WotC Comparing EN World's Demographics to the D&D Community's

WotC released some figures this week. I thought it would be fun to compare them to the demographics of our own little community here on EN World for the same period (2019).

WotC uses a metric it refers to as 40,000,000 'D&D Fans', but that's not defined. For the purposes of this, I assume a fan is a person who has interacted directly with D&D in some way (played a game, bought a book, watch a stream, played a video game, etc.) A fan's a fan, however they interact with D&D!

For comparison, I'm using people who have interacted with EN World in some way -- and what we can measure is unique visitors. Obviously this isn't on the same scale (40M people is a LOT) but it doesn't matter too much for what we're doing here; they're both samples for conversation. So, let's start at the top!
  • Short version: EN World skews younger, but more male than the overall D&D community.
WotC is looking at 40M fans, we're looking at 5.6M unique users (as opposed to overall visits, which numbers in the tens of millions). We get this data using Google Analytics, which provides a lot of anonymized demographic data. I can't identify any individual person with this; it merely shows the overall numbers. Our demographic data includes just under half of those 5.6M users; I don't know how WotC's data is derived. I know they do surveys from time to time, but I don't know what percentage of those 40M fans fill out those forms.

As an aside - 40 million D&D fans is awesome! We're definitely living in a golden age of tabletop gaming, and as the market leader, WotC is the entity most responsible for bringing in new gamers. Well, maybe Critical Role is, but they're playing D&D!

Age

So, the controversial data that everybody on Twitter is talking about -- the age groups. Google Analytics breaks it down a little differently to WotC's figures, so here's what we have. GA doesn't give stats on people under 18 years of age. The figures below are those GA has data on for EN World -- obviously that's only about half of overall users.

Age​
Numbers​
Percentage​
18-24592,401 users24.58%
25-341,309,373 users54.33%
35-44330,755 users13.46%
45-54138,372 users5.74%
55-6426,689 users1.11%
65+12,631 users0.52%

As you can see, the figures aren't as evenly distributed as WotC's. There's a significant number of 25-34 year-olds, and a higher number of 18-24 year-olds. Also, it shows people above the age of 45, who don't appear in WotC's stats.
  • We show a slightly higher percentage of people 34 or under (79% compared to WotC's measure of 74%) although we're not measuring people under 18, which would skew it younger if we were.
  • 26% of WotC's audience is over 25, while only 20% of EN World's is.
  • 7.37% of EN World's audience is over 45.
  • Under 18s are not included in the stats.
  • EN World skews younger than the D&D community overall.
Screen Shot 2020-04-25 at 12.09.27 AM.png

For comparison, here are WotC's figures.

Screen Shot 2020-04-25 at 12.42.49 AM.png


I've turned them into a quick and dirty bar graph. The number of players increases slowly from 8 up until age 35, peaking at ages 30-34, and then it starts to drop off sharply. That's the same age that the drop-off on EN World's readership takes place, too. Seems about 30 is peak age.

wotc_age.jpg


And here are those same figures in absolute numbers -- 10% of 40,000,000 people is a LOT of people!

Age​
Percentage​
Numbers​
8-1212%4.8 million
13-1713%5.2 million
18-2415%6 million
25-2915%6 million
30-3419%7.6 million
35-3915%6 million
40-4511%4.4 million

Gender

The gender demographics here skew much more male than WotC's stats do. Google Analytics shows male and female (it doesn't track non-binary people) and reports on under half of overall users (2.3M out of 5.6M total).

Of those, it reports 85.56% male, 14.44% female. It doesn't provide data on non-binary visitors.

Screen Shot 2020-04-25 at 12.08.51 AM.png



Geography

WotC's report shows that Europe is growing for them. As a European (at least geographically!) that's heartwarming news for me. So here's some figures on EN World's geographical distribution.

As you can see, it skews primarily English-speaking heavily, which is expected for an English-language community.

United States3,376,839 users59.14%
United Kingdom (yay!)478,217 users8.38%
Canada411,179 users7.2%
Australia198,922 users3.48%
Brazil125,682 users2.2%
Germany109,248 users1.91%
Italy95,682 users1.68%
Netherlands74,139 users1.3%
Sweden51,479 users0.9%
Spain47,096 users0.82%

The list goes on for pages, but we're under 1% now.

The average EN World reader is male, American, between 25-34.
 

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Huh, that's interesting. Being a website with a rather long tradition and seeing quite the amount of grognards on the forums, I would have guessed that EN would attract an older demographic than WotC.

Also, I'm a bit surprised to see that despite this age differences, EN is that male. Usually, I'd expect female players to be younger (at least that's my observation in our groups) while the grognards tend to be guys.
 

Huh, that's interesting. Being a website with a rather long tradition and seeing quite the amount of grognards on the forums, I would have guessed that EN would attract an older demographic than WotC.

Also, I'm a bit surprised to see that despite this age differences, EN is that male. Usually, I'd expect female players to be younger (at least that's my observation in our groups) while the grognards tend to be guys.

Well - historically, places like this haven't exactly been as open and friendly to non-males. I think that's improved, but it can take a long time for something like that to balance out.
 

Well - historically, places like this haven't exactly been as open and friendly to non-males. I think that's improved, but it can take a long time for something like that to balance out.

Female players are mostly on FB group pages of the various games, where moderation is swift and brutal agains those who engage in female bashing or disrespectful behaviour. You can get kicked out in record time and get no appeal.
 

Female players are mostly on FB group pages of the various games, where moderation is swift and brutal agains those who engage in female bashing or disrespectful behaviour. You can get kicked out in record time and get no appeal.

See, that's my point. Historically, online communities have been pretty awful for casually disrespecting people. I am very glad that's changing (I'd say changed - things are a hell of a lot better - but there's still a way to go).
 


Just because there’s a ddifference in demographics
Well - historically, places like this haven't exactly been as open and friendly to non-males. I think that's improved, but it can take a long time for something like that to balance out.
Males also have an inherently stronger tendancy for this sort of game than females do though. Lets be frank. Females number have climbed slightly in recent years. Its mostly due to effects of the digital age and social networking than anything else. This isnt a dig on females. Realistically though they honestly have interest in ttrpgs WAY less often than males.

And no. This is not female bashing. Im omly pointing out that there is dimorphism at play here.
 



Males also have an inherently stronger tendancy for this sort of game than females do though. Lets be frank. Females number have climbed slightly in recent years. Its mostly due to effects of the digital age and social networking than anything else. This isnt a dig on females. Realistically though they honestly have interest in ttrpgs WAY less often than males.

I... couldn't disagree more. What's more, I think that is a dig on females, even if you didn't intend it to be so. I think this is exactly the sort of comment, though, that has made groups like this feel like it is hostile.

Imagine yourself as a woman who is into tabletop, reading that comment. Are you going to think "Oh, hey, this is a place that will welcome me", or are you going to think "This is a place that thinks I don't exist and will probably continue to do so whether I try to change their minds or not".
 

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