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lowkey13
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*Deleted by user*
I think you're doing that whole, "arguing for the sake of arguing," thing.
As everyone on these threads is aware, WoTC (Hasbro) would very much like to launch a D&D movie (like, a real one, that makes money, and can sustain a franchise ... not like the previous attempts).
For the value of the Marvel IP, start with this article-
http://www.newsarama.com/24999-disney-s-4-billion-marvel-buy-was-it-worth-it.html
There aren't any good valuations on the D&D IP. That said, the IP is the total value that can be brought in. Movies, board games, action figures, TV shows, theme parks, and so on.
So yes, by the sole criterion of making money, then Marvel (Disney) is so far ahead of D&D (WoTC/Hasbro) it's not even worth getting into a semantic argument about. Which is ... obvious.
That's kind of it, however.
In the end, I don't think your expectation vis-a-vis canon will be met. Because D&D doesn't have that in popular culture.*
Because we're talking about the IP. Marvel licensed it to Margaret Weis Productions; they weren't making it directly. Just like they don't make certain bed sheets directly. Just like they don't make the toys ... they're licensed by ... wait for it ... Hasbro.
But it's Marvel's (Disney's) IP. Your attempt to quibble over this is completely meaningless, as you know. Why not compare the popularity of D&D movies and Marvel movies? D&D TV shows and Marvel TV Shows? D&D-branded products and licenses and Marvel ones? I could keep going, but I think you get the point.
Or, heck, just the relative popularity of FR books and Marvel Comic Books in terms of sales?
But when a single movie, such as Doctor Strange, pulls in $640 million worldwide, and (1) it's not the most popular character in the Marvel universe, and (2) it's not even the top Marvel movie this year, you quickly realize that D&D and it's handful of employees at WoTC (a subsidiary of Hasbro) is just a rounding error. Sorry.
*Seriously, it's like someone saying that because D&D is more popular than Star Wars for TTRPG, therefore ... what, D&D is more popular as a movie property? The facepalming is strong with this one.![]()
As [MENTION=6799753]lowkey13[/MENTION] said, the point I'm making is that the frequent rebooting/reimagining of comic characters doesn't seem to have done any harm to revenue for Marvel characters (whether that accrues primarily to Disney or other studios).what point are you making?
This reminded me of the fact that (per early X-Men comics) Prof X fought in the Korean War, yet (per 80s/90s X-Men comics) was a middle-aged man 40 years later. The subtle revisiting and readjustment of timelines that is part-and-parcel of long-running comic series doesn't seem to cause problems.Tony Stark can't be wounded in Vietnam.
I don't know of any evidence for this. What "barrier for casual entry" is created by the fact that, in X-Men Origins Xavier can walk and use his powers, and Wolverine and Sabretooth are brothers, whereas the other films imply that Wolverine and Sabretooth are strangers and that Xavier can only walk by taking a drug that suppresses his powers.if the canon and lore are inconsistent, ever changing and sometimes contradictory it creates a barrier for casual entry
As I said in the OP, and some posts not long after it, I don't care about canon. But I do care about tropes (that's one reason why my RPGing is mostly FRPGing).When pemerton mentioned what makes a Greyhawk game was basic geography and history (like Hardby being ruled by the Gynarch and the Bright Desert being settled by Suel tribesmen) - that's canon every bit as minute as minutiae that he says he doesn't care about. So while some canon doesn't matter to him, other canon clearly does.