Hadrian the Builder
First Post
For judging success of the DDI subs, I'd compare any numbers to the circulation of print Dragon and Dungeon prior to being cancelled, and their circulation around the time 3e started or so.
anyone have these numbers?
For judging success of the DDI subs, I'd compare any numbers to the circulation of print Dragon and Dungeon prior to being cancelled, and their circulation around the time 3e started or so.
There is a vast difference between "is unknown for certain" and "is 100% unknown." I was just politely pointing that out.
Most of my points are indisputable- for example, it is quite simply mathematically unlikely that vast numbers of people just happened to have their subscriptions run out in the short period between having a subscription and logging in to the forums, and now. Why? Because there just haven't been that many days since the new forums started, and the shortest possible subscription period is one month.
Same with my point about people with intermittent subscriptions counting as at least partial successes for WotC- a yearly subscription is $71.40 right now. Using your example, someone who subscribes for one month every six months is still paying $19.90 per year. And honestly there's a straight mathematical probability that, to the extent that people are actually doing this, for everyone person who's shown up in that list so far who's pulling this trick there ought to be four or five times more who haven't shown up because they're in the a no-subscription period of their cycle.
Eh, forget it. Sales data about WotC is one of your hobbyhorses, and I should just let you have it.
I thought it had already been pretty solidly established that the member count of the D&D Insider group is not an accurate count of subscribers at all, since only those who have recently registered with the new forum community are counted. The actual number of subscribers is probably many times the number of people in the community group.Yeah, I wish someone would because if all it does is count whether a person at the point they create a profile is a subscriber or not... well then this number is pointless as far as being negative or positive since it in no way gives an accurate count of how successful DDI is.
I thought it had already been pretty solidly established that the member count of the D&D Insider group is not an accurate count of subscribers at all, since only those who have recently registered with the new forum community are counted. The actual number of subscribers is probably many times the number of people in the community group.
And again if the counter does subtract and add members according to their status then we may very well get a pretty accurate average number of subscribers per year at a certain point... if all it does is add dependent upon status at time of creating a profile... we will never have anything close to an accurate number... I just asked which one was the case.
if all it does is add dependent upon status at time of creating a profile... we will never have anything close to an accurate number...
It doesn't.
Technically, all data we see will be flawed in some way, discounting it on that basis means we won't ever be using the data.
It has now been one month since Jack99 posted this, and the total is now sitting at 14392, not quite double where it was on Sept 6th.At the time of writing, it's 7972 members.