Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
Not weird particularly, that's dead on 10% off. It will go lower on Amazon, eventually, but it's the same price my FLGS charged for a preorder.Phandelver at $53.96 (weird price?)
Not weird particularly, that's dead on 10% off. It will go lower on Amazon, eventually, but it's the same price my FLGS charged for a preorder.Phandelver at $53.96 (weird price?)
All D&D books have 30-40% on Amazon, all thr time. Amazon charges wholesale prices, same as Target for books.It seems that the non-core books sell the best at the pre-order stage. From older conversations (primarily about GW products) the bulk of purchases are within the first month to three months of a books, with a sharp drop-off after that. These days I imagine a good bulk of these books have already been on pre-order, probably for a couple months. Don't know how that might affect sources like the USA Today booklist.
It is interesting how huge of a price drop the Bigby book has though - I'm seeing it on Amazon at 44% off (and Phandelver is already 38% off; Planescape is 30% off; Book of Many Things which is to be released next doesn't appear to have a discount at all yet). I wouldn't expect a book that's selling like hotcakes to have such a huge discount so soon after it's release.
They've been pretty explicit that their commercial goal is to get people to play so that they buy into what really makes money: t-shirts and toys. Merchandising. The game is an engine for that, so they make it readily a ailable.There is another point to remember too. A lot of these books are being sold in multiple formats. Sure, people buy the physical book. How many people buy the physical book, a copy for D&D Beyond and then a copy for something like Fantasy Grounds or Roll 20?
And, I'm sure there are people who only buy one format (like me - I buy my books for Fantasy Grounds) but, I know for a fact that some people are buying in multiple formats as well.
My point being that perhaps WotC can afford such deep discounts because they know that for every physical copy they sell, they are also likely going to sell X (some percentage of the physical copies) to the same person. I'm not saying that very well. Each physical copy sold is also responsible for selling some unknown number of electronic copies as well. Does that make sense?
Yeah. I don't really have any answer here. WotC has tried pretty hard to keep the FLGS alive. Organized Play, that sort of thing but, wow, it must be such an uphill battle. It's not like WotC's the only one in this position either. GW obviously is in the same boat. Need to keep the FLGS alive as a huge marketing vector but how?They've been pretty explicit that their commercial goal is to get people to play so that they buy into what really makes money: t-shirts and toys. Merchandising. The game is an engine for that, so they make it readily a ailable.
However, WotC doesn't take any hit with these sales, Amazon is giving the discount out of their profits from the MSRP equation: the goal is to underbelly and destroy smaller bookstores over time, as several FLGS folks have reported on here, of they charged the Aamazon price they make no money pm a sale.