Reynard
aka Ian Eller
Cutting jobs from a successful department is squeezing.But for D&D they're so far not squeezing it for every last cent.
Cutting jobs from a successful department is squeezing.But for D&D they're so far not squeezing it for every last cent.
So? That doesn't mean they're not an organisation trading on their name having horrible historical connotations. Also, I thought you were like a university/college or school guy, is that wrong? If it's not wrong what the heck is a Pinkerton doing at a place of learning?I say good morning to a Pinkerton every day at work, as do lots of other people.
I don't expect Hasbro to not do layoffs when it's making a loss (even though I know it's mostly a performance rather than a practical measure - it's something publicly traded companies are expected to do, a hair shirt for the company only the only people it hurts are actual workers, the real execs are left alone). I do expect them to make more reasoned and targeted layoffs - and that's flatly not unreasonable, because plenty of other publicly traded companies do manage it. It's also fascinating that they ditched so many people from D&D when they still seemingly have over 250 people working on the 3D VTT, which is basically just an app for D&D (indeed new hiring messages went up during the layoffs and after them for the 3D VTT).I don't really expect better of publicly traded companies: nature of the beast.
Yup. TSR made that mistake. Earlier WotC made that mistake. You've got to be real careful when killing off gods because if you get a popular one, people will be pissed, despite being entirely fictional and irrelevant to most campaigns, and they'll remember for decades.Like they will kill the wrong popular God
Yeah same.I don’t think so. I sad dislike the company, getting worse on perception, and dislike the current direction and didn’t get any more questions either. The survey does describe itself as brief. It definitely gives the impression that someone is trying to prove something, rather than hunting for the reasons behind that thing.
That's not what's meant by the term squeezing every dime out of D&D generally. You said squeeze it until it dies but D&D isn't going to die because some mid level employees were laid off. It would die because of overexposure, which is what that phrase usually means.Cutting jobs from a successful department is squeezing.
Per Corey Doctorow: Here is how platforms die: first, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die. I call this enshittification, and it is a seemingly inevitable consequence arising from the combination of the ease of changing how a platform allocates value, combined with the nature of a "two sided market", where a platform sits between buyers and sellers, hold each hostage to the other, raking off an ever-larger share of the value that passes between them.That's not what's meant by the term squeezing every dime out of D&D generally. You said squeeze it until it dies but D&D isn't going to die because some mid level employees were laid off. It would die because of overexposure, which is what that phrase usually means.
Nope, I have a fancy education, but I'm a corporate drone.So? That doesn't mean they're not an organisation trading on their name having horrible historical connotations. Also, I thought you were like a university/college or school guy, is that wrong? If it's not wrong what the heck is a Pinkerton doing at a place of learning?
Sure? The non-intimidation route didn't work, they tried reaching out to the guy several times and he blew them off until the Pinkerton came by and asked him to speak to the WotC rep who traded his illicit stuff for free replacements. Intimidation isn't illegal, they weren't threatening to break his kneecaps or anything.Hiring the Pinkertons for any kind of investigative or similar work is always a bad call unless your goal is intimidation. Period.
Hey Wizards!
Want to improve your reputation easily?
Release the SRD for the new version (wink wink, we all know what's up) day 1 of release into the CC!
Thanks!
Yup. TSR made that mistake. Earlier WotC made that mistake. You've got to be real careful when killing off gods because if you get a popular one, people will be pissed, despite being entirely fictional and irrelevant to most campaigns, and they'll remember for decades.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.