Backgammon Resurgence: Why the Game Is Booming Again (2026)

Backgammon is having a cultural comeback. We explore why the game is surging in popularity in 2025–2026, from New York cafés to London clubs and global social media.

Backgammon is one of the oldest games in the world — and right now, it is having one of its biggest cultural moments since the 1970s boom. From the first backgammon café in New York City to luxury designer sets fetching thousands of pounds, to packed tournament halls across Europe and the Middle East, backgammon is everywhere again. Here is why.

Key Takeaways

  • Backgammon is experiencing a significant revival in 2024–2026, driven by [social clubs](/articles/backgammon-social-clubs/), luxury branding, and social media
  • Major media — the Financial Times, The Times, Time Out New York — have all covered the backgammon comeback
  • The first dedicated backgammon café opened in New York City in January 2026
  • Tournament participation is growing globally, with record fields at events in Monte Carlo, London, and the US
  • Backgammon's appeal spans demographics: from young urban professionals to retirees and high-fashion circles
  • The game's combination of skill and luck makes it socially accessible in a way chess is not

The Numbers Don’t Lie

Backgammon’s resurgence is not anecdotal. Multiple indicators point to sustained growth:

  • Tournament participation: The World Backgammon Championship in Monte Carlo regularly draws record fields. USBGF-sanctioned events across North America have seen year-on-year growth in registrations since 2022.
  • Online play: Backgammon Galaxy’s active player base has grown significantly. Google Trends data shows steady increases in backgammon-related searches from 2022 to 2026.
  • Retail: Luxury backgammon sets from designers like Hermès, Gucci, and bespoke makers are selling out in premium markets.
  • Media coverage: Between 2024 and 2026, the Financial Times, The Times, Forbes, and Time Out New York all ran features on backgammon’s comeback.

The New York Café Scene

In January 2026, the first dedicated backgammon café opened in New York City — drawing national press coverage and immediate popularity. The café concept — a social space centred on the game, with sets at every table — mirrors what has existed in Istanbul, Beirut, and Athens for centuries, but brings it to Western urban culture for the first time at scale.

New York’s broader café and social club scene has embraced backgammon enthusiastically. Brooklyn, in particular, saw a reported dispute between two competing backgammon clubs in early 2026 — covered by the New York Post — suggesting the community had grown substantial enough to develop its own rivalries.

London’s Club Explosion

London has seen a parallel surge. Private members’ clubs and social venues have added backgammon corners. The UK Backgammon Federation reported increased interest in its 2026 nationwide tour (20+ events). The English Riviera Open in February 2026 sold out.

The Financial Times ran a December 2025 piece on how backgammon had become a status symbol in London’s social scene — a deliberate alternative to poker and chess nights that projects sophistication without aggression.

The Middle East and Mediterranean: Always There

Backgammon (called tavla in Turkey, shesh besh in Israel and parts of the Arab world, nard in Iran and Central Asia) never went away in its heartland. The game is played daily in cafés from Istanbul to Cairo to Tehran. What has changed is the West’s rediscovery of a game these cultures have maintained continuously for over a thousand years.

Several of the world’s top competitive players come from Turkey, Greece, Israel, and Iran — countries where children grow up watching and learning the game as a family tradition.

The 1970s Comparison

This isn’t the first time backgammon has boomed in Western culture. The 1970s backgammon craze — centred on New York, London, and the French Riviera — was remarkable:

  • Backgammon parties replaced bridge parties in socialite circles
  • Prince Alexis Obolensky (dubbed “the father of modern backgammon”) organised the first open tournaments
  • The World Backgammon Championship in Las Vegas drew celebrity attention
  • Books, magazine features, and endorsements exploded

The 1970s boom faded partly because the doubling cube and match play strategy were not well understood, and partly because backgammon lost the media cycle. Today’s revival is more durable because:

  1. Online infrastructure keeps players connected globally
  2. Software analysis (XG, GNU) allows self-improvement without expensive tutors
  3. Social media provides constant community and content
  4. Established competitive structure (ABT, BgF, WBC) provides ongoing events

Why This Generation Is Playing

Several cultural forces explain why backgammon appeals specifically to the current moment:

Analog in a Digital World

After years of screen dominance, there is a documented backlash toward physical, tactile experiences. Vinyl records, film photography, and tabletop games all benefit from this trend. Backgammon — with its beautiful boards, leather pieces, and face-to-face play — is perfectly positioned.

Skill + Luck = Social Accessibility

Chess is too intimidating for casual play: the better player almost always wins, and beginners feel helpless. Pure luck games (Snakes and Ladders, slots) are mindless. Backgammon sits perfectly in between — beginners can beat experts occasionally, keeping it fun, while experts still dominate over time.

Status Object

A beautiful backgammon set is a conversation piece and a status signal. Designer sets have become lifestyle objects in the same way that watches, sneakers, and coffee equipment are. Hermès’ backgammon sets sell for £4,000+. Bespoke artisan sets command £10,000+.

Poker Fatigue

The poker boom of the 2000s left a generation of players looking for a next game with genuine strategic depth and social play. Backgammon offers both, with a broader demographic appeal.

The Luxury Market

The luxury backgammon set market has expanded dramatically:

  • Hermès, Asprey, Lalique, and dozens of bespoke makers offer high-end sets
  • Custom boards in leather, wood, marble, and exotic materials
  • Designer collaborations between backgammon and fashion houses
  • Art-edition sets as collector items

For everyday players, good sets remain accessible — a solid club-quality set can be found for £60–£200.

Paris, Berlin, and the Continental Wave

The revival isn’t confined to London and New York. Across the Atlantic and the Channel:

Paris: The city’s café culture has embraced backgammon, with several dedicated backgammon evenings now a fixture in Marais and Saint-Germain venues. The French Backgammon Federation reports growing membership and media interest since 2023.

Berlin: Germany’s largest city has a thriving backgammon scene concentrated in Prenzlauer Berg and Mitte. The German Open attracts players from across Central Europe. Berlin’s coworking spaces have adopted backgammon as a team-bonding activity.

Los Angeles: LA’s backgammon scene has grown through celebrity association. Several high-profile entertainment figures have spoken publicly about playing backgammon, and Beverly Hills private clubs have added backgammon to their amenity offering.

The Social Media Effect

Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have played a significant role in the current revival:

  • Beautiful boards go viral. A striking Hermès or artisan set photographed on the right surface generates hundreds of thousands of impressions. Backgammon has become aesthetically photogenic in a way that chess — with its uniform pieces — is not.
  • Tutorial content performs. Backgammon how-to videos consistently attract high view counts, particularly from the 25–40 demographic discovering the game for the first time.
  • Influencer adoption. Interior design and lifestyle influencers frequently feature backgammon sets as home décor — driving aspirational purchase behavior.
  • Community content. Reddit’s r/backgammon has grown from a small niche to an active community. Instagram accounts dedicated to backgammon boards regularly attract significant followings.

Investment and Collectibles

The luxury end of backgammon has taken on investment characteristics:

  • Hermès backgammon sets retain value and are actively traded in secondary markets. A Hermès set purchased in 2015 can sell for 2–3× its original price today.
  • Vintage sets from the 1970s backgammon boom — particularly signed tournament sets — have attracted collector attention at auction.
  • Bespoke artisan sets from makers in Turkey, UK, and Italy command premium prices and waitlists of months.
  • Limited editions from fashion collaborations (Dior, Versace, Louis Vuitton) are treated as luxury goods with built-in scarcity.

This investment dimension has attracted a demographic not traditionally associated with board games: high-net-worth collectors who see backgammon sets as a lifestyle asset alongside watches, wine, and art.

What This Means for the Game’s Future

The current revival differs from the 1970s in one crucial way: infrastructure. Online play, global ratings, software analysis, and established federations mean backgammon now has the tools to sustain growth rather than fade again.

Tournament calendars are fuller than ever. New clubs are forming in cities that previously had none. Young players who learn the game online can quickly find live competition. The community is larger, more connected, and better resourced than at any point since the 1970s.

Frequently Asked Questions

A combination of social media, luxury branding, café culture, and analog gaming trends has brought backgammon back into mainstream awareness in Western markets. The game never left the Middle East or Mediterranean.

When did the backgammon revival start?

Noticeable growth began around 2021–2022 and has accelerated through 2025–2026. The opening of the first New York backgammon café in January 2026 was widely covered as a milestone.

Is backgammon a luxury game?

It has luxury associations (designer sets, private clubs) but is also completely accessible. A good beginner set costs £20–£50, and online play is free.

How is today’s revival different from the 1970s boom?

Online infrastructure, rating systems, analysis software, and established federations mean today’s revival has the foundation to sustain itself rather than fade with media trends.

The Middle East (Turkey, Israel, Lebanon, Iran) and Eastern Europe have uninterrupted traditions. In the West, London and New York are leading the current revival, with growing scenes in Paris, Berlin, and Los Angeles.

Is competitive backgammon growing?

Yes — tournament fields are at record levels. The World Backgammon Championship, Monte Carlo Open, and major national events all report growth in participation and prize money.


Further Reading