Hussar
Legend
Oh no way. Completely disagree.
I suspect this idea that the cover needs to create a desire to play is a big factor in why the 4e books have such a "toy" look to them (imo).
Compare Skyrim vs. the 4e PHB:
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Skyrim doesn't try so much to create a desire to play. This is why it looks cooler.
I think being coy and a little bit inaccessible would be a good thing. Basically, think of how a limited edition cover would look. That should be the cover on release!
Like "Roleplaying Game Core Rules" -- you don't need that on the cover. Who is going to be looking at it without already knowing that? You don't need that on the cover anymore than Skyrim needs "Roleplaying Video Game" on the cover.
Do we even need the name Dungeons & Dragons on the cover? What about just a solid fantasy painting (wraparound front to back! and a SCENE with a narrative to unravel, rather than just some PCs modelling themselves), with Dungeons & Dragons on the inside page.
I know that sounds wild, but this is the presumably the point of extending the conversation to random internet people like me, let's shake up the assumptions.
There is an apples to oranges comparison going on here though. Your Skyrim box, if you even bother buying it - you could just get it through Steam, gets looked at once and never seen again. You put it on your hard drive and the box gets put away, probably never to be seen again.
Your D&D books, though, are on the table all the time. Even if they're not open, they're still there. When someone is walking by at the FLGS or at the school lunch room or wherever, and a bunch of people have these really pretty coffee table books sitting there, you don't want that casual observer to have to be "in the know" in order to know what's going on.
Someone observing someone playing Skyrim won't even see the box. He or she will see someone's screen and amazing graphics, fantastic music and whatnot. THAT'S what sells the game to a new player.
D&D, unfortunately, does not have that option.