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Dungeon Trap Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

The dungeon trap generator gives tabletop RPG dungeon masters ready-to-run traps and puzzles without burning prep time. Each result includes a trigger mechanism, a detection cue, and a vivid description you can read straight from the screen at the table. Set the difficulty to Easy for low-level corridors, Medium for mid-dungeon tension, or Deadly for vault antechambers where one wrong step should sting. Generate up to a batch at once and scatter them across a crypt, wizard's tower, or bandit lair. Good traps tell a story — a pressure plate rigged with sleeping gas says something about who built this dungeon and why. Use the output as written, or treat each result as a spark and swap the trigger or damage type to match your faction's lore.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Select a difficulty level from the dropdown, or leave it on Any to get a mixed spread of trap types.
  2. Set the count field to how many traps you want — three suits a single zone, five or more works for a full dungeon.
  3. Click Generate to produce your trap list, each with a description, trigger, effect, and detection hint.
  4. Copy individual traps directly into your notes, or paste the full list into your session prep document.
  5. Re-generate as many times as needed — each result is randomized, so you can keep until the traps fit your dungeon's tone.

Use Cases

  • Stocking a D&D 5e tomb with Deadly traps clustered around the inner burial chamber
  • Quickly generating three Medium traps mid-session when players enter an unplanned dungeon wing
  • Building a gauntlet of escalating difficulty for a high-lethality OSR one-shot
  • Adding Easy environmental puzzles to a wizard's tower that reward Investigation over combat
  • Populating a Pathfinder 2e heist vault with mechanical hazards that feel faction-appropriate

Tips

  • Generate at two difficulty tiers — one easy, one hard — and alternate placement to create tension rhythm in long corridors.
  • Use the detection hint verbatim as your read-aloud text when a player succeeds on a Perception check; it saves improvisation mid-scene.
  • Combine two generated traps into a single room: one triggers the other, forcing players to solve them in the right order.
  • Traps with area effects (gas, flooding, collapsing ceilings) work best in rooms with multiple exits so players face a meaningful choice.
  • Save your favorite outputs in a 'trap library' document — reusing them in different dungeon contexts saves prep time across campaigns.
  • For puzzle-focused traps, reduce the damage output to zero and reframe the trigger consequence as a locked door or blocked passage.

FAQ

how do I run dungeon traps in D&D 5e without them feeling cheap

Use the generator's detection cue as the specific detail players notice on a successful Perception check, then reward clever roleplay alongside the Thieves' Tools roll. Traps feel fair when players had a real chance to spot them — the key is telegraphing danger before the floor gives way, not hiding it entirely.

can I use these traps in Pathfinder 2e or OSR games

Yes — the output is system-neutral by design. For Pathfinder 2e, assign a relevant skill for detection and convert damage dice to match the hazard rules. For OSR systems, a standard saving throw handles the mechanical effect and the description works as written flavor.

how many traps should I put in one dungeon

One or two per major area works for most dungeons, with a denser cluster near treasure vaults or boss antechambers. Generating five at once and choosing your favorites keeps variety high without slowing the session — mix two difficulty tiers to create rhythm and prevent player fatigue.