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Pathfinder 1E Paizo sets price of Pathfinder RPG PDF at $9.99!!!!!

gamerprinter

Mapper/Publisher
Not talking about the Adventure Paths...

I'm pretty sure nobody here is implying a cheaper version of the Adventure Path subscriptions, only the PFRPG Handbook PDF itself - and only to nonsubscribers as paid subscribers who buy the hardbound get the PDF for free as it is.

GP
 
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Twowolves

Explorer
Don't get ahead of yourself -- James Jacobs and other folks at Paizo have been fairly clear that a reasonably priced Pathfinder Adventure Path PDF subscription (i.e. cheaper than buying a subscription to the dead tree version) is not in the works.

Of course, if you subscribe to the print version of their adventure paths, you get a 30% discount from cover price and a FREE PDF of each issue. That's not quite the same, but it ain't nuthin' neither.
 

TheAuldGrump

First Post
Hmmm, it was already my intent to get both the PDF and the print versions of Pathfinder. A $10 price on the PDF certainly does not change that equation. :)

Pathfinder is one of only two new game purchases that I have planned for this year, the other being FantasyCraft. I will likely be getting the print and PDF of that as well.

And I do not think that I am in a small minority among those who purchase the PDFs (Though I suspect that the number of folks purchasing the PDF is a small minority vs. the number of people buying just the print version.)

There may be a certain percentage of people who are convinced to buy the print copy once they peruse the PDF - spending $10 to take a nice long look is much less expensive than spending $50 and not being happy with your investment. And if you run out and buy the print copy then you will still have the PDF to lug around in your laptop.

But I suspect that most will just purchase the print version, and that most will do so either through a brick and mortar bookstore such as Borders or Barnes & Noble (if it is made widely available in the book trade) or through the internet from Amazon.

The Auld Grump
 

seankreynolds

Adventurer
Ok then, the better phrase would be cost per unit sold...Let's ignore pathfinder for a moment....As gameprinter mentions, you still have a cost to produce a PDF so why wouldn't you have a cost per unit sold?

The printing companies (hereafter called "the printer" or "the printers") that Paizo and Wizards work with (at least, they did when I worked at Wizards) actually have you create a high-res PDF rather than a print prototype. The printers make the book from this PDF.

So, cost to produce high-res PDF for the printer to turn into a book = $X
Cost to produce low-res PDF for sale-download: two clicks, net cost $0

So for people who make printed products, the cost to produce a downloadable PDF is effectively zero.

Even if you're just using RPGnow.com or Lulu to make POD versions of your books, you're basically giving them your high-res files, which you already had to produce to make the product in the first place. It's not really an added cost.

Now for some personal evidence. My book Curse of the Moon was published as a PDF in May 2006. It sold about 100 copies on RPGnow/DriveThruRPG in the first three months (generally the peak time for a new book), and it's generally sold anywhere from 1-5 copies per month every month since then. So, for a book that I published over three years ago, it's still generating a trickle of income... income that doesn't cost me anything in terms of time, warehousing, or printing. It's free money, and in theory five years from now it could still be selling. As this wasn't a print book, my cost is paid of purely from PDF sales (there really isn't a cost per unit because I'm not creating a specific number of physical units among which I'm distributing my cost), with the expectation I would sell Y copies in a certain period of time. That cost was paid off sometime in those first three months. And even if I made COTM available in print-on-demand from Lulu.com or whatever, my cost per unit would still be zero because all I'd have to do is send the high-res PDF to the POD company (cost = none, it's been paid off) and start generating free income there, too (because the sunk cost for the book is paid off and as long as I'm pricing my POD book above how much it costs to print it, I'm making a profit).

As someone else pointed out, the cost of making the Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook is sunk into the price of the print version. PDFs of Paizo's print products can't be "loss leaders" because calling something a "loss leader" implies you're losing money selling it at that price. PDF sales of print books are just free income on top of your expected income from the print run; you can't be selling something at a loss when the cost to make it is $0. And Paizo's set the PDF price of the PFRPG Core Rulebook low in order to encourage people to try the new game, people who might otherwise balk at a $50 hardback. And if those people like it, they may buy the print version--either directly from Paizo.com, or from their FLGS.

(Disclaimer: I work for Paizo, if ya didn't know that.)

(Also: Go buy COTM, it's a good book. :))
 
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Mark

CreativeMountainGames.com
As someone else pointed out, the cost of making the Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook is sunk into the price of the print version.


It might be better to say that the initial costs are for the High-Res PDF (since those costs are realistically shared by both budgets, print and PDF), some additional costs are incurred by going to print, some further expenses arise from the advertising, and more from the ongoing time to individually manage the PDF sales and the print sales. One of the primary mistakes small businesses make (I'm thinking of ePublishers, in this example) is to ignore the man-hours as an actual and ongoing part of their overhead. I'm sure Paizo has this figured into their budgets.
 

So, cost to produce high-res PDF for the printer to turn into a book =
Cost to produce low-res PDF for sale-download: two clicks, net cost $0

So for people who make printed products, the cost to produce a downloadable PDF is effectively zero.

Please don't forget to bookmark that low-res PDF. :)

joe b.
 

Qualidar

First Post
I'm trying to somewhat "ride on the coat-tails" of Pathfinder, by republishing my initial OGL adventure and all subsequent adventures as PFRPG compatible - in that there are currently no Asian adventure paths, as well as no "Ravenloftian" style adventure paths either (my setting is both really.) With the near simulataneous release of Paizo's system, I'm hoping for some improved launch sales based on that alone - again, I could be completely off-base on this thinking.

Sorry to continue the derailment, but: So. Want. This.

More on topic: I'm shocked that normal PDF sales are as low as 150! I really would have thought the market much larger.
 

Mark

CreativeMountainGames.com
More on topic: I'm shocked that normal PDF sales are as low as 150! I really would have thought the market much larger.



Depends on the product but I would be shocked if sales were as low as 150 for any PDF product. I've only sold a few hundred of the Whispering Woodwind adventure, both as a 3.0E and 3.5E, since December of 2001, but the 3.5 SRD Revised Bundle, which is actualy a dozen+ PDFs and a five star product, has sold more than 2,000 copies since July of 2003. Many of my other offerings hover just above or just below WW's 300 and freebies like the cooperative dungeons have over 10,000 downloads, of course.
 

Sammael

Adventurer
I'm pretty sure every* Malhavoc PDF has sold thousands of copies (Books of Eldritch Might are probably into tens of thousands combined).

*except possibly the ones that were a bit too niche (such as Hyperconscious or When the Sky Falls); Sean, do you know what was the volume of sales on Skreyn's Register?
 

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