For movies? Yes they are.
and the novel line is for all practical purposes it's own product and brand, the success of which has little to no bearing on any other part of the brand.
It's about characters and brand recognition, and yes they absolutely are connected and always have been connected. I didn't say the success of the RPG is connected...this discussion has nothing to do with the RPG really. It has a connection to the movies though, and they've sold more novels than Marvel sold some comics of properties they successfully turned into movies. That's relevant.
And the fact that Iron Man shifted the focus for Marvel away from comic books is great, but WotC has nothing in the pipeline aside from Next for the D&D name
Uh, they have several movies in the pipeline right now. I am getting the sense you have not been following the larger WOTC and Hasbro news, and have been focused just on D&D. You were aware, for example, they're working on a Magic: The Gathering movie?
so whatever is going to come after Next's release will be effected by Next's relative success or failure.
You know what connection the Blade movies had to the success or failure of the Blade comic book at the time? Zero. Same with Iron Man.
At the end of the day, WotC still has no real sellable product to sell under the D&D brand right now aside from Next.
Uh, they have a ton of IP. It's all sellable. They're already making movies with some of it.
Next and the tabletop game is still what has to be front and center because it's the only thing they have to sell right now.
Unless you think everyone at WOTC is just outright lying right now, then you're wrong. They plan to put the brand front and center, and they've said that every opportunity they've been given to say it.
I am not sure why people are in denial over this concept, but it's odd to me. For you to be right on this subject, you have to assume a massive conspiracy or mass delusion going on at WOTC right now.
Take away Next and the tabletop game, and you have just another generic fantasy concept.
Dragonlance, Ebberon, Greyhawk, Forgotten Realms, Dark Sun, these are not generic fantasy concepts. And they exist independent of the RPG itself.
This is not to say that the tabletop game is always going to be the only thing they have to sell, but for now, it is.
Shall we bet on them selling a lot more than that, in the first year? I am up for it if you are.
Until WotC themselves can create a truly sellable product outside of the game itself, no one else is going to bother, and that no one includes Hasbro, which doesn't need or care about D&D at this particular point and won't until WotC gives them reason to.
You know this how? Again, please, cite your sources.
WotC has completely failed to anything with the novel line aside from sustain what they inherited
You say that like it's a negative - it's a HUGE positive. It's hard to do. Also I strongly disagree with your assessment of that issue.
The key with both Transformers and Iron Man is that while neither had been particularly smash hits prior to their breakout movies, both were easily recognizable IPs
Now we are going in circles. The first success for Marvel was Blade, not Iron Man, and it was not recognized by most people at all. The second was Iron Man, and it also was a second tier property that was not well recognized by most, and did not have a good following by fans a the time. That's the truth. This "easily recognizable" claim has been disproven multiple times in this thread - and so far nobody has answered it, they just keep repeating the false claim again and again. It's enough already - if you have evidence showing Blade and Iron Man were more popular than I am claiming, then let's see it already. Otherwise, deal with the fact that two relatively unknown properties were turned into successes through things like casting, directing, writing, and marketing - and not prior reputation of the properties.
far easier than what WotC faces with D&D, which lacks clear ownership of any world or character they might try to use
What they heck are you talking about? They own their settings. That was established a long time ago. Are you under the mistaken belief there isn't clear title to their settings? If so, I hope you have some evidence to support that claim.
Marvel may have had some work in convincing people that their long term strategy was good, but it is very clear that even at that early point of trying to sell Iron Man, they had at least a solid outline of long term strategy and goals that they could use to market their ideas; I'm just not convinced yet that WotC has anything similar or that if they do, that the people there today will be there long enough to implement it properly.
Fortunately it's not you they have to convince - it's people who approved of Battleship, and Tonka, and Jem, and Candy Land, and Hungry Hungry Hippos, and Monopoly, and Ouija, and Battleship, and My Little Pony.