Drengy said:
Finally, to those who would cancel or not subscribe - an entire year subscription to each of these mags is $45. Not much more than a one hardcover gaming book, and there's lots more useful info in a year of magazines than even the best hardcover book (except for the 3 core books of course). Put another way $45 / 12 months = $3.75 per month. Less than a single lunch, half a movie, or one large specialty coffee drink from Starbucks. If you are truly a fan of the hobby how can you justify *not* having subscriptions?
Maybe because I don't remember actually using one single thing from the last 8-9 issues of Dragon that I have? I expect that sometime in the next 6 months, I will actually be bored enough to try to read most of the last 3 issues. But, I'm not in a hurry.
By contrast, I am still getting use out of Portals and Planes, Manual of the Planes, and a host of other books. I am excited by my recent purchase of the Psychic's Handbook and have been integrating it into my game. I like a Magical Society: Ecology and Culture. I am eagerly awaiting both the Immortal's Handbook and Steam and Steel on the PDF front.
It's not that Dragon, or Dungeon, is a bad magazine. But, I find myself referring to Dragon magazines that 2-23 years old more than I have for issues that are less than 2 years old. For the older articles, part of the appeal has a lot to do with memories and nostalgia. Well, that and those gems from the past that I remember reading and having a gestalt moment. Sometimes, I want to brush up on the moment of insight on how I can make my game better. I'm not that interested in new PrC's. I create my own. I'm not that interested in alternate builds to core classes. (Urban Druid? It's not to my taste.)
I want to see more content for D20 games. I used to love Ares, even when it published Marvel Superhero characters. I want Open Game content, and articles that sometimes deal with other games. I want wacky cross-genre ideas and scenarios. Maybe I won't use it, but then again, maybe I will. In short, I'm looking for more diversity when they are pulling in to focus. It sounds like Paizo needs to do that, and that's great that they are able to recognize it. I hope it helps strengthen the industry. Down the road, things may swing outward again and they will need to shift toward more diversity. I will still be here. I've been here for 24 years, and I hope to be here for another 24. Heck, I will only be 58 in another 24 years. But, if I know that very little of the content is going to appeal to me, how can I justify a subscription? I will still see it on the shelves. I will still read about articles on the messageboards. When they have something that piques my interest, I can buy it then. But otherwise, I will spend my money on other gaming resources. Mostly sourcebooks.