How Much Do You Care About Form Factor/Book Size?

Rulebooks, source books, adventure paths/campaigns and bestiaries, for me, need to be A4 and hardback.

Adventure modules should still be A4 but I can live with them being softback since they will get more flipping through them.
 

log in or register to remove this ad


For gaming materials, it depends on how the text and illos are formatted. If images are generally simple and if the text is large enough, uses bullets/indents, tables, etc, or otherwise mostly highly formatted, I don't mind smaller sizes. For denser things or more traditional "rulebook" styles (eg, double columns, complex/color art, elaborate maps, etc) I prefer larger sizes.
Yeah basically this. I have little inherent preference, but I absolutely loathe books that feel like they've been inappropriately compressed down to "digest" format - which in my experience is about 20-30% of "digest" format RPGs, and you never know which until you get them!
 

I really like OSR books generally being digest size, as kind of a symbolic break with D&D. I can glance at my shelf and spot most of the indie games that way.

For actual practical use, though? It really doesn't matter. You can have a poorly designed traditional book just as easily (and arguably more often) than a digest-sized book.

And I love that the 3E third-party setting book Redhurst: Academy of Magic is laid out as an 11" x 8 1/2" book (yes, horizontally), emulating a college brochure.

I'm not quite @philreed -- whose newest RPG is literally a soda can and soda -- but I love when publishers play with format.
 
Last edited:



Come On What GIF by MOODMAN


This was quite literally looking at my screen, my wife, and back. :LOL:
 


Like several others, I almost exclusively buy PDF. In print, I very strongly prefer digest size, and it’s been years since I bought a letter-sized or larger book.
 

I like digest-size books as they are easy to carry. I don't like digest-size books because they are usually light on content.

The reverse can be said about letter-sized books. So I'm not sure there is a good size for me.
 
Last edited:

Does the size of a book influence your decision whether or not to buy it? For example, do you prefer (or avoid) zine-sized books as oppposed to full-size (A4/8.5x11") books?
As long as it's not unusually large or unusually small sizes (Not bigger than 9"×12" nor smaller than 4"×6"), and the text is readable, I'm not picky.
I don't like landscape once it exceeds 6"×7"... the Classic Traveller Big Floppy Books (BFBs) were letter landscape, and the BFB's were awful hard to use away from the table.
 

Remove ads

Top