The Little Raven
First Post
humble minion said:It's a lot easier to get a fan of campy-BSG to give modern-BSG a go than it is to convince someone who's never heard of it to watch it.
Not in my experience. Every fan of the previous one I've tried to get into it has rejected it simply because it's not the old one. Every fan of the new one that I've gotten into the show has no knowledge of the original series, and most of them weren't even sci-fi fans before that.
Your hardcore fans are the bedrock of your market segment.
Hardcore fans are a small section of the total customer demographic for a property.
Dragonlance reinvention (Saga, Summer Flame, War of Souls, etc) - failure
1. I think the Margaret Weis people would disagree with you there, since they've been producing excellent material for a few years now.
2. This is not a reinvention, this was an advancing of metaplot, as are your Dark Sun and Greyhawk notes. A reinvention is a reboot, not a continuation of the same story with the previous material as background.
3. Other reinventions you didn't bring up that succeeded: Halloween (Rob Zombie remake), The Italian Job (popular enough to land a sequel), Texas Chainsaw Massacre (enough to warrant a prequel), Batman Begins (quite different from Tim Burton's stylish rendition, but totally awesome), Superman Returns (only partially, since it was a sequel as well as a reinvention). Hell, Blade was a reinvention of a comic book character (quite different from his comic counterpart), and was a notable success that really spawned the modern age of comic movies.
World of Darkness reinvention (post-Gehenna) - arguable failure. I'm admittedly not sure about the exact numbers, but I get the distinct impression that NWOD isn't a patch on OWOD sales-wise, though WW has Scion and Exalted to take up the slack these days.
From everything I've seen, NWoD sells as well as OWoD, and in some cases (Promethean and Changeling) better than their previous counterparts. White Wolf seems to think their numbers are good enough to warrant spin-off games, like Vampire: Dark Influences and Prince of the City, and to continue their "new WoD game each year" trend.
somehow bland, uninspiring, lacking character and charm, and generally giving off a 'tries-too-hard' vibe
Well, to me, as a long-time oWoD fan and a nWoD fan, it's like this.
OWoD is a horror movie directed by Michael Bay. It's flashy and goofy and tugs at your heart, but at it's core is about "gotcha!" moments and explosions. I love Michael Bay movies for what they are, but I don't take myself so seriously when I watch them (I mean, come on... a clan of Middle Eastern assassin vampires?).
NWoD is a horror movie directed by Ridley Scott. It's grittier and more realistic, with a strong focus on the thematic elements that make horror distinct. A horror game that is all grown-up.
'Fighting Yet More Drow And Shar-Worshippers In A Shadowdale From Which Elminster Is Mysteriously Absent (Again)'
It's not mysterious. The Zhents invaded, kicked his and the locals' asses, and took over.
I can't really see any appeal here that's going to attract the new gamers in that will be needed to offset that percentage of old-school types who will drop off.
Since you're a veteran gamer, I'm complete unsurprised that you are unable to look at things like a new gamer would (I know I certainly can't, though I try). After all, you can only fall in love for the first time once.