It changes. From that one address you can get either a Game Day page, or one for Spiderkiller, or one for 1st edition rulebooks, or one for Sword of the Gods, or one that almost looks like a normal front page. But depending on your setup you might see just one of the promotion pages with the New to D&D sign hidden below the screen and just the image for the promo visible (Game Day, Spiderkiller, Sword of the Gods). It's like the whole front page was designed specifically for people who already are in the hobby and know what the heck those are.I have no idea what this "game day" thing that Libramarian is talking about.
I agree; it doesn't seem hard to me.
I start here:
Dungeons & Dragons Roleplaying Game Official Home Page
I click "New to D&D?" and up pops What is D&D?, What to Buy?, Learn to Play, Find a Game. Seems really simple to me, and involves one click.
That would be a good start. I would have it be three links. One for new players leading to a beginners guide, one for promoting things in the current product line for existing players, and then one that simply said something along the lines of Product Line & Free Content.I think a D&D site needs to have a Dragon on the splash page. Then have two links:
New to D&D (some image of a party of heroes)
Existing Player (some image related to the latest products, changing every week or two)
The front is well done.And hey, while we're at it, if you have suggestions for EN Publishing's page -- D&D ADVENTURE PATHS -- feel free to share them.
Cookies aren't as magic as you think.In this case, thanks to the magic of cookies, you don't even know what newbies see.
If you have never visited the D&D site before, you get a giant "New to D&D?" splash page with huge honkin' buttons guiding you to various options.
Which isn't good web design. You want your front to be stable, familiar, user oriented. Not something that changes, even for the same people. You want it so that the users know what choices there are, and get to make those choices themselves. Not so that the site makes the choices for them. What if the person looking for information is using a public library or school computer? Some organizations, goverment and private, offer free access to customers. There's internet cafes. Some cities have public computer terminals. You don't know whose been using them, or what they've been looking for. The designer can't know what your setup is, and he shouldn't account for 'newbies' like that.If you have visited the D&D site before, the site detects a cookie on your computer, and shows you one of four splash pages for D&D fans.