Ruin Explorer said:
The FR spirit is one of the most subjective things I can think of, as the FR is a setting that has gone through many phases, been influenced by many many authors, and been "spun" in several different ways. However well WotC did, if they actually made changes, they would be accused of "failing to keep the FR spirit", because for someone, somewhere (on Candlekeep) the FR spirit was all about sexiness in Silverymoon, and Silverymoon being hit by a comet (I can dream!) has broken the FR completely and oh god he can't play it any more. I mean, clearly for me, the FR had already lost the "FR spirit", had it not? From my entirely subjective perspective, definately, it lost it at the end of 2E and continued that path in 3E, only with megatons (like, more than I'd ever seen) more PC/NPC-oriented crunch.
In your original post, you missed qouted me and added your own typing to my statement. I wanted to clarify that as it makes your post confusing. If you can please correct it.
Of course spirit could be subjective. The way I am using the term is to define the IP's feel and the elements that are popular to long term fans. The fans majority spoke well of the 3/3.5 product line. Most people are impressed with the campaign setting book. The previews before were not reacted to with such a negative response nor was Ed Greenwood publicly showing dislike. Ed Greenwood himself has stated about the 4e FR he is not happy about the changes. These things are what I am referring to, not some personal idea of what I like or don't like about the realms. Personally I am a Dark Sun kinda guy, not a Realms one.
That's lovely talk, but I see nothing in your posts genuinely about "understanding the market as a whole", and a lot based from various specialist forums on the internet. You seem to assuming that, from these specialist forums, you're getting a better picture of the market than WotC did.
That seems a little... um, I dunno, dodgy to me.
Let's not turn this into an attack on my character. You know nothing about me or my research or professional involement within the industry. So please do not be so condemning. I am not looking to have a personal conflict with you.
Also, why are you "listening" to "extreme" fans? They're the least useful source of opinion on any kind of financial or "market as a whole" deal. You go on and on about how "in some people's mind it isn't good", but I've not seen a word from you about how in many people's, it is!
You twisted my words. I said that some of the dedicated fans are being extreme. I didn't say I was listening to all of them. My comment was that the hardcore Realms fan base seems to be back lashing to the 4e changes. As of this writing, the uphappy fans are now nearly equal to the ones who are going to stay interested. That is a near 50% loss of current market with the new edition if nothing changes. The question is why are those 50% of the market not happy? I fully understand that the verbal minority can skew results. That is why the poll is more accurate then the forum responses.
Forgotten Realms campaign setting sold roughly 40,000 copies into the market place through non-wotc hobby distributors within the first year of release. It can be estimated that WOTC sold roughly the same amount up to twice that amount. I do not have WOTC's exact sales numbers, but I do study the releases of direct sales from non-wotc and wotc distribution and that is a safe estimate. This means in a year, Forgotten Realms 3.0 sold 100,000 copies. In that same time, the player's handbook sold 250000 copies through distributors, it sold 2-3 times that amount through direct. That is 500,000 to 750,000 3.0 PHB upon first year sales. With these numbers you can get a rough market count of the Forgotten Realms customer base and what that percentage is compared to the D&D market as a whole. It should be noted that mass-market distribution (Borders, Amazon) is not included in these numbers.
Now those numbers are not entirely accurate because 1) The FRCS was new and many people bought it and then bought nothing else or weren't FR fans 2) The change over at 3.5 lost some fans 3) DMs usually buy campaign settings, so we don't know the size of the fan base solely on these numbers. From my own findings, most D&D groups use 2.5 player's handbooks amongst their 4.5 players. So this means that the D&D market is larger than PHB sales would indicate.
Apparently, it is, because, a few dozen individuals who have, over twenty-odd years spent "thousands" of dollars (more likely hundreds) is utterly meaningless in the face of a gigantic casual fan-base who spend a few dozen dollars every year.
If you can't understand that, well, I'm sorry for you, but it's very simple and straightfoward economics.
Again, you are assuming I am referring to extreme fans. You are also assuming how much they spend, how much a casual fan spends and that I don't have an understanding of simple economics. The economics involved are a bit more complicated than that, but yes I get that a handful of hardcore fans do not add up to the many purchases of the masses. What you may not understand is that RPGs are a niche market with the majority of its particpants being dedicate fans, with very few casual players. The majority of FR fans are dedicated to the setting, just as Greyhawk's fans are. I think it takes that to run or play in a setting honestly. WOTC is trying to change that with 4e. The only part of the FR fan base that is gigantic is the people who read RA Salvatore's novels. Most of which don't play D&D.
"Extreme" fans are few in number, loud in voice, and incapable of supporting this kind of product line by themselves. How hard is this to understand? Impossible for some, apparently. It really blows my mind.
What makes it even funnier, is that these extreme fans are in utter 100% denial that anyone has ever gotten bored with the 2E/3E realms and their tendencies, and stopped spending. I'm pretty sure WotC aren't in denial about this, however.
Your overall tone, disregard for those "extreme" fans and negative attitude towards me is very rude. Can you please take a step back and not read into my statements with such disdain. Also, please don't be so quick to make assumptions about people posting here. I would prefer to have a ration discussion with you instead of being attacked unecessarily.