Where to Share Your D&D Character Online (And Actually Get Noticed)
By Jan | March 2, 2026 | 8 min read
You've spent hours on this character. Maybe dozens of hours. You know their voice, their history, the scar on their left cheek and the story behind it. You've written backstory that nobody asked for and developed opinions on their favorite tavern food.
And the only people who know your character exists are the four other players at your table.

Maybe you've tried sharing your character online before. Posted the backstory in a Discord server where it scrolled away in ten minutes. Uploaded a HeroForge screenshot to Reddit where it got three upvotes and disappeared. The character sheet sits in a Google Doc that even you forget exists sometimes.
There's nowhere for D&D characters to actually live online. No permanent home. No page that's theirs. No way to share a link and say "this is who they are" without dumping a wall of text into a chat window.
What Players Actually Want When Sharing Characters

I've talked to hundreds of D&D players about their characters. The same desires come up over and over.
A permanent page, not a post that scrolls away. Discord messages disappear into the void. Reddit posts get buried. Players want somewhere their character can exist indefinitely. A link they can revisit years later when the campaign is a memory.
Visual presentation, not a wall of text. Character sheets are functional. They're not beautiful. Players want their character to look like a character, not a tax form.

The ability to share a link. "Check out my character" should be a click, not a fifteen minute explanation. Send the link. Done.
Some form of acknowledgment. It feels good when someone else cares about your character. A like. A comment. A heart. Proof that the creative work mattered to someone other than you.
The Hall of Heroes: A Home for Your Character
![]()
The Hall of Heroes is a community gallery I built for D&D players who want their characters to exist somewhere real.
Every submitted character gets their own page. Their name, their portrait (whatever image you have), their race and class, their campaign, and their story. The whole thing is designed to make characters feel like characters, not entries in a database.
Anyone can submit. Anyone can browse. There's no barrier to entry. You don't need professional art. You don't need to have played for years. If you have a character with a story worth sharing, they belong in the Hall.
The gallery is searchable by race and class. Want to see every Tiefling Warlock other players have created? Filter for it. Looking for inspiration for your next Dragonborn? See what others have done.
And every character can be hearted by other visitors. It's a small thing, but seeing that number tick up feels good. Someone found your character. Someone cared enough to click.
How It Works
Submitting takes about five minutes.
You enter your character's name, race, class, and level. You add the campaign they're from (or "homebrew" if you're running your own thing). Youwrite their story. Could be a paragraph. Could be a page. However much you want to share.
You upload an image. This can be anything. A portrait you commissioned. A HeroForge screenshot. A sketch you drew on a napkin. AI art you generated. Whatever visual represents your character right now. The Hall doesn't judge.
You give us your email (so we can notify you if you win the monthly giveaway), and you're done.
Your character immediately gets their own page in the Hall. You get a unique link that goes directly to them. Share it wherever you want. Party group chat. Discord server. Twitter. Your mom who doesn't understand D&D but pretends to be interested.
What You Can Do With Your Hall Entry
Share the link in your D&D group chat. "Hey, I submitted Gillic to this character gallery. Go heart him." Takes ten seconds. Everyone in your party can see exactly who your character is, beyond the stats on the sheet.
Generate a share card. The Hall creates a 1080x1350 image with your character's portrait, name, story snippet, and campaign. Perfect for Instagram, Discord, or anywhere you want to show off your character visually. The card looks good. It doesn't look like a screenshot of a form.

Use it as your character resume. Joining a new campaign? Send the DM your Hall link instead of explaining your character in a message. It's cleaner and it shows you're serious about the character.
Look back on it years from now. Campaigns end. Groups drift apart. But your Hall entry stays. Three years from now, when you're feeling nostalgic about that one character who died saving the party, their page will still be there.
Browsing for Inspiration

The Hall isn't just for submitting. It's for browsing.
Filter by race and class to see what other players are doing with the same archetype. Read backstories that approach the same concept from completely different angles. Find your next character idea by seeing what resonates.
I've seen players discover characters in the Hall that inspired entire new campaigns. A backstory that sparked an idea for a DM. A race and class combo someone hadn't considered before. The more characters in the Hall, the more useful it becomes for everyone.
It's also just fun to scroll through. D&D players are creative. The stories people write about their characters are genuinely interesting. Some are dramatic. Some are funny. Some make you want to play in that campaign yourself.
The Monthly Spotlight Giveaway

Every month, one character from the Hall gets featured at the top of the page. The player who submitted them wins a free portrait.
Here's how it works:
- Every submitted character is automatically entered
- Every heart your character receives gives you a bonus entry
- The more hearts, the better your chances
- One winner is announced at the end of each month
The featured character stays at the top of the Hall for the entire following month. Maximum visibility. And the winner gets a custom portrait of their character, on the house.
Past winners are displayed on the page. This is real. Someone actually wins every month. It could be you. Or it could be your friend's character that you submitted as a gift. (Yeah, you can do that.)
Your odds improve the more you share. Every heart is a bonus entry. Send your link to your party. Post your share card on social media. The more people who discover your character, the better your chances.
Your Character Has a Story Worth Sharing
The Hall of Heroes is free. Submitting takes five minutes. Your character gets their own page, their own link, and a shot at winning a free portrait every month.
Submit Your CharacterFrequently Asked Questions
Do I need professional art to submit?
No. You can submit with any image that represents your character. HeroForge screenshots, AI generated art, personal sketches, photos of miniatures, whatever you have. The Hall is about the character and their story, not the quality of the image. Some of the most hearted characters in the Hall were submitted with simple screenshots.
Can I submit multiple characters?
Yes. Each character gets their own entry and their own page. You can submit as many as you want. Players with multiple campaigns sometimes submit their entire roster. Each character is a separate entry in the monthly giveaway, so more characters means more chances.
How do hearts work?
Anyone browsing the Hall can heart a character they like. Hearts are limited to one per character per device, so they're meaningful. Each heart your character receives gives you a bonus entry in the monthly giveaway. You can see how many hearts your character has on their page.
When is the next winner announced?
Winners are announced on the last day of each month. The featured character stays at the top of the Hall for the entire following month. There's a countdown timer on the Hall page showing exactly when the next announcement happens.
Can I update my character's entry after submitting?
If you need to make changes, reach out and I'll update it for you. Characters evolve over campaigns. Stories grow. If your character has changed since you submitted, we can update the entry to reflect who they are now.
Can I submit a character from a campaign that ended?
Absolutely. Some of the best entries in the Hall are from campaigns that ended years ago. The Hall is as much about preserving character legacies as it is about active campaigns. Your retired characters deserve a home too.
Your Character Deserves More Than a Character Sheet

You've put real creative work into this character. Hours of thought, pages of backstory, moments at the table where they felt genuinely alive. That work deserves to exist somewhere permanent.
The Hall of Heroes is that place. A page for your character. A link to share. A community of players who get why this stuff matters.
Submit your character. Share the link. See what happens.
Enter the Hall
Free to submit. Five minutes to complete. Your character gets their own page forever.
Submit Your Character NowAbout the Author
Jan is the artist behind FramedFantasy and the creator of the Hall of Heroes. She built the Hall because she wanted a place for D&D characters to live online that didn't already exist. After completing over 500 character portraits, she's seen firsthand how much players care about their characters and wanted to give everyone a way to share that, whether they have professional art or not.