WotC D&D's Best Year Ever - But Hasbro's Goal Is For D&D e-Sports

We frequently get told that Dungeons & Dragons is having it's best year ever, which is awesome news for our hobby. Hasbro's Chairman, Brian Goldner, reiterated this to CNBC in an interview. But Goldner raised a new "e-sports" dimension to D&D's future growth.


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He talks about the Magic: the Gathering online "Arena" which had more than a million beta signups. But then he goes on to talk about D&D. CNBC says "... Hasbro's goal over time will be to build fantasy games like "Dungeons & Dragons" into esports properties "ripe for esports competition" as consumers increasingly choose digital gaming over standard board games."

What that means, exactly, I'm not sure. I'm not 100% sold that the article interpreted his comments correctly. Certainly card games could be imagined as e-sports, and I'm sure some kind of competitive D&D spin-off could be imagined, too, though what form that would take is anybody's guess. Some kind of PvP battle arena? D&D isn't currently viewed as a competitive game, and this could refer to other games based off the properties rather than bringing the tabletop RPG itself to e-sports. However, we shouldn't forget that D&D has had plenty of competitive tournament play at conventions over the years, so this isn't as surprising a move as one might think.

My guess - if this refers to D&D - is that this doesn't affect the tabletop RPG, but is about creating brand new online competitive games based on IP like the Forgotten Realms (although referred to as simply "Dungeons & Dragons"). But your guess is as good as mine!

You can watch the full interview over at CNBC.

The interviewer comments that he thought Dungeons & Dragons was a "so-so brand", and was surprised that it was called out in Hasbro's earnings report.

"We're also building a suite of digital games around Dungeons & Dragons and Magic: the Gathering. Our Magic Arena product is underway in a closed beta, we've had more than a million people sign up, and we're very excited about launching that later this year. So you'll be able to play Magic: the Gathering or Dungeons & Dragons on a mobile device or online as well as face-to-face."

Goldner goes on to say:

"Well, once you build this mobile game, we're also seeing that just with the analogue game, people are watching us on e-sports, we have about a million viewers a month watching a Magic: the Gathering game, and people watching Dungeons & Dragons on Twitch, and so we think over time we build this to be more of an e-sports property, it's a very immersive game, and it's global and ripe for e-sports competition."

It'm not clear whether he's referring to D&D as e-sports, or whether he means M:tG as e-sports and D&D on Twitch.

Competitive D&D play, such as the RPGA's D&D Open Championship which began in 1977, and which became the D&D Championship Series in 2008 (it ended in 2013) involved teams of players competing to score points in adventure modules. WotC brought it back for D&D 5th edition at Origins Game Fair in 2016.

Our own Mike Tresca talks more about D&D competitive play's history in his article Could D&D Ever Have an eSport? "Thanks to its wargaming roots, tournament play was well-established by the time D&D came along. Tournaments were associated with wargaming conventions. The first large-scale D&D tournament took place at Origins in Baltimore, MD on July 25-27. An estimated 1,500 attended, with 120 participating in the D&D tournament."

And one should not forget NASCRAG, the National Society of Crazed Gamers, which ran D&D tournaments from 1980-2011, before moving to Pathfinder instead.

NOTE - for some people if you're viewing this from the news article, something wonky has happened to the comments, and only the first 12 comments are currently showing. If this applies to you, and you want to read the comments, head to the thread here.
 

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Flexor the Mighty!

18/100 Strength!
This kind of my take, as well. A1 through A4, C1 through C3, all of these were tournament modules - the A “slavers” series even had point values based on your actions within the areas of the scenario, and the team who got the most points won the tournament. It’s not the “standard” for D&D today, but I could see an event strictly timed in this way, cameras focused on multiple tables, cutting with deft editing to the funniest or most high-energy moments or moments where someone messed up royally, all within a two hour program plus commercials (for video games and the new WotC Adventure Path that season, of course!)

...but that’s my pipe dream version of it, of course.

That is D&D TV I'd watch now and then. Real meat grinder dungeons that annihilate the foolish and laud the clever with eternal D&D glory! Hire this man Hasbro!
 

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Mistwell

Crusty Old Meatwad (he/him)
I love it when new information pops up that invalidates the original take on something but people just come in, read the OP and post anyway.

"Guys he didn't actually mean D&D when he said esport!"

"Something something Leage of Legends!"

...

Though I would kill for a D&D-themed map for DOTA. Vecna as the secret shop, Tarrasque as Roshan etc.

What new information are you referring to?
 


Harzel

Adventurer
CNBC says "... Hasbro's goal over time will be to build fantasy games like "Dungeons & Dragons" into esports properties "ripe for esports competition" as consumers increasingly choose digital gaming over standard board games."

The last bit about consumer behavior was the thing that struck me
as most odd when I first read this. However, listening to both the
2017 and 2018 interviews I heard nothing even approximating that last bit, nor did I hear
him say anything this direct in terms of characterizing Hasbro's "goal over time".
So I think it is worth noting that this is a quote from the CNBC article,
not from Goldner, even though the way the article is written implies he said that
or something to that effect. You might or might not agree that that is a reasonable
interpretation of what he said, but it is certainly not a direct quote from the interviews.
 



Ancalagon

Dusty Dragon
we are doomed for esports!

https://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2018/07/25/dsports

:p

Jeremy made it clear that all the MtG metasetting details like mana, colours of magic, and so on were stripped out, so it's just another D&D setting, not MtG metasetting warping the D&D cosmology. If you weren't familiar with MtG it's sounds like you wouldn't even know that MtG was the origin of the setting.

I think that is excellent news!
 

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