Elsenrail said:Look at the newest report from icv2.
It really doesn't look good. 4th edition may be the last (because if it's good, many people won't buy the 5th ed. stuff; a lot will play 3.5 still). The rpg industry is a tiny piece of the hobby market cake (15-17 million $ a year). Compare it to CCG and miniatures - 600 million and 150 respectively. If I was a Hasbro CEO I would say "concentrate on CCG market and miniatures". To sum it up, if DDI is a success, we can smile, if it doesn't... it can really be the end. The costs of producing a D&D book (with plenty of art) are higher than the costs of cards or miniatures. It takes also quite a lot of time to write the fluff, test the rules (if they are tested)etc.
I'm switching to 4th ed., but I will probably buy only the corebooks and a setting. I know a lot folks who will do the same.
How much of both markets do you think WOTC owns? Even though there is Yugi-Oh and (still) Pokemon, I wouldn't be surprised if M:TG owned at least HALF of that market (and that's just the US market. In the Far East, it seems like M:TG is a license to print money. No two ways about it, M:TG has to be at least half a billion revenue generator....) .
Similarly, the DDM is probably much less (maybe 10% of the market given the existence of Warhammer) but WOTC also owns Heroscape ( a very popular seller so I've heard and Axis & Allies which probably gives them a larger share of the market.
Seriously, does Hasbro even KNOW that D&D is a RPG? Would they even CARE given the sales of WOTC's other market To WOTC, the RPG has to be pocketchange....that's kind of sad to think about...