overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
So Twilight is one of the highest quality book ever written. Got it.Sales are a measure of people's reactions to a quality. Especially long term sales.
So Twilight is one of the highest quality book ever written. Got it.Sales are a measure of people's reactions to a quality. Especially long term sales.
It has qualities that hits the right spot for a lot of folks, absolutely. They might be torrid spots, but the hit is palpable, clearly. Really goes to prove my point.So Twilight is one of the highest quality book ever written. Got it.
Much more cleanly than I would have done. Bravo!It has qualities that hits the right spot for a lot of folks, absolutely. They might be torrid spots, but the hit is palpable, clearly. Really goes to prove my point.
If you say so. I think it shows that even a horrid thing can be popular and garner lots of sales. It's a clear indication that sales do not equal quality.It has qualities that hits the right spot for a lot of folks, absolutely. They might be torrid spots, but the hit is palpable, clearly. Really goes to prove my point.
Oh I hate it and know it's completely off the chain bonkers insane. My gripe with it is that it provides a clear & concise example of WotC writig the rules in a way that don't treat the GM like someone playing d&d just because they aren't playing the role of a "player". We could list off a huge number of things that pose a similar dilemma where Wotc all but outright says "whatcha gonna do, punk" to the GM with areas of the rules tuned so far far away from lethality & risk that I've seen more than one player at more than one table actively attempt to get their character killed, try hard at it... and fail badly. Those failures are often attributable to rules areas frequently met with "well you could redesign encounters or reshape your campaign like so" to throw it back on the DM & defend the ruleAgain, common sense isn't so common. Common sense dictates that any kind of life-threatening situation is by definition not restful, yet people are pretending that it's "common sense" that you can maintain restful sleep through 59 minutes and 59 seconds of combat...but adding in one extra second of life-threatening mayhem is clearly the "common sense" dividing line.
It is horrible at being a "good book," which believe me as someone who got a BA in English hurts. But it is very good at hitting the emotional sweet spot for a lot of people. For the intended purpose of the author, Twilight is damn near perfect. Same with it's fan fiction spin-off, Fifty Shades of Grey.If you say so. I think it shows that even a horrid thing can be popular and garner lots of sales. It's a clear indication that sales do not equal quality.
It has qualities that hits the right spot for a lot of folks, absolutely. They might be torrid spots, but the hit is palpable, clearly. Really goes to prove my point.
For the intended purpose of the author, Twilight is damn near perfect. Same with it's fan fiction spin-off, Fifty Shades of Grey.
Mental stimulation.One-handed reading?
Mental stimulation.