7 Best AI Fantasy Games Worth Your Time in 2026

Weekend Team
Written by
Weekend Team
Published on: 
June 29, 2026
4
 min read
Table of Contents

Gather your friends, not to scroll and fiddle with options, but to dive straight into a world of dragons, goblins, and bad decisions. That’s where an AI fantasy game comes alive for me, so I pulled together 7 favorites that hurl you into magic-soaked quests shaped by your crew’s choices.

7 best AI fantasy games: At a glance

Game Best for Platform pricing Strengths
1. Wit’s End (on Weekend Games) Friends who want epic quests without rulebooks Fire TV, Samsung, LG (Weekend app) 7-day free trial, then $12.99 per month Big screen fantasy nights driven by your group’s imagination
2. AI Dungeon Solo dreamers who want infinite fantasy Web, iOS, Android Paid plans from $14.99/month Free-form text adventures where any world you type can exist
3. Friends & Fables Online parties that want an AI game master Web browser Free tier; paid plans from $19.95 per month D&D-inspired platform with an AI GM and deep worldbuilding tools
4. Infinite Worlds Readers who love long-running epics Web browser Free starting credits; additional credits purchased as needed Structured interactive sagas with rich fantasy settings
5. AI Tales: Dungeon Story RPG Mobile dungeon crawlers who play in short bursts Android, iOS Free download with in-app purchases Fast runs through fantasy dungeons with big swings from each choice
6. SoloDungeon Solo TTRPG fans who want a narrator Web plus tabletop tools Free download on Itch.io; requires your own AI access Classic dungeon rules with an AI guide for scenes and surprises
7. Text playgrounds Tinkerers building custom fantasy realms Web tools and browsers Mix of free tiers and paid plans from about $10 to $25 per month Flexible prompts for crafting your own spell-slinging story engine

Note: Always double-check current prices and regions before you buy or subscribe.

1. Wit's End (Weekend app)

What it does: Wit's End turns your TV into a fantasy campfire where your group throws wild ideas into the story and watches them spin into full quests in minutes.

Best for: You and your friends want the buzz of a D&D-style campaign without character sheets, and you feel happiest when everyone on the couch gets a say in what happens next.

Wit's End sold me on a random Tuesday after work. We tossed it on the Fire TV, then I joked about a broke knight who owes a goblin casino a mountain of gold, and the game turned that throwaway line into debt collectors, shady taverns, and bad decisions in every scene.

By the time we stopped, that disaster knight had become a running bit we still bring up any time someone mentions game night.

Key features

  • Generates fresh adventures, characters, and plots every session for groups on Fire TV, Samsung, and LG
  • Storylines that echo your table’s personality and running gags
  • A short warmup that gets new players comfortable in minutes
Pros Cons
Perfect intro for D&D-curious friends who hate dense rulebooks Needs at least one player ready to talk and improvise
Everyone can shape the night instead of one person running the show Not a match for people who only want quiet play with strict rules

Bottom line

Wit's End earns the top slot on my list because it turns a random weeknight on the couch into a story your friends still quote later.

{{cta-witsend}}

2. AI Dungeon

What it does: AI Dungeon hands you an empty text box and lets you conjure any fantasy setup you want, then reacts to each line you type with new story beats and twists.

Best for: You enjoy solo sessions where you write wild ideas, push a world around with your words, and never run into a hard limit on what your character can try.

I once started with a simple “wandering ranger in a haunted forest” prompt and ended up running a sky ship, negotiating with dragon courts, and rebuilding a ruined city in one messy saga.

The joy comes from that freedom to pivot on a whim. One scene you sneak into a cultist lair, the next you retire and open an inn for retired adventurers, and the story still tries to keep up.

Key features

  • Free-form prompts that support any fantasy tone, from cozy to grim
  • Preset scenarios if you want a gentle on-ramp instead of pure blank page
  • Active community that shares seeds, settings, and tricks
Pros Cons
Huge creative space for writers and roleplayers Heavy typing and reading can tire some players out
Great way to test new characters before you ever bring them to a table Long runs need a bit of self-editing to stay coherent

Bottom line

AI Dungeon belongs in your toolkit any time you feel a new character or world itching at the back of your brain.

3. Friends & Fables

What it does: Friends & Fables gives you an AI game master, a flexible rules layer, and a browser-based table so you can run D&D-inspired fantasy campaigns online.

Best for: You already love tabletop fantasy, you game with friends across different cities, and you want help with narration, tracking, and worldbuilding while you still keep control.

I think of Friends & Fables as a co-GM instead of a replacement. You define the world, set expectations, and then let the AI handle descriptions, background chatter, and some of the heavy lifting on NPCs.

The situation leaves more brain space for actual choices and drama, which matters a lot when you have a full party on voice chat.

Key features

  • AI-driven game master that adapts to your party’s decisions and style
  • World tools for locations, factions, and recurring characters
  • Support for multi-session campaigns with persistent worlds
Pros Cons
Slashes prep time while keeping that tabletop feeling Interface and options can feel like a lot for brand new players
Great fit for long-distance groups who want something deeper than a one-shot Less instant than pure "tap and read" style apps

Bottom line

For fantasy groups who want an online home base, Friends & Fables delivers a flexible AI partner that supports your stories instead of trying to replace them.

4. Infinite Worlds

What it does: Infinite Worlds focuses on structured, long-running AI-driven stories where your character’s background and choices slowly build a full-scale fantasy saga.

Best for: You prefer long arcs over quick hits and see your hero more like the lead in a novel than a disposable character in a quick dungeon crawl.

Infinite Worlds rewards people who sink in. You pick a setting, shape your character, and then watch the story weave your past into quests, relationships, and strange callbacks.

Sessions feel more like chapters than levels, which hits hard when you want to live in one world for a while instead of hopping between apps.

Key features

  • Rich fantasy setups with room for custom tweaks
  • Visual touches that help you keep faces and places straight
  • Progress that carries across many nights instead of one short sprint
Pros Cons
Great for readers who want interaction but still love text-heavy stories Not ideal when you only have ten minutes to fill
Gives solo players a genuine sense of long-term growth You need to stay mentally present, or the story starts to blur

Bottom line

Infinite Worlds nails that feeling of living inside one long fantasy saga instead of hopping between throwaway runs.

5. AI Tales: Dungeon Story RPG

What it does: AI Tales drops you into quick fantasy dungeon runs on your phone, where every choice has immediate stakes and each run takes just a short window of time.

Best for: You want to raid a dungeon while you wait for coffee, then pocket your phone and move on with your day.

AI Tales plays like an AI RPG stack of mini modules in your pocket. You drop in, make bold choices, grab loot, or blow up your own plan in spectacular fashion. Because sessions stay short, you never feel stuck in the middle of a huge arc when you need to stop.

Key features

  • Mobile-friendly format that respects small chunks of time
  • Fantasy scenarios tuned for clear, high-impact decisions
  • Runs that end cleanly instead of hanging over you
Pros Cons
Easy to fit around work, school, or commute Less depth than PC or TV-based fantasy games
Great way to test risky play styles without a big commitment Focus stays on dungeons more than wide open worlds

6. SoloDungeon

What it does: SoloDungeon blends a fantasy ruleset with a responsive narrator so you can run solo tabletop-style crawls without needing a human game master in the room.

Best for: You enjoy rolling dice and tracking gear on paper, but you still want descriptive scenes, fresh hooks, and surprises you didn’t script yourself.

I love how SoloDungeon keeps the tactile side of tabletop gaming intact.

You bring your character, roll for challenges, and then ask the narrator to describe what that success or failure looks like in the world. It fills in the sensory details so you can focus on decisions and mood instead of trying to talk to yourself.

Key features

  • Classic fantasy dungeon play built for one player
  • Structured prompts that turn ChatGPT into a narrator for rooms, creatures, and encounters
  • Simple way to mix your favorite tools with a responsive guide
Pros Cons
Great bridge between solo journaling games and digital tools You juggle both mechanics and prompting, which some players may not enjoy
Lets you keep full control of pacing and rules More bare bones visually than app-first experiences

Bottom line

If you want solo fantasy runs that feel less lonely, SoloDungeon gives you a low-key narrator who never cancels game night.

7. Text playgrounds and custom tools

What they do: Text playgrounds give you a blank slate and a lot of knobs to tune, so you can build your own house style AI fantasy game instead of following anyone else’s template.

Best for: You enjoy tinkering with structure and prompts as much as you enjoy playing, and you want a space to prototype worlds, factions, and campaign hooks.

I treat these tools like a lab. Some nights I draft a tiny village cursed by talking fog. Other nights I sketch out pantheons and magical laws just to see how the system reacts. They shine when you want to explore ideas with no stakes and then later turn the best ones into full campaigns or published settings.

Key features

  • Fine control over tone, rules, and reference material
  • No strict loop, so you decide what counts as a “session”
  • A natural home for GMs and writers who like to experiment
Pros Cons
Maximum creative control You build more scaffolding yourself
Perfect for people who plan to run or write their own fantasy content Not ideal for players who just want to click and go

Bottom line

Text playgrounds turn loose ideas into real fantasy prototypes, from throwaway prompts to worlds you might run for years.

How to pick your next AI fantasy game

You have plenty of options to choose from. Line them up with the kind of night you actually want:

  • If you want an unpredictable fantasy session that feels like a campaign, start with Wit's End and let your group talk heroes into existence.
  • If you crave solo freedom, choose AI Dungeon or a text playground and see how far your prompts can stretch.
  • If your crew gathers online and loves tactical turns, give Friends & Fables a shot as your AI-assisted GM.
  • If long arcs and slow-burn drama make you happiest, settle into Infinite Worlds for a while.
  • If you just want something short and punchy, keep AI Tales or SoloDungeon handy for quick runs.

Once you know whether tonight calls for a full saga, a quiet solo dive, or a quick dungeon sprint, the right pick becomes obvious.

Turn your smart TV into a dungeon crawler worth delving into

If you want that fantasy energy sitting right next to quiz shows, music battles, and word games, the Weekend Games app turns your TV into an instant AI fantasy game launcher. You open one app, pick a mood, and you already have something the whole room can play.

Other games you can spin up on Weekend include:

  • Wit's End, where your group speaks heroes into life and chases a fantasy story that grows from your ideas.
  • Jeopardy!, which lets everyone shout answers and argue over who nailed it first.
  • Song Quiz, a rapid-fire name-that-tune-and-artist showdown that usually ends with half the room singing.
  • Wheel of Fortune, a familiar word puzzle format that even non-gamers slip into easily.
  • Karaoke (on Roku), for when someone finally grabs a mic or phone and decides to headline the living room.
  • 20 Questions (on Roku), a cozy guessing game that pulls the whole room into one shared mystery.

Every game feels built for real-world hangouts, so you can move from dragons to trivia to sing-offs without touching cables or extra hardware. Install Weekend on your Roku, LG, Samsung, or Fire TV, start the 7-day free trial, and give your crew a simple way to start new adventures from the same couch.

FAQs

Do I need a console to play Weekend fantasy games on my TV?

No, you can install the Weekend Games app on a compatible smart TV, use your remote or smartphone as the mic, and jump straight into fantasy, trivia, and music games.

Can I play Wit's End with a big group?

Yes, Wit's End works great when you have a full room, because everyone can pitch hero ideas, suggest actions, and share one big story on the screen.

Does Weekend still make sense if I already love tabletop fantasy?

Yes, Weekend, and Wit's End in particular, gives you that “friends around a table” feeling in a format you can launch in minutes on a TV.

Can I use Weekend for more than fantasy nights?

Absolutely. You can slide from story-driven adventures to quiz shows, music games, and word puzzles in the same app, which makes it ideal for mixed groups.

How do I get the Weekend Games app on my smart TV?

To get Weekend Games on your smart TV, open your TV’s app store, search for “Weekend Games,” install it, start the free trial, then open the app, browse the library, and fire up your first game in a few clicks.

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