ENnies predictions?

Dextra said:
Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you my own, personal hero, the Hand of Evil!

25,000 flyers shipping out to Indianapolis in order to be stuffed into the Gen Con attendee bags.

HOODYHOO!

They are not there YET! :heh: They will be.
 

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I predict that there will be more blanks on my ballot than any one elses.

I should be playing "Who are you?" in the background...

I know the d20 companies...

I don't know the rest.

I don't want to know the rest.

I predict I'm not alone. But I predict no one else cares. :p

-Dave, who really needs to find something else to worry about.
 



Whisperfoot said:
I predict that you are wrong, given the fact that the majority of the people who visit this site either primarily play D&D or D20.

Considering that the voting has been announced on my non d20 boards, imagine the gamers voting that don't pay attention to the d20 market and have no idea on those games? There are going to be a lot of people that are not familar with a lot of the books nominated.
 

Hopefully though, other publishers will point their fans to the voting. I like D20 games. I tend to prefer them. But that does not detract from the quality of other products. It would be nice to get more variety in the voting process.
 

MulhorandSage said:
Gee Wulf, and here I figured Cydonia and Maure were probably the two front-runners in the category. Cydonia's gotten a lot of good press on this site, and Bad Axe does great work.

Well, if it's gotten good press on this site, it's probably just due to me being here to pimp it all the time. ;)

I haven't seen the Hero product, and by reputation alone, I'd put Paizo's Maure Castle and Goodman Games in the same category of adventure (dungeon crawly) followed by Trouble at Durbenford (which is dungeon crawl with campaign sprawl).

Slavelords is dangerously different in terms of scope, style, and presentation than any adventure I can recall in my 20+ years of gaming. I am very, very proud of the work that my two writers, Matt Beall and Eric Tam, showed on this product (and I wasn't easy on them as an editor and project manager). Obviously I think it deserves to win, on its merits, but I respect the 'popular vote' as an indispensible part of ranking a product's utility.

Once again, for me, the honor is all in the nomination.

I would be very surprised if the Gold and Silver didn't go to Paizo and Necromancer (in no particular order).
 


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