EzekielRaiden
Legend
I'm fairly sure methane isn't an entheogen...After a heavy Thanksgiving dinner, using the bathroom can be a religious experience. You may see God.
I'm fairly sure methane isn't an entheogen...After a heavy Thanksgiving dinner, using the bathroom can be a religious experience. You may see God.
I don't think so. If D&D stopped publishing suddenly (for whatever reason) it would be dead in the broad casual community in 2 years and dead in the gamer community in 5. Of course a handful of people would keep playing even if it was dead, but not many. Continued support keeps RPGs alive. I can't think of an example to the contrary.I can't see it dying in the foreseeable future, even if Hasbro closed up shop and nothing for D&D was produced ever again. No other game does what D&D does, the way D&D does it.
Indeed. If anything, D&D is currently wildly exceeding expectations, even for the most bullish among us (which definitely wasn't me, I make no secret of that.) Going from "doing so well, Hasbro execs are touting it as a major performer and discussing it favorably at meetings" to "still making money but not really a major force" would technically be a fall, but in practice would still be perfectly healthy.But I don't think the sky is falling just yet, and won’t for a long time. It wouldn't even if they stopped publishing books tomorrow.
PF1e. It remains more popular than PF2e despite not being the official supported version anymore.I can't think of an example to the contrary.
One of my players enjoys a green herbal be supplement. He had pound of it last week that will make you see the gods.After a heavy Thanksgiving dinner, using the bathroom can be a religious experience. You may see God.
I thought of another death scenario I have not seen mentioned, though I might have missed it:
- TSR3 bribes a judge (Is that the TSR version with the extremely overt racist in it? I don't want to besmirch mere scammers/fools by confusing them with nazis)
- WOTC lose their legal case and the TSR3 gets all the rights they are seeking.
- All D&D products are republished with explicitly racist eugenics theory baked into all of the racial choices. They use racist co-opted runic magic as the basis for all spell casting. All villains are caricatures of RL "undesirables".
- We burn down their headquarters and blame it on Antifa.
I think that is a really bad prediction. D&D should have a ton of new stuff going for it come 2025.It won't even take the movie flopping or MTG burning itself to death.
At some point down the road, D&D will lose its charm, and be tossed into the corner, forgotten. I'm thinking it will be in decline around 2025, but we've got plenty of time to see.
Then someone will have the bright idea to "bring it back to its roots". It will become popular again until they think the game needs a "new vision", when it slowly begins to decline. Then someone will have the bright idea to "bring it back to its roots"...At some point down the road, D&D will lose its charm, and be tossed into the corner, forgotten. I'm thinking it will be in decline around 2025, but we've got plenty of time to see.
D&D, like all other franchises before, will go through it's up and downs. Currently it's ridding a wave of all-time high, eventually it will fall back down into absolute niche.
Like Power Ranger, Ghostbusters, Masters of the Universe, TMNT, ........
It will never completely die, but very well go back down to the small level from where it once came. And then maybe rise again at some point in the future.
Lots and lots of games continue on without new versions of the games coming out.I don't think so. If D&D stopped publishing suddenly (for whatever reason) it would be dead in the broad casual community in 2 years and dead in the gamer community in 5. Of course a handful of people would keep playing even if it was dead, but not many. Continued support keeps RPGs alive. I can't think of an example to the contrary.
I think this is a very small subset of the group that is playing the game now. Being a part of a subset like this, as you seem to be, subscribes you to the illusion that there are more of you than there actually are. Especially since the advent of the internet which spawned forums and other social media... this advancement lended substance to that illusion.The constant churn of new support doesn't really matter to the vast majority of gamers. It matters to the companies, of course, but the gamers themselves? Meh.
You're correct that games like Monopoly and Diplomacy do just fine without getting serious overhauls, but they still remain in print, and therefore still have a presence on store shelves that makes it easier for new fans to be introduced to them (either directly, or through others who can conveniently buy copies for friends and family).Lots and lots of games continue on without new versions of the games coming out.
Take virtually any card game. Sports would be another example. Even evergreen games like Monopoly or Diplomacy - while getting refreshed versions from time to time, have basically been printed unchanged for decades.
While sure, individual board games go out of print and vanish (where's my Stop Thief game?) - board games as a hobby certainly haven't.
Hell, people still play AD&D and it hasn't had a new book (outside of OSR) for decades. So on and so forth. The constant churn of new support doesn't really matter to the vast majority of gamers. It matters to the companies, of course, but the gamers themselves? Meh.
You figure that the majority of gamers out there are buying the new book every time it comes out to use? The sales certainly don't support that idea. The current player base is measured in the millions, but, I really don't think that WotC is banging out millions of copies of every single book they publish. Hundreds of thousands, maybe, but many millions? That would put them in Harry Potter level book sales.I think this is a very small subset of the group that is playing the game now. Being a part of a subset like this, as you seem to be, subscribes you to the illusion that there are more of you than there actually are. Especially since the advent of the internet which spawned forums and other social media... this advancement lended substance to that illusion.
So when you say: "doesn't really matter to the vast majority of gamers", I would suggest you are speaking to the small subset to which you belong. The one you might be thinking is larger than it actually is.
yest butAs the title says. D&D has almost died 3 times but could it happen a 4th time?
For purposes if this question I'm going to ignore events that are highly unlikely and would really mess things up. This means WW3, Supervolcanoes, great depression etc basically things completely beyond WotC control. Could they botch things that badly purely on their own merits?
Also an edition flopping by itself won't kill D&D. Nor am I talking about no more D&D ever but something similar to the other near collapses/TSR going under.
So in what somewhat plausible scenario could D&D die again?
Not a plausible scenario in my opinion. It is unlikely that the failure of the movie will impact the D&D brand or market in any significant way as D&D has got to where it is independently of the movie. A success, on the other hand could have an impact.Here's my scenario.
1. The D&D movie flops (for whatever reason). A flop here means it loses money roughly speaking it needs to make around double it's production+marketing costs not if it makes hundreds of millions of box office or the quality of the movie or if you liked it. $200 million box office could still be a flop. Does the movie make money yes/no is the only criteria.
2. One D&D flops for whatever reason. Bit harder to know but if it's 4E 2.0 and it goes out of print in a few years it's probably a flop.
3. Hasbro/WotC themselves get into trouble due to whatever reasons. This means no MtG money to bail out D&D.
So that's roughly the scenario that's somewhat plausible.
The collapse of Hasbro/WoTC would not kill D&D, not immediately or not at least in the broader context. One question, is Critical Role D&D?This is not a prediction, projection, want desire etc.
Why plausible? For those of you who don't know is Magic is not in the best condition right now and Hasbros stock price is falling.
Due to various decisions made by WotC there's a lot of angry MtG players out there. It's probably worse than 4E comparatively. Espicially to WotC bottom line.
There's also multiple reasons but overprinting sets, to much product and to expensive with deluxe products aimed at whales seems to be big issues.
How bad is it? They're dumping MtG product for sale on Amazon cheaper than distributors can get it. And they're asking people why they're no longer playing standard. And Bank of America has commented on what's happening. How it plays out in the future no idea.
And that's basically how D&D could tank again a simultaneous collapse of D&D and MtG. Probably won't happen but it's a somewhat plausible scenario.
At the end of the day, Hasbro/wotc has to return a profit on the investment on D&D. If they don’t, then D&D will cease and only survive as long as their hobbyists. In the long term, that is a slow death. People die out, and with them the culture of ttrpg gaming. If you’re looking for an example, think of human cultures that have died out or cease to live - for example, latin, Aztec, Maya or the Safavid Empire.I see no evidence that the hobby needs a constant stream of new books. I understand that publishers need that. Fair enough. And, I understand that people like new books. Heck, I do too. But, I'm not really convinced that a majority (or even a really significant minority) of gamers actually pays much attention to the newest releases.
Wow, it really has been 20 years already. Time flies indeedMore importantly my favorite German poster had been stalking me online for 20 years since the 3.0 boards.
o7.
Seriously I'll shut up now.
As the title says. D&D has almost died 3 times but could it happen a 4th time?
Here's my scenario.
1. The D&D movie flops (for whatever reason).
2. One D&D flops for whatever reason.
3. Hasbro/WotC themselves get into trouble due to whatever reasons. This means no MtG money to bail out D&D.