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D&D General Behold! A mega chart of AD&D 1st and 2nd ed monster products sales!

Jer

Legend
Supporter
Yeah, thanks for digging. I tried googling as well but hadn't found that list yet.

My memory must have been off, because I definitely had those monsters too. I must have bought both and then just consolidated them into the big MC1 binder.
I mostly remembered because one of the guys I knew at the time absolutely hated the 2e rollout and considered the entire thing a "cash grab" by TSR. One of the things that incensed him was the MC format and the fact that they were "charging twice" just to get the monsters that were in the 1e Monster Manual.

(We moved away in the early 90s and I didn't keep in touch. I do wonder what he'd think of the numbers that Ben Riggs posted - probably satisfied that he was right and it was a cash grab.)
 

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darjr

I crit!
Ben has an economist looking at all this. He said that while he didn’t have any conclusions yet it did look like D&D did well when the economy was doing bad. That it is such a good bargain for when times are tight. And when they are not people might spend more on things like actual vacations, but not D&D.

I dunno but it’s interesting to throw the idea into the mix.

What if the BiG downturns were out of TSRs hands, no matter if it was Gygax or Lorraine?

What if thier job should have been planning for that hiccup and getting ready to weather a storm.
 
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overgeeked

B/X Known World
Ben has an economist looking at all this. He said that while he didn’t have any conclusions yet it did look like D&D did well when the economy was doing bad. That it is such a good bargain for when times are tight. And when they are not people might spend more on things like actual vacations, but not D&D.
Makes sense. $20-30 for months or years of entertainment vs $100s for a week.
 

Steampunkette

Rules Tinkerer and Freelance Writer
Supporter
I dunno if that shows Satanic Panic was a big problem...

So about 700,000 people bought the MM by 1984. There were about 3 million PHBs and DMGs in circulation by that point and another million would yet be sold before AD&D2e became the big boss on the block. It -looks- like the vast majority of players and DMs either borrowed an MM from a friend or made up their own monsters.

But in '84, almost half as many people who had bought an MM over the past 6 years bought the MM2 in a single year.

Then in '89, you get about the same situation. By that point almost 500,000 MM2s had been sold, and the MC1, 2, and 3 sell about 350,000. About half the previous offering between the three of them. The first of which almost hits the halfway point on it's own when the MC1 sells about 250,000 units itself.

Dragonlance does miserably, because it's the -fourth- Monster book in 6 months and related to a single setting.

1984 saw the last "Big Sales" of the MM1 and MM2, but really it's the start of a clear trend. The Monster Manual in Pink barely does 300,000 before it's discontinued over the course of -six years-. And in it's first year? Less than half as many sold as the MC1 in it's first year.

The Satanic Panic probably helped to exacerbate the speed at which the red and blue lines dropped, but it didn't stop them from being a commercial success, and shows the start of a fairly clear "Half as much as the last offering" trend.
 

Jer

Legend
Supporter
Further, what if thier error wasn’t bad sales or bad market strategy or saturating the market but a failure to prepare for thin times?
I think that's exactly what their main problem was - they hit the lotto for a few years and thought it was going to be like that forever, and spent money accordingly.

They lost a lot of time during their prime years with infighting and backstabbing instead of planning for lean times, and when the lean times hit they moved heavily into the book market to try to stop the bleeding.
 



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