic and Pokemon, or larger again like Thunderstone, as well as for smaller cards like Yi-Gi-Oh, US, Euro, and US Chimera sizes.

Also great for storing board game components for quicker board game setup and packing away. Perfect size for player cards and components for Dune Imperium (thanks for the feedback Seth!).
Small stackable boxes
7cm x 7cm x 2cm.

Durable non-hinged lids that double as trays during play. No hinges means these can be used many thousands of times.

These are also genuinely stack-able boxes with small legs on each corner that don't interfere with storage but 'lock' the boxes in place so they stack without easily sliding off each other when stored upright.
Medium stackable boxes
7cm x 7cm x 3.5cm.

Durable non-hinged lids that double as trays during play. No hinges means these can be used many thousands of times.

These are also genuinely stack-able boxes with small legs on each corner that don't interfere with storage but 'lock' the boxes in place so they stack without easily sliding off each other when stored upright.
Medium stackable boxes
7cm x 7cm x 5cm.

Durable non-hinged lids that double as trays during play. No hinges means these can be used many thousands of times.

These are also genuinely stack-able boxes with small legs on each corner that don't interfere with storage but 'lock' the boxes in place so they stack without easily sliding off each other when stored upright.
Medium stackable boxes
7cm x 7cm x 8cm.

Durable non-hinged lids that double as trays during play. No hinges means these can be used many thousands of times.

These are also genuinely stack-able boxes with small legs on each corner that don't interfere with storage but 'lock' the boxes in place so they stack without easily sliding off each other when stored upright.
7.1mm acrylic board and card game cubes - we find these ideal for Terraforming Mars two or three player games since we otherwise often run out of player cubes.
also available in grey, black, and purple
Coffee coloured 15 x 20cm draw bags in a soft velvet material. Also available in smaller sizes.

Can be used as replacement tile draw bags for games like Tigris & Euphrates, Eclipse, and Carcassonne, monster chit bag for Eldritch Horror, Chaos Bags for Arkham Horror: Living Card Game, or even just for storage.


Our Quacks of Quedlinburg tokens became visibly worn after only a dozen or so games.

Some had also started to separate as per the photos below:

Our solution? We use and sell coin capsules that fit the tokens snuggly as below.

Compare the new token at the bottom with the ones on the left that are from the base game, and the ones on the right that are covered.


To use these:

Open a coin cover, put the token into the half with the notch with the flat side of the token facing downwards, then carefully push the smaller coin cover part into the larger one and you are done.

There are 215 chips in base game, and 153 more in Herb Witches expansion. We didn't use coin protectors for the witches' coins since they don't go in the bags.


Feedback from BGG for the Alchemists expansion:

You don't need capsules for the tokens in Alchemists; they are purely extras to replace damaged white chips from the base game and to provide Locoweed tokens if you don't own Herb Witches. However, Alchemists comes with 5 more Locoweed than Herb Witches, so you may want to add 5.

The tokens in my copy of The Alchemists as well as a friend's copy are both slightly larger than the tokens in the base game or Herb Witches. 21mm capsules still work, but you have to put them in upside down (sloped side of the punch down) and press them in as they are half a millimeter too big.








The stackable 7cm x 7cm x 3.5cm and non stackable 40 piece box work nicely with Eclipse:

(Thanks to Jonathan Sim for the photos)







Boardgame Resources

If you've been boardgaming a while you'll probably have seen someone with a customised game.
The best example of this is Agricola, a lovely game but the tokens are bland!
eg., a black cube = pigs, brown = cows, black token = stone, yellow = grain, and so on.

You can do something about that with Mayday's tokens (which we can bring in on request).

You can also print free labels of your own like those in the image below from Boardgamegeek:

I've included these here for your convenience:

resource stickers,
resource multipliers, and
animal multipliers.

I have other customizations, cheatsheets, scoresheets, and rules errata for Agricola, Citadels (Game of Thrones character theme set), Endeavor, Ora Et Labora, Powergrid, Puerto Rico, Terraforming Mars, and Axis and Allies. Contact me here if you would like them (free).


Other Boardgaming Websites


The Esoteric Order of Gamers

The Esoteric Order of Gamers make video reviews and LOTS of game cheat sheets (including for some quite heavy games), rules summaries, reference sheets, reviews, foamcore plans and more.


Out of the Closet Gaming

A site dedicated to "creating gaming resources to help you get your board games out of the closet, on to the table and most importantly to get played", providing cheat sheets that are streamlined versions of board game rule books aiming to logically guide new players through the steps of a game with less confusion than a read through the rule books often entails.

















Sleeve Guides

Card Sleeve Sizes

Club website





Random games we play



Contact Details

Mark Hodge, Phone 03 479 8598 or 021 614 134, 71 Viscount Road, Waldronville, Dunedin, New Zealand