Jdvn1
Hanging in there. Better than the alternative.
My thoughts (I'm still reading the thread. Great stuff! And I'm happy to see Scott post here--I certainly didn't expect that. We'll get his post count up in no time...
):
EDIT: Someone pointed out the writing staff is already pretty big. And it is, but if WotC plans on releasing books with the same vigor as before as well as frequent online material, they may yet need more (or ask for a lot of submissions).
Essentially, you make an account. For free, you can go to a "Previews" tab/folder and see all the content marked as previews. You may also have access to tables of contents. From there, you can choose specific features for, say $1 each, which gives you access to all current and archived documents in a feature. Say, you pay $1 for a month of Class Acts. For that price, you get all the Class Acts from that year and all archives. When the month runs out, your account just stops updating your Class Acts tab/folder. You can still access the information you had, but you can't get new information until you pay another $1. And, for 25 cents, you can get an individual article.
Then, say, there are 15 different features/tabs/folders available, and each works that way. You can pay $1 for any one feature or $10 for everything in a month.
For online tools (such as a dice roller or character generator, etc), those may be a bundle for $1/month, free with signing up, or free with any periodic (monthly or longer) purchase such that when the time period ends so does access to the tools.
EDIT: There may also be a distinction between submitted material and WotC material--maybe a price different or a separate bundle or something.
Regardless, I appreciate the time of the WotC employees involved and of Morrus. This interview did answer some of my questions.

I don't think they really answered the question here. The question isn't about the books and printed content in general, it's about the magazines. Why kill off the magazines? Why can't we have both? If they can't answer the question, I'd have appreciated if they said so.Our understanding at present is that the online content is set to replace the magazines. What factors were involved in the decision to replace one with the other, rather than to allow the two media - the online platform and the magazines - to co-exist?
Chris: Our online content plans will replace the printed magazines. That aside, we are still very much in the business of producing printed products.
Bill: I also want to take a moment to quell some related rumors. D&D is not going away. In no way do our plans call for the end of face-to-face tabletop gaming. We are not making an MMORPG. We will continue to produce printed, for-sale, published products.
This is very good to hear, IMO.Scott: While WotC staff may not be as responsive on the boards as we were in the past, everyone on the product development and business teams reads the boards regularly, and we often discuss the postings and suggestions in various team meetings.
Chris: That said, we’re working to make WotC R&D and Brand team members more accessible and visible online, and this interview is a beginning step toward that long-term goal. We’re excited by this opportunity and look forward to participating more fully in the future.
Isn't this exactly the type of information Paizo would have collected? They'd be good people to ask...What can an online platform offer to the customer that a magazine cannot?
Chris: We have a lot of ideas that we’re happy with, but let me turn the question around. What would you hope for? What would make this exciting and useful for you? Another question for the community: How much of the magazine content were you able to use in your campaign? How much work did you have to do to accomplish that? If this new incarnation of the magazines could encompass anything you could want, what would that be?
And more? Either that'd take a bunch of writers and editors, or very little of the content will be balanced, I think. I wonder which.Would it be fair to say that the new platform will contain enough content to replace both DRAGON and DUNGEON magazines?
Bill: Yes, and more. The constraints of the printed page go away when we transfer this particular kind of content to an online platform.
EDIT: Someone pointed out the writing staff is already pretty big. And it is, but if WotC plans on releasing books with the same vigor as before as well as frequent online material, they may yet need more (or ask for a lot of submissions).
Gah! You can't tell us this and then not tell us whether or not our most favorite columns are going to die! I'm really anxious about Core Beliefs.Chris: We expect some of the columns and features to continue, some to evolve, and new features to appear as well.
This is nice to know. September/October should be interesting.The big question: when can we expect to see the new online content?
Bill: Soon. As stated, Paizo keeps publishing until issue #150 and #359. We don’t want to get in the way of that. Keep an eye on our website for more details.
The best idea I can think of is a client (it may be an online client, maybe almost like a quasi-email thing) that updates itself with information.Chris: We don’t foresee any lack of “previewability.” There will be ways to preview content and we will be testing a couple preview different options. It would be great to hear how customers would like to preview content. We have not come up with a solution for “portability” of content after your subscription has ended but we are discussing ideas with in our development team. We do not have a DRM solution yet but have a range of options available to us.
Essentially, you make an account. For free, you can go to a "Previews" tab/folder and see all the content marked as previews. You may also have access to tables of contents. From there, you can choose specific features for, say $1 each, which gives you access to all current and archived documents in a feature. Say, you pay $1 for a month of Class Acts. For that price, you get all the Class Acts from that year and all archives. When the month runs out, your account just stops updating your Class Acts tab/folder. You can still access the information you had, but you can't get new information until you pay another $1. And, for 25 cents, you can get an individual article.
Then, say, there are 15 different features/tabs/folders available, and each works that way. You can pay $1 for any one feature or $10 for everything in a month.
For online tools (such as a dice roller or character generator, etc), those may be a bundle for $1/month, free with signing up, or free with any periodic (monthly or longer) purchase such that when the time period ends so does access to the tools.
EDIT: There may also be a distinction between submitted material and WotC material--maybe a price different or a separate bundle or something.
This question, and its answer implicitly ignore the effect on third-party companies. That is, my follow-up question would be, "Dragon and Dungeon magazines were important not just to Paizo and fans, but to the RPG industry as a whole as a means to advertise smaller companies and their products. Does WotC have any plans to allow or provide advertising for other companies?" I see this as a highly important question. Again, I don't know if WotC can answer it, if they can't, I'd appreciate an acknowledgment of such. This question also doesn't answer someone else's question of, "What about prisoners, who don't have internet access?"It has been said, both by fans and by those in the industry (including some ex-WotC staffers) that the magazines were an invaluable marketing tool during the run-up to 3E. Given that 4E is going to come sometime, how does this affect WotC plans to successfully market the new edition - or, for that matter, any other large product launches on the horizon.
Regardless, I appreciate the time of the WotC employees involved and of Morrus. This interview did answer some of my questions.
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