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General Tabletop Discussion
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A look at WotC and Paizo Product Lines (and their different approaches)
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<blockquote data-quote="Haffrung" data-source="post: 8004639" data-attributes="member: 6776259"><p>A considerable portion of Paizo's audience of subscribers (I've heard around half) do not actively play an RPG. And even those who are actively in a game don't use most of the books they purchase. When you consider that a subscriber to the Adventure Path line alone will receive six complete APs in three years, that shouldn't surprise anybody.</p><p></p><p>This shapes the kind of content Paizo publish. APs are filled with background content and character drama that players will never uncover, but which someone who reads APs for their private fiction will appreciate. Books of crunch present far more options than any player will ever use at the table, but it's grist for the mill for those who enjoy white-room character builds and optimization.</p><p></p><p>While WotC sells lots of books to people who don't actively play and who use the books as reading material as well, they don't deliberately cater their content to that market to the extent Paizo does. Their whole strategy with 5E is to sell fewer books each to a much larger audience.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Haffrung, post: 8004639, member: 6776259"] A considerable portion of Paizo's audience of subscribers (I've heard around half) do not actively play an RPG. And even those who are actively in a game don't use most of the books they purchase. When you consider that a subscriber to the Adventure Path line alone will receive six complete APs in three years, that shouldn't surprise anybody. This shapes the kind of content Paizo publish. APs are filled with background content and character drama that players will never uncover, but which someone who reads APs for their private fiction will appreciate. Books of crunch present far more options than any player will ever use at the table, but it's grist for the mill for those who enjoy white-room character builds and optimization. While WotC sells lots of books to people who don't actively play and who use the books as reading material as well, they don't deliberately cater their content to that market to the extent Paizo does. Their whole strategy with 5E is to sell fewer books each to a much larger audience. [/QUOTE]
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A look at WotC and Paizo Product Lines (and their different approaches)
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