Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
I think we are really trying to fit very limited data into a conclusion, tbh. Kremlinology, met Paizology.
Welcome to the Internet.
I think we are really trying to fit very limited data into a conclusion, tbh. Kremlinology, met Paizology.
Welcome to the Internet.
So it looks like PF2 is still selling better than PF1 was after the announcement of PF2, generally, I think. The numbers for the PHB 4e doesn't go back past 2020, which sucks. And the PF1 numbers don't go back before the PF2 announcement.Yes, I do!
Go to this website, and in the "ASIN" blank enter the number: 1640781684. That'll give you the daily Amazon rank of the PF2 core rulebook for the last two years. (It'll also give you the lowest FBA price each day, and the lowest price with shipping each day.)
Here's the full graph:
View attachment 132561
For reference: the graph starts in April 2019, the low point on the left is July 2019 (release date), and the upward bump in in the middle starts in March 2020 (onset of the pandemic).
I think Paizo have learned that "D&D but crunchier and with more scope for PC optimization" isn't nearly as big of a market as it was 10 years ago. The growth in the RPG hobby has been almost entirely in people who are more interested in story and socializing, rather than the types who buy multiple books and study them at home to build uber-PCs.Yeah, and Paizo is doing fine. I'm just disappointed that it ended being as niche as it is. If Paizo managed to really break out with PF2E, that would have been really nice for the whole hobby.
I saw some stats recently by a book store trade group that stated Curse of Strahd sold 6,000 units in its first week of release. Just from book stores (not from Game Stores or Amazon). It would be interesting to know if this kind of hard figure matches sales rank.So it looks like PF2 is still selling better than PF1 was after the announcement of PF2, generally, I think. The numbers for the PHB 4e doesn't go back past 2020, which sucks. And the PF1 numbers don't go back before the PF2 announcement.
Looks like WotC ran out of stock or couldn't ship Amazon enough stock recently as well, the ranking tanked for a bit. Into the 400's, but it's back at 160 or so. It looks like it's something that happens to them periodically, if someone could dig up the early numbers, that first few printings it kept catching WotC by surprise too.
I'd go capture them and post them but man I'm not feeling well.....
I would say its a little more complicated than that, we basically have people getting into the game for story and socializing and they bring their friends, both themselves and their friends may or may not find themselves getting into "Crunchy and Customization" as time passes and they have more experience with the game. After all, many of the younger people getting into the game (20s and below, as opposed to people who played ADND and are coming back) have plenty of experience with that sort of thing from video games and enjoy it. Once they have experience with 5e... well there's a reason that community has gotten kind of complicated over the last couple of years, one of them is that its the most popular system so people want to keep playing it with their friends, but there's a growing frustration with WOTCs decisions in terms of game balance, expansion, and so forth.I think Paizo have learned that "D&D but crunchier and with more scope for PC optimization" isn't nearly as big of a market as it was 10 years ago. The growth in the RPG hobby has been almost entirely in people who are more interested in story and socializing, rather than the types who buy multiple books and study them at home to build uber-PCs.
I think all of that is likelye true. I also think that the market for crunchy systems hasn't shrunk, it is just a lesser percentage of a much larger pool of players. the total numbers of crunchy players is not going done. In fact, I imagine it to is growing, just not quite as fast currently.I would say its a little more complicated than that, we basically have people getting into the game for story and socializing and they bring their friends, both themselves and their friends may or may not find themselves getting into "Crunchy and Customization" as time passes and they have more experience with the game. After all, many of the younger people getting into the game (20s and below, as opposed to people who played ADND and are coming back) have plenty of experience with that sort of thing from video games and enjoy it. Once they have experience with 5e... well there's a reason that community has gotten kind of complicated over the last couple of years, one of them is that its the most popular system so people want to keep playing it with their friends, but there's a growing frustration with WOTCs decisions in terms of game balance, expansion, and so forth.
It isn't like, the majority of the playerbase or anything (even the community as a whole, is only a fraction of the casual base) but its still a chunk of people, in absolute numbers.
Cody at Taking20 got a lot of talk recently.How much presence does PF2 have with streaming Actual Play? Is there a show that people talk about?