Doug McCrae
Legend
Now that is a good analogy, Mallus. I much prefer it to all the ones about food.
The cost arguement would make sense if it weren't for two factors.Costs of providing PDFs
The most recent number of The Monthly - a moderately leftist Australian culture/society magazine - has an article by Malcolm Knox on e-publishing and its effect on the publishing and bookselling industry. Knox writes:
The mindset [that if you're reading it on a screen then it must be free] is quanitatively wrong: the costs of digitisation, file conversion and file management are high . . . One reason e-books were so slow to take hold was that publishers could not make money with the addition of the estimated $400 per title it cost them to digitise.
Obviously, some of that work has already been done in the case of the WotC and TSR PDFs.
I really haven't followed WotC for a while. But I stopped playing D&D right about the time 4e came out. I started to get the feeling that WoTC didn't really seem to care much about D&D and simply wanted to lure new gamers into the fold. Several of the WotC people I met at Gencon were outright jerks and I just basically moved on.
I'd like to get the feeling that they are about the franchise and they care about gaming. Remake D&D and rename 4e "D&D, the Boardgame".
That's just how I feel. I'm not stating facts or figures, so it can obviously be argued, and I know there are tons of people who feel differently.
Also, clean up all the errata on the first publication or sell me a PDF that can be patched.
I'd love to get back into D&D, but would almost assuredly play 3.5 or Pathfinder. Paizo seems to have more of a passion for the game.
--CT
I am not sure that anything done to the game itself is apt to bring back many (perhaps even most) of the disenchanted. Why not? Because they probably aren't paying much attention to current D&D.
Folks who tried 4e, and found it lacking, have had a couple years now to move on to something else. Whatever they found to do instead (have a kid, take up toy trains, or Pathfinder, or whatever) will be their focus now. It will take big noise to gain their attention back again - release of a new edition could do it, for example. But just making a few modest changes to the current rules probably won't do the trick.
Let me get this straight. You're calling him a liar if he can't give you specific names? Really?Thats some accusation. But lets hear some names and what happened, because otherwise, I am gonna call nonsense on that story.
It will take big noise to gain their attention back again - release of a new edition could do it, for example. But just making a few modest changes to the current rules probably won't do the trick.
At this point in time, I doubt a new edition will do much to gain back their attention, considering 4E has only been around for two years.
I am not sure that anything done to the game itself is apt to bring back many (perhaps even most) of the disenchanted. Why not? Because they probably aren't paying much attention to current D&D.
Folks who tried 4e, and found it lacking, have had a couple years now to move on to something else. Whatever they found to do instead (have a kid, take up toy trains, or Pathfinder, or whatever) will be their focus now. It will take big noise to gain their attention back again - release of a new edition could do it, for example. But just making a few modest changes to the current rules probably won't do the trick.
At this point in time, I doubt a new edition will do much to gain back their attention, considering 4E has only been around for two years.