So their goal is to take the TSR name and coat it in a layer of ricin? People are strange. Especially the ones who make employees wrestle in grits and then run for public office.
It's as if they're doing their best to be as unlikeable as possible. Do they think that's a trait that a particular market segment admires?
Even so, it ignores how Hasbro owns a lot of products. While many of those products didn't do well, D&D has been on a huge roll and is extremely profitable, so you can't look at Hasbro's stock value as an indicator of D&D.So... uh... unless those posts about Hasbro stock price were made in the spring of 2020, when the stock did dive (although I wonder what could have been happening in the spring of 2020 that might be a more parsimonious explanation of dives in stock prices? [*]), there's nothing since then that could reasonably constitute "tanking"/"diving", or what-have-you. Not that LaNasa and company and "reasonable" have anything in common, mind.
[*] Am I being sarcastic? Maaaaaaaaybe.
TSR(1) '70s to 90s. Original publisher.I can't keep the various TSRs straight anymore.
stephencolberteatingpopcorn.gifTSR(1) '70s to 90s. Original publisher.
TSR(2) 2012 or so until this year. Jayson Elliot's company, publisher of Gygax Magazine, the recent Top Secret new game (but by Merle Rasmussen again!) and a few other things.
TSR(3) 2021. Justin LaNasa's dumpster fire, incorporated once he realized Jayson had forgotten to renew his Trademark registration a year ago, and roped Ernie Gygax into being a partner and not telling his erstwhile friend and former business partner Jayson about the trademark until after the contestation period had expired.
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