Raven Crowking
First Post
I'd say that TSR did assume people were using minis, simply because most people did.
WotC's market research prior to the release of 3e must have been really slipshod, then, as this is not what it showed.

RC
I'd say that TSR did assume people were using minis, simply because most people did.
To me, saying "4e forces one to use minis" is like saying "4e forces you to breathe while playing."
PS
There are two major knocks against 4E that I carried into the game:
The lack of any injury that lasts longer than six hours.
Again, this bothered me less than I thought I would, and again, that's subject to "not thinking about it." My sense of narrative style would absolutely require me to make a house rule for this, if I were DMing (but I think doing so would be both trivial and elegant), and if the lack of it creeps up on me as I expect it will, over multiple sessions, the failure to house-rule it could be a deal-breaker for me.
Most of my other dislikes of 4E are "meta-dislikes." Just for example, having separate powers for everybody, when so many of them are so similar. It would have made much more sense to have a system for building powers. (But, of course, it wouldn't sell as many books.) I call this a meta-dislike because it isn't actually the powers I dislike -- not even for martial characters -- but rather the method of presenting them, and the clear reasons for choosing that method.
Data, please. I almost never saw a group use minis outside of a convention. Still don't, and our group still plays AD&D.
WotC's market research prior to the release of 3e must have been really slipshod, then, as this is not what it showed.
RC
Found the research.
According to WotC,
When asked to describe a variety of past game experiences, the market
provided the following data:
Question: Result
Used detailed tables & charts: 76%
Included Miniatures: 56%
Used ìrules lightî system: 58%
Diceless: 33%
Combat Oriented: 86% (*)
Live Action: 49%
House Rules: 80%
(*) Looked at in reverse, this interesting answer tells us that 14% of the
gamers who play an RPG >have never played< a combat oriented RPG.
only 56% of gamers have ever used minis. It doesn't say how many use them regularly. This is far less than would be true if everyone used them in every game. Compare, for example, with LARPing. I admit that this was a larger number than I had thought, though.Still, that 44% of gamers have never used minis is a lot more than I expected.
What WotC did learn, which was really important was
Effect of miniatures addition to RPG mix:
Few miniatures owned/used: $139 total RPG spending
Many minis owned/used: $4,413 total RPG spending
Of course, I didn't remember this difference being quite so large, either.
If you buy minis, you spend over 30 times what you spend if you do not.
Is there really any wonder that WotC's business plan includes making the game more (rather than less) mini-centric?
http://www.seankreynolds.com/rpgfiles/gaming/WotCMarketResearchSummary.html
RC
What I'm really trying to say is that OD&D and AD&D were not designed to be played without minis. The ability to play without minis in older editions was an emergent feature of a game, not a design feature. I'm not going to deny that those games were easy to play without minis. They were. I'm just saying that feature was more of an accident that something intentionally designed.
Would these numbers mean that 56% used real miniatures? How many more people on top of that 56% used a ghetto substitute like pennies, dice or candy?
If that 56% is the number who used actual minis, than I would definitively say that most D&D players use minis when you include those who use cheap substitutes.
I am assuming that it doesn't matter to you whether or not the people who actually designed both games agreed with your position or not?![]()
It's tough to say, based on what WotC released, but the question was not of the "Do you regularly....?" type but of the "Have you ever.....?" type.
I guess, if you believe that there is a large contingent of people who regularly used lemondrops, but never used minis, you might be on to something.......but, frankly, that's a bit too big of a leap for me to accept on faith.
In the WotC poll, I would be one of those who has used minis, and I didn't use them regularly. If anything, I would suggest that the number of respondants who has ever done X is obviously greater (and probably far greater) than the number of respondants who regularly do X, almost regardless of what X is. I guess things like eating and breathing are going to be exceptions............
Frankly, if the WotC marketing research results aren't sufficient to make you examine your assumptions, I doubt what would be sufficient.
RC