And if they can't man up and talk straight? Then they need to shut up.
I can't "man up and talk straight" to you, sir, because that would get me a suspension, and you're not worth it.
And if they can't man up and talk straight? Then they need to shut up.
Just a few more posts and my prophecy will have come TRUE!!!
MEWHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHahahahahahahahahaha![]()
I'm pretty sure gamers trying to get reasonable prices on GW stuff 15 years ago invented the online discount store model in the first place.
You can say that you didn't make this misrepresentation all that you like but, unless you go back and edit your posts, it's pretty clear that you did, in fact, misrepresent what Mr. Goodman posted. Specifically, as I posted later, you ignored that Mr. Goodman says 4e is doing as well as D&D was from 1974 to 1981, 1983 to 2000, and from 2002 to 2008.
The problem comes in, that, while interesting as Mr Goodman's post was, there really is no hard information there, from an objective standpoint. He states his credentials(which I dont doubt), says a bunch of stuff(from which he says he pulled from a variety of sources) on a point by point basis, then comes down to his conculsion-that 4e is doing well(again, I have no doubts its selling).
Then most everyone went, ok where's there data? And that seems to be the sticking point and arguing- folks that dont care about 4e are going to run with one way, while 4e fans run the other.
Why would anyone need to? Unless WoTC is lying, 4e has sold better than 3.0 (and 3.5 sold better than 3.0) 3rd party products on the other hand...
On CM, Truth Seeker is constantly feeding news, and news from Sony and how about the PS3 is doing well despite claims to the contrary, or how other consoles will last only 5 years while the PS3 will last 10 years till the next model, and all such talk just makes be believe more and more that the PS3 is in trouble.WotC hasn't lied at any point as far as I'm concerned, but I don't believe that anyone with them has ever come out and stated that 4e has sold better than 3.0. They've stated that the initial print run for some of the core 4e books was larger, and since it sold out quickly there's a lot that people can read into that. It's marketing speak of pushing out the numbers that look awesome for you, and phrasing them in such a way that good numbers appear all that much better. But it says nothing about continued success in subsequent books, or net sales of the 4e core books versus those of any other edition. We don't have numbers to honestly answer that.