
Aย block behind Franklin Street, upstairs from a Mexican grill, thereโs a place: a warehouse-esque bar with concrete floors, wooden booths, and steel shelves packed with tabletop games.
The Gathering Placeโso named by cofounders Don Tiver and Josh Goodsellโis exactly that: a place in Chapel Hill for people to come together and hang out after a long day at work, drink a beer (or a hibiscus tea), and talk.
โIt reminds me of all of my friendsโ basements combined,โ says Zach Thomas, a regular who is about to sit down for his weekly Dungeons & Dragons campaign. โLike, we were doing the exact same activities. It feels very homey. It feels nostalgic.โ
The Gathering Place, which opened in February, started as a place to sell Magic: The Gathering cards, says Goodsell. Heโs been playing the massively popular tabletop card game since he was eight. Today, some of the rarest cards in the game are worth thousands, sometimes tens of thousands, of dollars.
โI was selling Magic cards as a side hustle since the beginning of 2019โjust to collect [limited-edition cards] I didnโt get a chance to collect when I was a kid,โ Goodsell says. โI started buying small collections, keeping the cards I wanted, and then flipping everything else. By the end of 2019, I had amassed a pretty modest $25,000 collection with an initial investment of $500. I just kept turning it over in my free time.โ
Goodsell got into the Magic business full-time in 2020, after he lost his job as an executive chef, a casualty of the coronavirus pandemic. He was doing a ton of sales with a pretty thin profit margin, but it was enough to live off of, he says. In 2021, he recruited Tiver, a guy heโs known since the fifth grade.
Together, the two started thinking about opening a brick-and-mortar store so they could expand their online business. Running a cost-benefit analysis, though, it looked like renting a physical space would be too expensive.
โThen we found this space,โ Goodsell says. โMe and Donnie walked in and we were instantly like, โOh, this could actually work. If itโs a bar and a game storeโ โฆ. I started running numbers and I was like, โThis is actually a viable business model. Even if nobody walks in the bar for the first year, weโll still make money if weโre doing our online sales.โโ
Goodsellโs restaurant background allows him to provide what he calls โwhite-glove service for nerds.โ Heโs hands-off when he needs to be and always right there when someone needs something. The consensus among the barโs regulars, of which there are many, is that the place is โwelcoming.โ Although itโs undoubtedly a gaming store, selling miniatures and RPG rule books, itโs also a bar.
โWe have a bunch of people that come in just for the atmosphere in here,โ Goodsell says. โEven if youโre not a gamer, not a Magic nerd, you donโt know anything about D&D โฆ. Thereโs just a weird vibe in here thatโs very welcoming and warm and fuzzy.โ
Case in point: Kendall Lee, a Chapel Hill resident with long braids and painted nails who wandered into the Gathering Place by accident.
โWhat do you think, Donnie, about two months ago?โ Lee asks now, turning to Tiver.
Since then, Lee has been a daily visitor, warming a stool directly across from the barโs 30 taps.
โWeโre all kind of like a family around here,โ Lee says. โWe have trans people, we have nerds, we have people who donโt game at all, itโs all different walks of life. Itโs a safe place to be and not be looked at differently. Whenever I need to decompress from work, I come here. Itโs my local hangout spot.โ
Leeโs not a big gamer, but he quickly bonded with their fellow regulars, even trying their hand at the classic, strategy-based board game Azul. The Gathering Place is a gaming geekโs paradise, but itโs also a good place to โdip your toe inโ if youโve never tried tabletop, Goodsell says.
โItโs not your typical local game store that might feel pretentious or exclusive, where if you look a certain way or act a certain way or talk a certain way, you might feel out of place,โ he says. โWeโre a bar.โ
The Gathering Place definitely doesnโt pretend to be something itโs not. Goodsell, who has a classic mohawk, jumps from customer to customer in a scuffed pair of Adidas, selling dice and answering questions about the newest Magic release. Tiver, a guy with sleeve tattoos, bright blue earplugs, and a 1980s cult science-fiction T-shirt, is behind the bar pulling pints. The speakers pump out a mix of hip-hop and metal.
The bar itself has a smorgasbord of local brews, from a Belgian Tripel made in Sanford to a saison made in Saxapahaw. Tiver likes to include out-of-state offerings too, he says, like an ale from Oregon and wheat beer from Maine.
โWe grew up having a craft beer education that was pretty unique, because in New Jersey you werenโt allowed to have a taproom until 2012,โ Tiver says. โSo we constantly were inundated with stuff from all over the country, because the craft beer market was strong but you couldnโt go local.โ

In North Carolina, itโs almost the reverse, Tiver says. Many of the barโs patrons are familiar with local brews but have never tried, say, a Narragansett lager from Rhode Island. Regardless, Tiver likes to have things on tap that are a little bit differentโunique alternatives to well-worn beers like Blue Moon and Miller Light.
Some of those alternatives are even non-beers. In addition to the multitude of local brews, the Gathering Place offers wine, sake, and cider on tap. It also has coffee, soda, kombucha, and tea. The in-house cold brew is particularly delicious.
โWe wanted to make the best of having 30 taps, because itโs a lot,โ Tiver says. โWe didnโt want to just have beer. We wanted to have our wine on draft, ciders, even nonalcoholic stuff, because thereโs a lot of younger players, thereโs a lot of people that donโt drink, and itโs still nice, socially, to be able to walk around with a goblet of coffee or root beer or something.โ
Contrary to traditional business patterns, Wednesdays are one of the barโs busiest nights. This week, there are some 25 people bustling around, some at the bar, some at long card tables in the back. The draw? Tabletop games, of course.
โWe do a modern-format Magic tournament on Wednesdays, which is pretty much the most popular constructed format in the Triangle, so itโs got a pretty big draw,โ Goodsell says. โThen on Thursdays, weโve got two D&D one-shots and a few campaigns that run, and thereโs always new faces coming in.โ
The bar also holds nerd trivia on Fridays and alternates between stand-up comedy showcases and karaoke on Saturdays. In a reverse of the normal struggle, Goodsell and Tiver are trying to get more people to stick around on weekends. Whether itโs on a game night or a weekend, however, the vibe is the same.
The Gathering Place is your classic down-the-street haunt, a place where everybody knows your name. And it seems like Goodsell and Tiver really do know everyoneโs name. Goodsell is quick to greet the next guy who comes through the doorโColin Sheffield, a middle-aged man with a thick beard. In response, Colin simply unfolds a bright pink T-shirt, some merch from a recent concert he attended.
โOh, yes! Youโre the best dude,โ Goodsell responds, cradling the Run the Jewels T-shirt in his hands. โHey, Colinโs drink is on the house.โ
Tiver immediately pauses in his explanation of how he and Goodsell founded the bar, moving to pour the man his drink. He already knows Sheffieldโs order.
โItโs a very welcoming atmosphere,โ Sheffield says. โI wouldnโt go out and just buy a concert T-shirt for somebody if I didnโt feel like I was part of a community.โ
Tiverโs description of the Gathering Place is a little more colorful.
โI like to think of it as the Foot Clan hideout from the first [Teenage Mutant] Ninja Turtles movie,โ he says with a chuckle. โExcept for offering children cigarettes. And I guess thereโs not a skate park inside. Other than that, itโs the exact same.โ
โItโs got that clubhouse sort of feel,โ he adds, on a more serious note. โEspecially if people donโt come here on purpose. They see nerd stuff on the wall and usually thereโs hip-hop on, and theyโre just like, โWhat the hell is going on here?โ So I imagine itโs just very unusual for a lot of people. But thatโs what we like about it.โย
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