snip
However, with D&D, the only edition on sale is one released 3 years ago (of the 37 year history of the game) with zero backward compatibility to older editions. /snip
You mean like 3e? Which was pretty much completely not backwards compatible with earlier editions? Even modules brought forward from earlier editions had to be completely reworked in order to be run.
Never minding things like B/E/C/M/I - let's see you play your Immortal character in AD&D.
Funnily enough though, I'm rebuilding my World's Largest Dungeon for 4e and it's not exactly difficult to go from 3e to 4e. First region looks pretty much the same in both editions - numbers might change a bit, but, other than that, nope, pretty much the same.
Or, if you want a side by side comparison, look at the Pathfinder and 4e versions of Zeitgeist. It's not like they are massively different. In fact, they're pretty darn close.
This is all just my recollection, and everyone seems to have a different take on the history of D&D: There were some moments when D&D became somewhat mainstream. It has just been on a popularity decline since the mid-80s or so (with a few brief booms if I remember). Even through the 90s though you could find the red boxed set in toy stores. I know because I bought a bunch of them for the heck of it. I think it has just been a matter of D&D increasingly becoming more and more of a niche hobby game. I suppose it makes sense, that is how it began. But there was a time when you had a D&D TV show, D&D being played in movies like ET, and commercials for D&D on television. But that was also a period when fantasy and sci-fi were hugely popular in general.
I don't know if that can be achieved again. I think it was more of a passing craze in the early 80s like shoulder pads or the moonwalk.
You honestly think SF and fantasy were more popular in the 80's than they are now? Really? Quick, name the
top grossing movie of all time - 9 of the top ten are SF or Fantasy and ALL of them (the fantasy movies) have been made in the past ten years.
We have SF on prime time TV now - and it's top spot. We have cable channels devoted to nothing BUT SF and Fantasy.
The idea that genre fiction was more popular in the past than it is now is not true at all. Every element of genre fiction - print, movies, TV, video games, shows that SF and Fantasy are on the top spots of pretty much everything.
Good grief, I remember the 80's. We could go an entire year without an SF movie. And fantasy movies? Other than some really really crap B list movies, fergettaboutit. Now, we get genre movies every year, and that's movies plural. Heck, look at this summer. How many genre movies did we have? Six, seven? Between comic book movies and straight up SF and fantasy, we're in the land of milk and honey as far as geekdom goes.
See, the presumption that so many gamers seem to have is that the gamer population hit some sort of peak back in the 80's and we've done nothing but decline since then. But, there's nothing to actually support that. Gen Con this year posted record attendance. En World has done nothing but grow, year on year, year after year. We've now got TWO companies producing core D&D material on a regular basis, when, for the past thirty years, we only had one.
How is this evidence of shrinkage?