Wulf Ratbane said:If you really loved the game, you'd sell a kidney to come up with the fee.
GMSkarka said:Not true. There are small publishers (like me, for example), for whom this is a full-time job.
A very good question, since not paying the $5K means sitting for 5 months with almost no sales, while everybody spends money on "the new hotness" that is 4th Edition.
Think of it this way -- are YOU able to take an entire months' income and pay it up front, on demand? How about 2 months? Leaving nothing else for rent, food, utilities... much less freelancers or production costs?
EricNoah said:Let's round up 5000 ENW members and have them chip in $1 apiece.![]()
Let's not hijack the thread by telling other people what they should or shouldn't be doing, please.Vyvyan Basterd said:I think you risk sounding unprofessional coming here and repeatedly bashing WotC's decision. Your time could probably be better spent thinking of a way to partner with other small publishers to reduce the burn of this new investment. It seems to me that you think you would best profit from being in the Phase 1 group and thus the anger that flows into yours posts here. A foundation of small publishers would also benefit from shared resources and contacts, thus giving you more clout with distributors and the industry at large than you could achieve going it alone. If this really is your sole means of livlihood maybe you should look at how to make this investment work for you.
GMSkarka said:Think of it this way -- are YOU able to take an entire months' income and pay it up front, on demand? How about 2 months? Leaving nothing else for rent, food, utilities... much less freelancers or production costs?
Rechan said:So after June, Joe Gamer who wants to see if 4e D&D is worth his time by clicking on the SRD, or Stan Diceroller, D&D gamer online, won't be able to read the fluffless rules online?
That's going to bite. Simply because I run a lot of online games, and having the d20SRD at my fingertips when I need to look up a quick rule is so convenient.
tenkar said:It might bite, but I fail to see why WoTC should distribute what is basically a free version of their rules and IP. I know gamers that never bought 3.5 as the 3.0 and the SRD was all they needed. From a business sense that is lost money.
That being said, I will miss having a 4e online rules set for free (or negligible cost for some of the PDF versions of 3.5 out there) but I can understand why WoTC is avoiding doing so this time around.
But will it be a hyperlinked, searchable e-version? That's what I want to know.EricNoah said:Well this is where D&DI comes in -- if you care to pay the monthly fee (plus a little more for each book you buy? Can't remember if that's the case) you get access to an e-version of your paper product.