Aย block behind Franklin Street, upstairs from a Mexican grill, thereโ€™s a place: a warehouse-esque bar with concrete floors, wooden booths, and steel shelves packed with tabletop games.

The Gathering Placeโ€”so named by cofounders Don Tiver and Josh Goodsellโ€”is 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.

โ€œIt 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. โ€œLike, 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. Heโ€™s 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.

โ€œI was selling Magic cards as a side hustle since the beginning of 2019โ€”just to collect [limited-edition cards] I didnโ€™t get a chance to collect when I was a kid,โ€ Goodsell says. โ€œI 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 heโ€™s 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.

โ€œThen we found this space,โ€ Goodsell says. โ€œMe and Donnie walked in and we were instantly like, โ€˜Oh, this could actually work. If itโ€™s a bar and a game storeโ€™ โ€ฆ. I started running numbers and I was like, โ€˜This is actually a viable business model. Even if nobody walks in the bar for the first year, weโ€™ll still make money if weโ€™re doing our online sales.โ€™โ€

Goodsellโ€™s restaurant background allows him to provide what he calls โ€œwhite-glove service for nerds.โ€ Heโ€™s hands-off when he needs to be and always right there when someone needs something. The consensus among the barโ€™s regulars, of which there are many, is that the place is โ€œwelcoming.โ€ Although itโ€™s undoubtedly a gaming store, selling miniatures and RPG rule books, itโ€™s also a bar.

โ€œWe have a bunch of people that come in just for the atmosphere in here,โ€ Goodsell says. โ€œEven if youโ€™re not a gamer, not a Magic nerd, you donโ€™t know anything about D&D โ€ฆ. Thereโ€™s just a weird vibe in here thatโ€™s 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.

โ€œWhat 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 barโ€™s 30 taps.

โ€œWeโ€™re all kind of like a family around here,โ€ Lee says. โ€œWe have trans people, we have nerds, we have people who donโ€™t game at all, itโ€™s all different walks of life. Itโ€™s a safe place to be and not be looked at differently. Whenever I need to decompress from work, I come here. Itโ€™s my local hangout spot.โ€

Leeโ€™s 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 geekโ€™s paradise, but itโ€™s also a good place to โ€œdip your toe inโ€ if youโ€™ve never tried tabletop, Goodsell says.

โ€œItโ€™s 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. โ€œWeโ€™re a bar.โ€

The Gathering Place definitely doesnโ€™t pretend to be something itโ€™s 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.

โ€œWe grew up having a craft beer education that was pretty unique, because in New Jersey you werenโ€™t allowed to have a taproom until 2012,โ€ Tiver says. โ€œSo we constantly were inundated with stuff from all over the country, because the craft beer market was strong but you couldnโ€™t go local.โ€

In North Carolina, itโ€™s almost the reverse, Tiver says. Many of the barโ€™s 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 differentโ€”unique 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.

โ€œWe wanted to make the best of having 30 taps, because itโ€™s a lot,โ€ Tiver says. โ€œWe didnโ€™t want to just have beer. We wanted to have our wine on draft, ciders, even nonalcoholic stuff, because thereโ€™s a lot of younger players, thereโ€™s a lot of people that donโ€™t drink, and itโ€™s 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 barโ€™s 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.

โ€œWe do a modern-format Magic tournament on Wednesdays, which is pretty much the most popular constructed format in the Triangle, so itโ€™s got a pretty big draw,โ€ Goodsell says. โ€œThen on Thursdays, weโ€™ve got two D&D one-shots and a few campaigns that run, and thereโ€™s 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 itโ€™s 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 everyoneโ€™s name. Goodsell is quick to greet the next guy who comes through the doorโ€”Colin 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.

โ€œOh, yes! Youโ€™re the best dude,โ€ Goodsell responds, cradling the Run the Jewels T-shirt in his hands. โ€œHey, Colinโ€™s 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 Sheffieldโ€™s order.

โ€œItโ€™s a very welcoming atmosphere,โ€ Sheffield says. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t go out and just buy a concert T-shirt for somebody if I didnโ€™t feel like I was part of a community.โ€

Tiverโ€™s description of the Gathering Place is a little more colorful.

โ€œI like to think of it as the Foot Clan hideout from the first [Teenage Mutant] Ninja Turtles movie,โ€ he says with a chuckle. โ€œExcept for offering children cigarettes. And I guess thereโ€™s not a skate park inside. Other than that, itโ€™s the exact same.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s got that clubhouse sort of feel,โ€ he adds, on a more serious note. โ€œEspecially if people donโ€™t come here on purpose. They see nerd stuff on the wall and usually thereโ€™s hip-hop on, and theyโ€™re just like, โ€˜What the hell is going on here?โ€™ So I imagine itโ€™s just very unusual for a lot of people. But thatโ€™s what we like about it.โ€ย 


Support independent local journalism. Join the INDY Press Club to help us keep fearless watchdog reporting and essential arts and culture coverage viable in the Triangle.ย ย ย ย ย ย ย 

Follow Staff Writer Jasmine Gallup on Twitter or send an email to [email protected].

Jasmine Gallup is a freelancer for INDY, covering LGBTQ+ issues, social justice, and arts and culture. A Raleigh native, she also works as an editor for online media.