Comparison

Board Game Turn Tracker vs. Turn Timer

A turn timer answers how long a turn is taking. A turn tracker answers whose turn it is. Some tables need one, some need both, and confusing the two leads to the wrong tool.

01

A turn tracker is about order

Turn trackers keep the table oriented around the current player, next player, and handoff. They are useful even when nobody is trying to rush turns.

02

A turn timer is about pace

Timers help when turns are taking too long or when a game benefits from time pressure. They can be stressful if the table only needed clarity.

03

NexTurn is hardware-first turn tracking

NexTurn can support timer behavior, but its main value is visible turn state through physical nodes at each player position.

Available now

Buy the NexTurn Tabletop System

Finished hardware is the main purchase path. DIY digital files are available for makers who want to build their own nodes.

NexTurn 4 Node Bundle

4 Node Bundle

$299

A ready-to-play 4-node starter pack for smaller board game nights.

Available now - US only View option
NexTurn 6 Node Bundle

6 Node Bundle

$457

A finished 6-node setup for groups that often play 5-6 player games.

Available now - US only View option
NexTurn DIY Digital Files

DIY Digital Files

$65

Firmware, printable housing files, and activation for makers building their own NexTurn nodes.

Available now - US and international View option