And perhaps some of us haven't managed to get this single point across - more advanced technology does not necessarily translate into a better consumer product.
Plus clearly the Enterprise-A is the best one.
And perhaps some of us haven't managed to get this single point across - more advanced technology does not necessarily translate into a better consumer product.
This latter is not just "fashion". The market is unlikely to move backwards towards feature phones, because whatever my own needs or wants may be, for the vast majority of people, the technology provides more of what they want. *I* am the one stuck in fashion, not the rest of the world.
There were enough of them, that wotc of the coast not only re-issued the first edition core books, they released some of the old modules in hard cover as well. And some people have taken these older systems, cleaned them up a bit and released them as new games that actually doing well.
Ooh, careful there.... I don't think the numbers support you there.
You agree with me on smartphones. But, check it out - in the US, 56% of adults have smartphones.
But, according to Morrus' "Hot Games" page, which takes a pretty broad sampling, less than 5% of discussion is about the OSR and those old games.
Sure, WotC reissued the old core books. But I think that was to fuel nostalgia, and to show the range of thought in the company. I don't think there's call to say there are enough OSR folks themselves to have made them a real business driver.
If we look at cell phones, and say, at 56% penetration, that really, the new tech is in, and the old tech is out, when we look at OSR, which is quite clearly way, way down the list of games people are playing, should we not say the same thing?
I would be very, very surprised if that 5% number is correct. I don't know what measures morrus used, but i just see too much OSR online and in regular gaming to believe it would be as low as five percent. I dont have data to support this.
You do have data; it just doesn't say what you think it should, so you casually dismissed it as incorrect. Confirmation bias is a powerful, powerful thing!![]()
Yes, I am being a bit dismissive of the data offered. But only because it does not match my overal experience.
If you had multiple studies showing this again and again, i would be a lot less dismissive. But one online analysis alone isn't enough to convince me what I am seeing on the ground isn't reflected more broadly in the community,
By the way, i am in no way saying, that OSR is as popular as pathfinder or even int he same ballpark. I just am a little suspicious of that five percent numeber based not only on the volume of osr discussions I have seen on forums and blogs, but also what I see locally. I don't know the details of how the analysis was done, but i would think it would be harder to measure than say pathfinder, because most discussions of old school material use a variety of terms and labels.
There's a saying which contains the words "anecdote" and "data"... how does that go again?![]()
It measures it constantly in real-time, every day. It's not a one-time analysis, it's a continual tracking of over 1000 sites and nearly a third of a million forum members. You can use it to see historical data. It takes a broader view - by an order of magnitude - than any human could.