There's A New Online Gaming Store In Town

Billing itself as the home of open gaming, particularly D&D 5th Edition OGL products, a new online store has just opened up. It has been planned by a consortium of top OGL-supporting companies, including Kobold Press, Frog God Games, Troll Lord Games, Green Ronin, Rite Publishing, Super Genius Games, Expeditious Retreat Games, Hero Games, and more. Already it stocks 5E products from these companies, both in electronic and print form. The store is called Tabletop Library. They have announced themselves with a press release which you can see below.

Billing itself as the home of open gaming, particularly D&D 5th Edition OGL products, a new online store has just opened up. It has been planned by a consortium of top OGL-supporting companies, including Kobold Press, Frog God Games, Troll Lord Games, Green Ronin, Rite Publishing, Super Genius Games, Expeditious Retreat Games, Hero Games, and more. Already it stocks 5E products from these companies, both in electronic and print form. The store is called Tabletop Library. They have announced themselves with a press release which you can see below.



logo.png



The new store's main competition is, of course, the monolithic OBS (DriveThruRPG, RPGNow, and now DMs Guild, etc.) and, to a lesser extent, Paizo.com, Warehouse 23 (over at Steve Jackson Games) and smaller outfits like d20pfsrd.com's web store. There have been other stores in the past - YourGamesNow closed a couple of years ago (a casino now appears to have the domain) and the EN World GameStore was bought by OBS about 10 years ago. It's a tough market. In terms of sales, I'd estimate that 95% of my own (EN Publishing's) direct PDF sales are at DTRPG, and about 5% at Paizo (not counting Patreon, Kickstarter, and so on, which are an entirely different story). I have tried products on YGN and d20pfsrd's store, but never sold a single item on either of them, which speaks to how tough a nut to crack that segment of the industry is.

The fees at the new store are pretty low. For PDFs, it only takes 25% of a seller's revenues, which is 5%-10% lower than the competition (and 25% lower than DMsG which takes 50%).

PRESS RELEASE

Kobold Press, Frog God Games, Troll Lord Games, Green Ronin, Rite Publishing, Super Genius Games, Expeditious Retreat Games, Hero Games, Rogue Comet, Metallic Dice Games, Pacesetter Games and Simulations, Eldritch Enterprises; Far Future Enterprises and TableTopLibrary.com

March 10, 2016

Kobold Press, Frog God Games, Troll Lord Games, Green Ronin, Hero Games, Rogue Comet; Pacesetter Games and Simulations, Eldritch Enterprises; Far Future Enterprises and TableTopLibrary.com are jointly announcing that, effective immediately, our companies will all be offering our Fifth Edition products through a new RPG download store called TableTopLibrary, as a one-stop shop for OGL Fifth Edition products. TableTopLibrary, website https://tabletoplibrary.com/ is a newly-formed online store for RPG books and pdfs designed to offer both electronic versions and hard copy versions of books produced by your favorite publishers. TabletopLibrary will also offer a full slate of products and resources for other role-playing games, including Pathfinder and OSR-games. All of us will continue our own websites and stores, but TableTopLibrary offers a place to draw all these products together in one place for convenience.

At this time, by coming together as a consortium, we can offer the high-quality products we pride ourselves on; provide a one-stop shopping spot with outstanding customer service; and allow a better experience for publishers, and more importantly, for customers . Centralized electronic book fulfillment, kickstarter fulfillment, and single-location warehousing will improve our delivery speed, accuracy, and customer service in the RPG download market.

Our reasons for setting up a consortium at this time include (1) each partner retains ownership and editorial control over the individual campaign worlds and other “intellectual property” that our fans have known and loved for years; (2) our desire to offer physically higher-quality printing, paper quality, and binding than print on demand outlets offer; and (3) the desire to continue drawing upon and increasing the vast resources of Open Game Content as opposed to other alternatives.

TableTopLibrary is committed to offering a deep and broad-based marketplace of Fifth Edition products, superior to any other online store, as well as many other game system products. We are joined in a partnership of many large publishers in this project, and expect many more to join us as time goes on. TableTopLibrary will be issuing its own press release soon, describing the advantages and the procedures involved in joining.

You can continue buying products directly from each of us, as always. But if you want to browse the whole library of Fifth Edition and other products produced under the Open Game License over the years, we’re letting you know that there’s a new online game store in town.

Check out TableTopLibrary at TableTopLibrary.com - The Leading Source for RPGs and watch us grow! We think you’ll be impressed.
 

log in or register to remove this ad


log in or register to remove this ad

Morrus

Well, that was fun
Staff member
@Morrus: I am not sure if I'm just mis-reading the internet or if you genuinely have serious hostility towards me. I'm going to play it safe and assume I'm just imagining it. Regardless, when I said "Regarding your success or failure at..." I should have perhaps said "Regarding the overall results of your time being listed at..." because I wasn't attempting to insinuate YOU succeeded or failed

No, it's just that phrase that irked me a little. Thanks for clarifying. I've edited out my response, as in retrospect it was a little harsh.

I'm not going to argue with you and I'm not interested in having a public debate about it.

It's not an argument, John. I was only replying to your comments. If your d20pfsrd store can work out how to market other types of products, I'll happily stock them with you. I'm more than happy to use the new TabletopLibrary store, too (and already have an item there).
 

I also want to know what sort of shipping arrangements are going to exist...especially for people that do not live in the USA.

Unfortunately this one seems still unanswered. As a non-US resident I'm quite interested in the answer there as well. Couldn't find anything regarding shipping on the website either, unfortunately.
 

Mythmere1

First Post
Unfortunately this one seems still unanswered. As a non-US resident I'm quite interested in the answer there as well. Couldn't find anything regarding shipping on the website either, unfortunately.

We will be able to ship from the USA to other countries, but unlike with POD companies like Lulu, we don't have mailing sources outside the USA (Lulu sends print jobs to nearby countries for printing and shipping). So our cost to ship will be basically the same as it would be for regular USA-to-country shipping, which has become a lot more expensive over the last 5 years or so than it once was. Some shippers bundle items together and send them to places that bulk ship them out of the USA at a lower cost, but we've found that the percentage charged by companies like that essentially eliminates the savings on RPG books. I assume that other types of products gain more of an advantage from that kind of shipping. If your only warehouse is in the USA, there really isn't any dramatically better way of handling that without creating a warehouse elsewhere. At the present time we're nowhere near large enough to consider that kind of solution, especially since most RPG publishers do short runs of product at low profit margins. It wouldn't be cost effective for those publishers -- since we own the warehouse we use, we currently don't pass on any warehousing costs to the publisher or the consumer, but if we used a warehouse outside the USA it would create costs because a third party was involved.
 

jreyst

First Post
As we have friends located in the U.K. we may be able to arrange local U.K. warehousing and fulfillment. I'll be discussing this with Bill and Matt today.
 


Wow... browsing through the site I came across this link:
https://tabletoplibrary.com/collect...ts/5e-1-sheet-adventure-the-fourth-wing-riots

$5. For a 2-page adventure. In pdf.

Hmm.

Anyway, best of luck. At present, two things I'd like to see:
* An affiliate system for referrals
* A better categorisation system. Trying to find the 5E adventures is a pain - and not everyone seems to be tagging their products properly.

Cheers!

TTL can't really dictate what prices people charge though. Ultimately the market dictates what items should be priced at. In reality that "adventure" will likely get little in the way of sales at that price.
 

Mythmere1

First Post
Wow... browsing through the site I came across this link:
https://tabletoplibrary.com/collect...ts/5e-1-sheet-adventure-the-fourth-wing-riots

$5. For a 2-page adventure. In pdf.
So far we haven't started any program of advising publishers about how to maximize their sales. Once things calm down a bit, and we have more smaller publishers in the fold, we'll be doing that.

At present, two things I'd like to see:
* An affiliate system for referrals
* A better categorisation system. Trying to find the 5E adventures is a pain - and not everyone seems to be tagging their products properly.
These are also our highest priorities. For a list of things identified by customers and publishers, we're evaluating what level of structural change is needed to the site, which means there will be a slight delay since that's a threshold question for how to implement these. The affiliate program is easy, for example, but if we put out affiliate code and then alter anything deep in the website we could end up having to send out replacement code. So the affiliate program will happen, but first we have to make sure we're building on the structural foundation that will remain in place for a long time.

While we're still relatively small, we've got the luxury of finding the best solution to problems like categorization without having to make a seismic change, so we want to take a deep breath, evaluate what we've learned, and make sure that our phase 2 is done properly. Until then, even something as small as an affiliate program would be putting the cart before the horse. We're in this for the long term, so we don't want to create problems down the road.
 

Remove ads

Remove ads

Top