Most of us end up using whatever is at hand as a catch-all: coffee cups, candle lids, random bowls, and that works until you actually need to find a specific SD card or binder clip. A lot of the best small organizers are hiding in other categories, and these magnetic hexagon token trays, sold as board game accessories, are really just well-designed hexagonal dishes with magnets and dividers.
Each tray is a hexagon with magnets hidden in its edges so it snaps to its neighbors in a honeycomb. You can build a cluster that fits the corner of a monitor stand or the space in front of a keyboard, then peel one off and move it closer when you need it. The magnets keep the layout coherent instead of letting dishes drift apart over time, which is a small but meaningful improvement over loose containers.
Designer: BoardGeekFox
Each unit is a two-part organizer, a black magnetic base, and a colored insert that drops in. The insert ships with two dividers, a straight one that splits the tray into two sections and a Y-shaped one that splits it into three. You can run it as one big bin, two equal compartments, or three wedges, depending on whether you are holding paper clips, sticky-note flags, or three different pen nibs.
The color options for the inserts let you treat the trays as a visual system. You can assign colors to categories, blue for tech bits, yellow for writing tools, red for things that need attention, or just build a small rainbow that makes the corner of your desk feel more like a layout than a pile. The black bases keep everything grounded, so the color reads as an accent, not chaos.
The trays are 3D-printed in PLA with embedded magnets, which keep them light but give them a satisfying snap when they connect. On a smooth desk, that matters, a cluster of loose bowls tends to slide and separate, while a magnetic cluster holds its shape when you nudge things around. The slight texture of printed PLA also keeps small items from skittering around inside each compartment, especially paper clips and staples.
The modularity plays nicely with shifting work modes. On a heavy project day, you can build a larger honeycomb and park it next to your main work area, each tray handling a different set of parts. On quieter days, you can break the set into smaller clusters and spread them across a shelf, a secondary desk, or a nightstand. The hexagon footprint is compact enough that a single tray works as a bedside catch-all for rings and earbuds.
These trays sit in a sweet spot between rigid drawer inserts and random containers, structured enough to keep things sorted but flexible enough to reconfigure when your habits change. For anyone who likes their desk to feel a little more like a considered layout and a little less like a junk drawer, a handful of magnetic hexagons with dividers is a surprisingly simple way to give every small object a place to land, while keeping the option to rebuild the whole composition whenever the mood or the project shifts.
The post Hexagon Board Game Trays Make Perfect Magnetic Desk Organizers first appeared on Yanko Design.

