Hunter In Darkness
First Post
30 started in 91 with 2ed..i wanted to like 4e but it just dosnt look like it'll be something i would play for my d&d games.oh and yes that poll took some reading lol
But thank you for doing so. Next time I'll include height, weight, and number of dependents. Frankly, I'd be interested to see the results!Hunter In Darkness said:oh and yes that poll took some reading lol
Wolfspider said:Really?![]()
Mistwell said:As people age, they become more set in their ways. See this study, for example:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2459/is_n1_v27/ai_21113302
"...it has been found that increasing age, although associated with a wide inter-individual variation in lifestyle, was associated with a decreased intra-individual variation. That is, older individuals appear to become more `set in their ways'."
For what it is worth, I am 38, started with 1e (AD&D, then bought basic set, then back to AD&D, skipped 2e, picked back up at 3e), and I am looking forward to 4e.
Hussar said:Yes.
Think of cars. If I told you that 70% of Ford owners are looking forward to buying the latest model Ford, would that be good or bad for Ford?
If I told you that 70% of computer owners are looking forward to buying the latest CPU in the spring, would that be good or bad?
If I told you that 70% of PS2 owners were looking forward to buying a PS3, would that be good or bad?
The BIGGEST influx of cash is the core 3 books. I'm thinking that there's a fair number of people on that poll like me who own the core 3 and probably don't buy a whole lot of books every year. With a new edition, that's at least a PHB for 70% of your market. Plus a DMG and PHB for a fair chunk as well. That's GINORMOUS.
The passage of previous editions has lulled us into a sense of false security and paved the way for World of Wardungeons & anime wuxia.Dannyalcatraz said:Unless I misread the poll result, I find it interesting that more people welcome 4Ed than fear it in each age category!
Wolfspider said:Seems like a 30% loss to me....
Sure, 70% is better than 50%, but 70% means that roughly 1/3 of customers won't be coming back. And that doesn't sound good. At least not to pessimistic me.![]()