Chris Cocks says it makes sense to move D&D to a "live service" model, but Hasbro will always make physical books

Chris Cocks explicitly said that he wants to move D&D to a live service style of gaming.
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Chris Cocks isn't shy about plans to move Dungeons & Dragons to a more live service model of gaming. In a recent interview with GamesRadar, Cocks explicitly said that "it makes sense" for players to shift their mindset towards a live service due to the high amount of players using digital services, but assured the interviewer that books will still be produced by Hasbro. When asked if Wizards was moving away from books in favor of a more piecemeal release schedule, following the announcement of D&D Beyond's new Drops service. "Books will always be an important part of D&D," Cocks said. "It will always be kind of like a special totem that you can collect. I have a big bookshelf of D&D books myself."

"But we see what's happening – almost everyone who plays D&D uses D&D Beyond, like a super high percentage uses it," Cocks continued. "A very high percentage use Foundry VTT or Roll20, and so it just makes sense that you should start to migrate your thinking about the way you play to more of a live service where you don't have to wait 18 months for us to build a book. We can start to release components or aspects of that book over time, and you don't have to buy everything all at once. You can buy chapters or segments of it over time. That makes a ton of sense to me. That said we will still have big moments. We will still have like, 'hey, ta da, here's a huge campaign.' You can expect there'll be more around that, both from us and from all the creators in the world that can leverage a platform like D&D Beyond to share their content as well."

Broadly speaking, Dungeons & Dragons has always been a "live service" game, as the game's core business model involves continuously releasing new content in the form of new rulebooks or campaigns. However, it seems that Cocks is principally interested in shifting this model around more frequent releases. We'll note that the business model suggested by Cocks was already rolled out in a manner of speaking. The Dhampir species rules were released as a "digital DLC" for D&D Beyond subscribers who digitally ordered a Forgotten Realms book bundle, but a physical version of the rules are being released via the upcoming Ravenloft: The Horrors Within book. However, a la carte purchases were removed from D&D Beyond several years ago in order to force users to purchase entire books instead.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

Most NAS devices have multiple drives in a RAID configuration so this specifically doesn't happen.

I remember in a previous job that our multi-drive RAID configuration literally caught on fire. Besides, you're the one saying it's "easy" ... it's not if you aren't a techie. That's why I pay someone else to back up my data because if my house is on fire the last thing I want to worry about is whether I'm going to lose my backups.
 

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I remember in a previous job that our multi-drive RAID configuration literally caught on fire.

Nothing is 100% perfect. Or flawless. But cloud backup solutions fail far more often than hardware backups. And, yes, I still use cloud backup solutions BUT I also use hardware backups. For a reason (it's the same reason businesses primarily rely on hardware backups - proven reliability).
 
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Nothing is 100% perfect. Or flawless. But cloud backup solutions fail far more often than hardware backups. And, yes, I still use cloud backup solutions BUT I also use hardware backups. For a reason (it's the same reason businesses primarily rely on hardware backups - proven reliability).

Which is why a good online backup server will have data stored in multiple locations, something I can't do at home. But this is also way, way, way off topic.
 

I thought NAS was a rapper.
If physical books should die before I wake
I'll put an extended clip inside of my AK
Roll to every live service, murder the DJ
Roll to every live service, murder the DJ
If physical books should die before I wake
I'll put an extended clip inside of my AK
Roll to every live service, murder the DJ
Roll to every live service, murder the DJ
physical books just died this mornin'
And they's dead, they's dead
 

I know, right? I specifically mentioned mass market stuff from the 60s, 70s and 80s because mass market is cheap and allegedly disposable. And yet, nearly a lifetime later, it's still going strong.
I believe mass market is on the way out. Over the last 5 years I worked at B&N we got less and less.

In fact, we recently had a thread on here (I think) talking about how our old mass market book shelves in our home didnt hold trade paper.
 

I believe mass market is on the way out. Over the last 5 years I worked at B&N we got less and less.

In fact, we recently had a thread on here (I think) talking about how our old mass market book shelves in our home didnt hold trade paper.
Yup, the last major distributor of mass market paperback is throwing in the towel and winding down this year. The upcoming Wind and Truth mass market is probavly going to be the last one Tor releases.
 

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