Im in south florida & there are plenty of them in the major metro areas around here. They make the majority of their money from comics, collectibles, & tcg* sales/tournaments, but they all devote plenty pf space to rpg game books/accessories , but that doesn't stop them from making some decent extra cash charging 2-5$/head for AL & stuff on the other nights. The 80's style flgs with nothing but books went away or evolved.Cheap? Yea I think RPG gamers are cheap. It doesn't mean we don't spend money, but we do so in very strange ways.
Where I live there are over 3 million people in one of the top 5 urban areas in the US. Want to know how many RPG game stores we have? 3, assuming the Games Workshop place hasn't closed.
A million people per FLGS? yea, crazy.
But then when folks would rather pirate a pdf than pay $10 for an official PDF, or expect their local store to provide Amazon prices for a hard copy. Or complain about a VTT that costs less than $1 per hour of use.
But they are happy to buy a $40 or $100 bottle of alcohol for game night or spend $50 at a bar for a couple hours while they use their pirated PDFs on their tablet...
Maybe we are not cheap, but we sure have a funny way of spending our money to support those that create content for what we say we want to support.
I get it that models have changed, I haven't bought dead tree RPG in years, and I very rarely buy PDF. But I do buy VTT products and their DLC. And I support Patreons and others that provide content I wish to support. And I don't wine about prices because I know the tens of thousands of hours that go into such things.
Yeah, you seem to think there is an obvious contradiction there, but there isn’t. Every ddb user I know buys products at their flgs. Ddb is primarily used at physical tables, which is also where people use maps, physical dice, minis, etc.Well, this is an interesting side discussion, but I'll be honest I can't take it very seriously when you're asking for evidence that FLGS are in trouble while claiming DDB has millions of subs.
Yeah I have 2 1/2 (one is mainly a comics shop but also does tabletop games) in my metro area of ~350k people, while the greater area around me has at least two more in the smaller towns.Im in south florida & there are plenty of them in the major metro areas around here. They make the majority of their money from comics, collectibles, & tcg* sales/tournaments, but they all devote plenty pf space to rpg game books/accessories , but that doesn't stop them from making some decent extra cash charging 2-5$/head for AL & stuff on the other nights. The 80's style flgs with nothing but books went away or evolved.
*Ie magic the gatthering/pokemon/etc cards
Since I've now installed FG and set up incoming communication, I'm looking for a way for us to talk. People seem to like Discord. What's the advantage over a simple Skype call?I find Fantasy Grounds + Discord very effective. It's especially good for crunchier games (I guess for fluffier games one could simply use Discord).
No, you've misunderstood. It was the requirement for proof of my claim while stating that DDB had millions of subs, a dubious claim. The rpg market is estimated around a $35 million and tou're saying that at least 2 million people are paying $72 a year in subs? I think your ideas of scale and spending in this hobby are off.Yeah, you seem to think there is an obvious contradiction there, but there isn’t. Every ddb user I know buys products at their flgs. Ddb is primarily used at physical tables, which is also where people use maps, physical dice, minis, etc.
You claimed that FLGSs are going under, as if to suggest they are doing so more than at other times, but I can’t find literally any evidence to support that.
First, skype is going away (supposedly) in about 3 months in favor of MS teams.Since I've now installed FG and set up incoming communication, I'm looking for a way for us to talk. People seem to like Discord. What's the advantage over a simple Skype call?
Really? Does no one else use MapTool?
In Discord one can effectively create a persistent room for each game, and give members of each room local labels and rights. So that there can be a DM, players, etc. I don't know if Skype has that.Since I've now installed FG and set up incoming communication, I'm looking for a way for us to talk. People seem to like Discord. What's the advantage over a simple Skype call?
You can also post pictures in chat, and there are die roller macros.In Discord one can effectively create a persistent room for each game, and give members of each room local labels and rights. So that there can be a DM, players, etc. I don't know if Skype has that.