D&D 5E PDFs and Next

reanjr

First Post
I was curious if WotC has dropped any information on whether they will be bringing back PDFs of their books. I completely stopped purchasing from WotC after they abandoned digital distribution. I don't understand how someone in this business can be so ignorant as to think stopping digital distribution helps fight piracy, but I can guarantee it kills legitimate revenue.
 

log in or register to remove this ad



Kabluey

Explorer
I agree, but unfortunately it may not be up to wotc. It might be the best business decision, but I work for a company that is owned by a parent company, and sometimes the wrong decision is made just because the parent company doesn't really understand our business. I think it's the same with Hasbro. They probably don't really understand the rpg market, so to them I suspect having PDF's which can be easily copied and distributed would be like handing out Monopoly boards on the street corner, and since they probably don't deal with PDF's, they may not understand that they can generate a lot of income as well.

Our best hope is that their top competitor in this market, i.e., Paizo, has done very well with PDF's, so hopefully wotc can make the case, "Look, it's working for them, it can work for us."
 

dmccoy1693

Adventurer
We can only hope. I'd like to be able to buy a book and get a .pdf copy included.

Well all Jon Brazer Enterprises Pathfinder books include a free PDF, no matter where you purchase them. Assuming there is a license, and the license is good and the system turns out to be AWESOME!!!, and there is sufficient interest in third party material for D&DNext, we will continue that practice here as well.
 

billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him)
If WotC doesn't come up with an effective method of digitally distributing the game so that people can run the game on an iPad or other hand-held device without being connected to the internet, they might as well stick a fork in 5e and their RPG division. They're done.
 

Agamon

Adventurer
If WotC doesn't come up with an effective method of digitally distributing the game so that people can run the game on an iPad or other hand-held device without being connected to the internet, they might as well stick a fork in 5e and their RPG division. They're done.

No kidding. I've been reading a lot of new RPGs on my tablet. It almost seems odd to think the new D&D game would be the one exception. In fact, odd is the very polite way of putting it.
 

To be honest, this is by far more of a 'dealbreaker' than anything yet suggested about the rules.

If there isn't the capacity for me to download and utilise the D&D game on my IPad I simply won't buy the game.
 

I agree, but unfortunately it may not be up to wotc. It might be the best business decision, but I work for a company that is owned by a parent company, and sometimes the wrong decision is made just because the parent company doesn't really understand our business. I think it's the same with Hasbro. They probably don't really understand the rpg market, so to them I suspect having PDF's which can be easily copied and distributed would be like handing out Monopoly boards on the street corner, and since they probably don't deal with PDF's, they may not understand that they can generate a lot of income as well.
I doubt very, very much Hasbro is that involved with D&D. Hasbro managers have their own company to manage, with its billion dollar brands. D&D is forgettable and likely something they leave entirely to WotC, only dealing with reports and summaries and generalities. Day-to-day and month-to-month is likely all WotC.

So PDFs seem like upper WotC management. With the death of 4e it's easy to see what happened now.
4e underperformed and PHB2 sold poorly. And digital sales were low. They blamed piracy first (couldn't have been the product after all, or the disgustingly high price of PDFs) and axed PDFs. Sales didn't increase so it must be a lack of new players. Cue Essentials. Sales dropped still, so change the later Essentials books back to the old style and start planning 5e.

Of course, they can't easily restore PDFs without admitting yanking them was a mistake. And they're still worried about piracy.

If they do bring back PDFs I want them to be (much) cheaper than physical books, but also with more features. Bookmarks and hyerlinks are a must. The earlier PDFs were amateurish. And the competition (especially the many PDF-only 3rd party publishers) really know what they're doing now.
 

billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him)
I doubt very, very much Hasbro is that involved with D&D. Hasbro managers have their own company to manage, with its billion dollar brands. D&D is forgettable and likely something they leave entirely to WotC, only dealing with reports and summaries and generalities. Day-to-day and month-to-month is likely all WotC.

In a sense, Hasbro has been very much involved with WotC. The CEO of WotC is an experienced Hasbro man. He probably got his current job because Hasbro could count on him to have his views aligned with the parent company's. It's possible he could have gone native after being exposed to WotC's culture, but my understanding is that WotC's culture is what shifted to be in more accord with Hasbro's since the acquisition. So, little chance of that.

D&D may be forgettable to most Hasbro execs, but one is in charge of WotC and I'm sure it's not forgettable to him.
 

Remove ads

AD6_gamerati_skyscraper

Remove ads

Upcoming Releases

Top